Paula Bonet
Barcelona-based artist and illustrator Paula Bonet (Instagram) developed her only style based on mixed media practices and spread over canvas, books or large murals.
Barcelona-based artist and illustrator Paula Bonet (Instagram) developed her only style based on mixed media practices and spread over canvas, books or large murals.
Talented Russian digital artist Yuri Shwedoff (previously) shares his latest artwork on Behance as well as invites everyone interested to check his painting tutorial on a Gumroad account
Leading Russian character illustrator Alexey Baydakov released a huge volume of his latest commercial and personal artworks. Explore more of his works on Behance
After enormous design school workshops we posted during last years, BHSAD Moscow students strike again. This time their unstoppable tutor Dmitry Karpov asked guys to imagine cities having an all sorts of mental disorders - the results are killing. We selected few of them, but please follow the link on Behance to check all works from the team
https://www.behance.net/gallery/30629721/Cities-with-mental-disorder
Like all artists - digital ones are not an exception. They develop a style through decades, exact what we follow in latest artworks of Evgeny Kiselev. No doubts this changes were kindly met by his followers and clients where one of them - South Korean magazine Web Trend put Evgeny's work on the cover.
California-based illustrator Eric Petersen has a very stylised approach to his work and is influenced by instructional graphics and video games.
Hailing from Copenhagen, Rune Fisker shows his talented lively and dynamic drawings and illustrations on website and Instagram
Ikenaga Yasunari paints tranquil portraits of women immersed in elegant floral patterns. His work is a curious blend of traditional Japanese-style paintings (nihonga) and modern imagery.
Read more on Juxtapoz
Paul Jackson is a British artist based in Toronto. His black and white art is incredibly detailed, and some pieces are even verging towards being hyper-realistic.
Steve Cutts studied Fine arts in university, and worked at Glueisobar as the main storyboard concept artist. “In terms of process every piece for me is different. I don’t have a standard way of doing things,” Cutts said in an online interview. “At any one time I’m usually juggling a few projects – I tend to work intermittently, working on one piece, then doing something else for a bit before coming back a few days later to the first piece with a fresh perspective. That always helps me to focus on the bigger picture.”
French painter and street artist Ratur has a lot to show you from his Facebook, Instagram and personal website
Artist Mike Winkelmann (beeple) has been making an illustration every day for eight years. As his website will tell you, he hasn't broken routine for 3,039 days—and over that time his illustrations and process have drastically evolved. In his most recent digital illustrations, he imagines dreamlike futuristic landscapes. via
Saint-Petersburg based illustrator Vera Golets has picked selected artworks she did for various clients by a topic of sweets and food.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9YkI9IjY3I0
Chow Hon Lam (aka Flying Mouse) is an artist, illustrator, tee shirt designer living in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Chow’s tees have proven to be tremendously popular and have won many prestigious awards. Nearly 100,000 people have purchased a tee shirt featuring one of Chow’s designs. In 2010, Chow began an ambition project titled Flying Mouse 365 where by he released one design per day for an entire year. His latest affair is a long term project The Daily Lives of Food and Drink, a collection combining surreal situations with vibrant illustrations.
Illustrator Nataly Sheveleva from Russia decided to level up her own illustration skills by creating a 20 days line illustration challenge. via
Australian artist Alex Louisa (Instagram) from Brisbane draws upon life and death in nature with fervor in her soft pastel artworks. Primarily using PanPastels on textured paper, she is able to exhibit her unique fascination for her subject’s peculiarities.
Read more on Hi-Fructose
"Blue pencil drawings by Canadian artist Zachari Logan depicting a man engulfed by plants, animals, and insects. Logan uses himself as a model for his drawings and paintings, turning his elaborate studies of nature to explore intersections between masculinity, identity, memory and place. His idea of a man entwined with nature, a life unfamiliar to most of us, is his concept of a unified man who Zachari believes has disappeared in the 21st century."