Emmanuel J Morgan illustrations
Emmanuel J Morgan aka Sffuma shares her inner world full of Forbidden fruits and provocative dreams based on the sharp style of Tarot cards. All these amazing pieces available as prints
Lena Pogrebnaya was born in Odessa, Ukraine. She first fell for photography in 2009 while studying at Odessa State Academy of Civil Engineering and Architecture. After graduating in 2011 Lena continued her photographic exploration. Brutalist architecture of the 50s and 70s quickly became Pogrebnaya’s main inspiration. The essence of her projects lies in monumental constructions featuring concrete, granite, decorative tiles of multiple colors and… people merged with the aesthetics.
Her artistic investigation goes beyond conventional approach that nature and industrial objects should be opposed. For Lena Pogrebnaya architectural forms are part of the nature — being creations of people, nature’s products themselves. In her “nature creating nature” universe a human being feels harmony both in the wild and urban environment. Her models looks dignified in any site, and yet they are simply a unit of the beautiful surrounding just like everything else in the picture.
French art director and illustrator Jerome Masi shares his flat-styled artworks that looks like a paper-cut masterpieces
“From Rembrandt I’ve learned how little light there is in man. The Rembrandtesque portrait exhausts all its light resources; there is no more light in it. Light itself seems to be the interior refraction of a light that dies somewhere, far away. Rembrandt’s chiaroscuro doesn’t derive from bringing clarity and darkness in close proximity but from the illusion of light and from the infinity of the shadow. From Rembrandt I’ve learned that the world is born out of the shadow…”
French architect Thomas Paturet shares his photography series “Chiaroscuro” taken on Mount Saint Helens & Mount Rainier in Washington
“Conceptual illustrator and artist living and working in Brooklyn, Dan Bejar likes to focus on conceptual image making naturally lends itself towards a variety of subject matter, but he is often tasked with lending his conceptual approach to create visual solutions for challenging subjects and to convey the social and political issues of our day.” via @trendland
Photographer Kris Provoost shares his shots of Taipei Performing Arts Center that is still under construction under OMA/Rem Koolhaas architect direction and looks like a giant golf ball hits a cube
Fresh graduate from the Film Academy of Baden Württemberg, Germany, Henning Himmelreich shares his short motion design film “After Silence”
After Silence addresses the inner process of mental and emotional regeneration of human psyche. To visually represent this process the film uses the imaginary from Egyptian mythology and its concept of the journey into the afterlife in an abstract manner.
The process of self-purification is visualized through both abstract and direct representations of deities and other mythological images, combined with modern graphical elements.
The protagonist is trapped in an uninhabitable world reigned by chaos, which is a visual representation of her own state of mind. As she enters subconsciousness, a mixture of self-reflection and external judgement makes her undergo self-purification. By passing all stages successfully and facing her demons she reaches a state of perfect harmony that purifies the soul.
The world around her changes correspondingly and darkness becomes light.
American artist Brian Alfred is best known for his collages, paintings, and digital animations. He works fluidly between classic and contemporary media like drawing and digital art, and he depicts subject matters that range from architecture and technology to modern idealism and romantic heroism. Best known for his works that examine how people's perception of their surrounding world and culture is mediated by technology, Alfred's practice is often accounted for as socio-critical and a mirror of our contemporary times.
He creates flattened and usually depopulated worlds of color reproduced in two dimensional bold patterns, often derived from found images. Alfred explores the effect public imagery has on individual perceptions of reality by using newspaper photographs, television advertising, and the internet as source. Inscrutable scenes in his paintings and animations remind the viewer of how public media tend to show a glimpse of reality: relevant information is cropped out of the image and the overall picture is flattened into a coherent colourful narrative of a simple ideology.
View this post on InstagramA post shared by The Art Front Row (@artfrontrow) on
Miloš Hronec focuses mainly on painting, but also on digital drawing and collage. He comes from Bratislava and this environment has gradually formed him artistically.
Exterior designer working in Italian cars industry Yuliia Lobodiuchenko creates awesome illustrations during her free time. Check out these series of retro cars featuring classic ones we miss so much
Freelance artist and digital illustrator Mahdieh Farhadkiaei shares her best works you won’t forget ever
Talented illsutrator Ross McCampbell teamed up with legendary BUCK to work on 360° in-store experience for a secretive skin-care brand in San Francisco
Graphic designer Christo Krüger shares his latest commissioned projects created for the vast list of clients
Talented CG artist Alex Maltsev shares his lates digital studies and projects with a focus on motion design and animation
Reel 2019
Japanese illustrator Kotaro Chiba shares his love to a mix of traditional and contemporary practices
An unconventional love is what we feel looking at drawings of Henrique de França. Some untold stories, unseen characters and unsolved plots leaved behind the frame… so tempting and intriguing
Ludwig Favre is a Photographer specializing in major cities and landscapes of america, raised in Paris, currently living in Paris. He has created visuals on a variety of media platforms from advertising campaigns to magazine editorials, books, gallerys over the world. We share his latest project “Tokyo, Lost in Translation” featuring never sleeping capital of a sunrise country
Budapest-based artist and designer Miklós Kiss aka @kissmiklos shares his latest public art affair “emograms” he presented as a part of solo exhibition at Lotte Gallery, Incheon, South Korea, 2020
The exhibition consists of two parts. The first space is built around emograms and the installation Ball.Room. The second displays a new installation called, LOVE field, and a typography-based sculpture.
Miklós Kiss’s works incorporate various facets of architecture, fine art, design, and graphic design. A strong artistic approach and outstanding aesthetic quality characterise his art. His fine art pieces are just as significant as his distinctive style in corporate identity and graphic designs.
These giant badges are based on the first Smiley, which was originally a badge itself. The „smiley“ was born in 1963 when Harvey R. Ball, owner of an advertising agency in the USA, came up with the idea to use it to lift the mood of the workers of a recently merged insurance company.
Check his 2nd part of exhibition called “LOVE” on Behance
Gustavo Amaral is a Brazilian artist who creates photographic collages that explore the human form. His works capture simultaneously the body in its external form, and the inner emotions and psyche the exist beneath its shell.
The artist graduated in his hometown of Belo Horizonte with a degree in Journalism before pursuing his passion for photography and filmmaking in Sao Paulo. His work has been shown frequently in both Brazil and Holland