Corey Brickley Illustration
Corey Brickley is a freelance illustrator and designer living and working in Philadelphia. In addition to detailed editorial illustrations he creates animated versions of the best of them
http://vimeo.com/155469392
Corey Brickley is a freelance illustrator and designer living and working in Philadelphia. In addition to detailed editorial illustrations he creates animated versions of the best of them
http://vimeo.com/155469392
American illustrator Hallie Elizabeth (previously) tames her inner goddesses through pencil and watercolour works that explore nature, the occult, pain, and matters of the heart. You can try and catch her on Instagram or adore her works on Tumblr
Camille Walala is a purveyor of powerfully positive digital print. Recent work has seen her progressing from her popular textile based range to include art direction, interior design and a continued love affair with popup restaurants, where her love for food and design are brought to life. Influences include the Memphis Movement, the Ndebele tribe and optical art master Vasarely alongside the simple desire to put a smile on people’s faces.
Editorial illustrator Simon Prades shares his latest works on Behance
Michigan based artist Kelsey Beckett creates the world of fashionable fairies
Surreal digital artist mixing VHS 80s aesthetics with modern abstract CG art. Follow him on Instagram for more daily visual overdose
Maggie Sichter is a pattern and lettering artist based in Chicago. Her works are created with nothing but pen and paper, featuring the smallest of details and both floral and geometric influences - www.littlepatterns.com
Awesome Californian artist working mainly in watercolours, meet Tracy Lewis (Instagram) and her fairy tales
For almost twenty years I’ve lived in the Sierra Foothills. My home has a tree house view of the world that has made nature an integral part of my life and my art. The metamorphosis of seasons and the cycles of life and death are reoccurring elements. A collection of curiosities, along with my love of fairy tales, Art Nouveau and Old Hollywood Glamour have also found their way into my art.
I paint primarily in transparent watercolor, layering luminous glazes of pure hue to give everything a candy coat of Easter-like color.
Saint-Petersburg raised street artist Lora Zombie and Berlin-based Mimi S have a joint at Saatchi Gallery, talking from "XX : A Moment in Time" exhibition. Take a look and if in London, have a chance to visit them offline.
Pierre Schmidt, also known as „drømsjel“ (Instagram) is Berlin-based artist working in-between illustration and collage art. To create the artworks artist splices vintage photographs of well-groomed ladies and gentlemen that evoke the standards of 20th-century propriety, turning them into bastions of surreal visions.
The geometric wonders are by Kerby Rosanes (previously), an illustrator from the Philippines, who wields an ink pen and plastic compass like a straight-edge wizard. Full of life-like detail as well as playful realness, the illustrations take two simple artistic tools to combine math and the animal kingdom.
Alto’s Adventure is such an immersive experience, it’s hard to believe it’s being channeled through a mobile-sized screen. Its beauty is in the details: the tiny shadow reflected in the snow as you leap into the air for a backflip, the birds flying away in fear as you tear down a hill, the satisfying sound of your board pressing down on the snow. Overhead, the sky is constantly shifting, drenching you in darkness and rain during a midnight storm, then offering solace a few moments later with the soft, rosy hues of dawn...
The app was built by Ryan Cash and Jordan Rosenberg, the founders of the Toronto-based software studio Snowman, with UK illustrator and developer Harry Nesbitt.
Read more on The Creators Project
Following the last year success of illustrated by Malika Favre the best films posters, BAFTA (British Oscar) commissioned another artist this year to complete the full set of 2016 selection.As Levente Szabó says "there were still a dozen of candidates in December but we already had to start developing the series' visual identity as the final nominees were announced only at 9th of January and we had roughly two weeks to finish them.
María María Acha-Kutscher (Facebook) illustrates women exercising their voices in political struggles. She says her work focuses on the woman, on “her story, the struggles for emancipation and equality, and the cultural construction of femininity.” The political dimension of her work plays a dual role—“an artistic product in itself” and “an instrument covers a social need and... contributes to political transformations.”
Chilean illustrator Santiago Salvador Ascui has a very positive with a bit of scandinavian way of depicting things that matter him a lot
Camilla d’Errico is an Italo-Canadian artist who has been making waves in the fine art and comic industries with her manga-influenced style. Ever the prolific artist, Camilla is comic artist and Pop Surrealist painter
Architect and watercolorist Tytus Brzozowski imagines a dreamlike world where giant structures rest on towering stilts and trains seem to emerge from tunnels in the side of residential buildings.
Russian illustrator and artist Mikhail Vyrtsev aka Reey Whaar (previously) shares his latest awesome artworks on Behance
Vero Navarro is a freelance illustrator from La Mancha, Spain, currently living in Madrid. She is an enthusiast of colored pencils in one hand and digital techniques in the other. Vero’s body of work encompasses delicate and realistic renderings of human figure, fauna, flora, architecture and everything in between. In her works she tries to tell stories about human condition using characters in constant struggle with their inner selves.
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