for those that hate all things Apple
iDeath: Artist's 'shots' of Apple products
http://www.cnet.com.au/ideath-artist-s-shots-of-apple-products-339308210.htmMichael Tompert, a San Francisco-area digital imaging and CGI artist, bought an assortment of brand-new Apple gadgets with the express intent of destroying them and photographing the results as a statement on "our relationship with fetish, fashion, freedom, and bondage."

Targeting
One of the giant prints, "Targeting," shows a 2009 iPhone 3G that had been shot with a Heckler & Koch handgun.

Breathe
This 2008 MacBook Air, pictured in "Breathe," was also shot with a Heckler & Koch handgun. It's one of the prints on display at the WhiteSpace Gallery in Palo Alto, California, not far from Apple's headquarters in Cupertino.

Breathe
A closeup of the damage on the MacBook Air. Tompert's friend, Paul Fairchild, photographed the damaged gadgets and turned the photos into giant high-resolution digital prints.

Liquid Crystals
A MacBook got the sledgehammer and torch treatment. The result: "Liquid Crystals," which measures 38 x 48 inches.

12LVE
This is what an iPhone 4 looks like after getting smashed with an 8-pound sledgehammer. Though some might assume that Tompert's an Apple hater, he used to be part of the company's graphic design team and calls himself an Apple fan from the early days. 12LVE, he says, is meant as a statement on consumer culture.

You're so 200&L8
Ouch. The 2008 iPhone 3G pictured in "You're So 2000&L8" has definitely been through it.

Tompert got the idea for the project after seeing his two sons fight over a game on an iPod Touch he gave them for Christmas. Tired of their squabbling and wanting to make the point that the gadget was just that — a gadget — he grabbed the device and threw it to the ground. The screen broke, liquid oozed out, and the mangled device looked surprisingly cool.

Bookburning
The iPad pictured in "Book Burning" had a date with a sledgehammer and a soldering torch. Each gadget "had to be a brand-new product," Tompert said. "It's not about destroying old products. It's about our relationship with the new."

Caltrain Fatalities: Left Track/Right Track
When a train ran over a bunch of 8GB iPod Nanos, it left behind a vibrant rainbow of destruction.

Caltrain Fatalities: Left Track/Right Track
A detail from "Caltrain Fatalities: Left Track/Right Track" shows a shock of colour

After having been exhibited briefly in San Francisco, 12LVE is currently on display at the WhiteSpace Gallery in Palo Alto, in California's Silicon Valley.