Part street installation, part macro photography project, Slinkachu’s “Little People” are equally as fascinating as they are terrifying. I had a particular connection with his work because it echoes some of my own. I was working on a photographic project awhile back that involved people who were alone in New York City. The project took on a life of it’s own before long, and I realized that, despite the fact that the city was crammed with so many people, everybody seemed lonely.

Slinkachu uses miniature models of people he finds in hobby shops and on the internet, paints them, and sets them up on the street where they are sure to be passed by hundreds of times daily without anybody noticing.

Slinkachu's "Little People"

Slinkachu’s “Little People” also comment on the ability of city-dwellers to not notice their surroundings. After all, the denizens of New York City are so often filled with things both small and large that are not worth taking note of. Eventually, people stop paying attention. But beware, hurried businesspeople and working stiffs alike, if you stop paying attention to the world around you, you might miss the beauty in the details.