Photography of Aaron Brimhall
Check the lifestyle and travelling photography portfolio of Aaron Brimhall focusing on motorbike cross-country trips you can join virtually on Instagram
Check the lifestyle and travelling photography portfolio of Aaron Brimhall focusing on motorbike cross-country trips you can join virtually on Instagram
"2015 was Ari Fararooy’s second trip in a row to Burning Man. While enjoying the mind blowing experience on the dusty playa, the photographer captured its unique light and even more unique people. Now Fararooy has animated the experience, tapping into the surreal aspects of Nevada’s Black Rock Desert, and using it to create an alternate reality of hypnotically moving images."
As we are planning to run our 4th Glitch Digital Art collaboration The Digital Decade 2016 very soon, we are all four into new names on pop art scene. Here is our new finding - Liron Ashkenazi, she is a multidisciplinary visual designer who thrives to create bold, complex and conceptually driven imagery using 3D illustration, animation, photography, experimental typography and colour. She spends most of her free time exploring new ways to develop her work & loves a good challenge.
teamLab, a Japanese interdisciplinary art collective created by artists, engineers, mathematicians, programmers, architects, and other creatives, brought together a 20,000 square foot installation presented in collaboration with Pace Art + Technology in California. This project, titled “Living Digital Space and Future Parks,” features 20 digital works, several that have been exhibited previously and others that have never been seen before.
Known for us by a collaboration done for OFFF 2015 festival, Ash Thorp (Instagram) is an artist and creative director of LOST BOY. He works mainly in motion video industry and leads an educational platform Learn Squared.
"Ash Thorp’s career is a continuous rotation of roles from designer to creative director. He is fueled by a tremendous internal drive to develop his own signature imprint on the industry. His first directorial debut started with the assembly of an international team for his visionaryGhost in the Shell tribute titled Project 2501. Ash then wrote and directed the main title for OFFF Barcelona 2014 alongside his close friend and acclaimed director, Anthony Scott Burns. In 2015, he was requested once again to assemble an international team of designers and create the title sequence for FITC Tokyo, which instantly gained monumental attention, including selection as a Vimeo Staff Pick. Also, in 2015, Ash was contacted by Adobe to create an image for their After Effects software, as well as participate in their Adobe Remix project. Later in 2015, Ash Thorp co-directed with Chris Eyerman from 3AM, “Ares - Our Greatest Adventure,” featuring Neil deGrasse Tyson in a promotional trailer for the feature film “The Martian.”"
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The series Fine Line created by Alex Trochut is an evolution from Binary Prints, but in this case instead of light triggering the transformation of the images, uses movement and the point of view of the observer towards the artwork. This series is a collaboration with Isabelita Virtual, featuring the Puck Loomans and exhibited at Miami 2015 at SpectrumArt fair during Miami ArtBasel week.
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"Every day we are surrounded by data generated by our presence in environments saturated with digital technologies and touch screens. Glitch Textiles, a textile design label originated by Brooklyn-based graphic artist Phillip David Stearns, showcases a stunning set of functional, colourful artworks that bridge the gap between woven textiles and digital art, all designed and inspired by algorithms.
The project explores the histories of woven image making and modern digital technologies, transcoding the computer glitches into stunning garments and functional fabrics. Phillip, whose significant projects include a series of experiments on imaging making and the digital realms, tries to create a dialogue about the influence of digital technologies/material and how they will affect how we live our lives in the future."
via People of Print
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For "Lost in Infinity Split," photographer Alex Markow photographed models painted by Magnus Sodamin in fluorescent paint and camouflaged in a floor-to-ceiling black light-lit installation covering 3,000 square-feet of gallery walls.
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It's hard to believe but this space artworks are made of oil on canvas by talented hyper-realism artist Damian Loeb (previously)
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New York based art director David McLeod (Instagram) released a personal project exploring Polymorphism in motion
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A personal project of tiny proportion—matching small everyday objects to their Pantone® Matching System colors, by designer Inka Mathew (Instagram). All pictures were taken with her iPhone 5 and edited with Snapseed. She also released a book "Tiny Pantone Objects" last year available on Amazon
"According to Mathew, the process is fairly straightforward. After she finds an object she wants to match, she goes through her Pantone chips book (an indispensable tool for graphic designers and color enthusiasts) to find the right swatch. Using natural daylight, she places the object on top of the swatch to make sure the hues match, and then snaps a photo with her phone. She finds matches 95 percent of the time, making for a total of about 145 vibrant compositions since she started the project over a year ago." via
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Talented designer working in NYC at CHRLX - Danil Krivoruchko (previously) has a very little spare time to spend it between his adorable twin sons and personal projects. Anyhow he was able to showcase his latest practices in Houdini software and released a CGI Procedural Fashion Catwalk we are expecting as a near future substitution of that exhausting show industry
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"Virtual Depictions:San Francisco" is a public art project by media artist Refik Anadol (previously) consist of series of parametric data sculptures that tell the story of the city and people around us within a unique artistic approach for 350 Mission’s media wall in collaboration with Kilroy Realty Corporation / John Kilroy and Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP Architects.
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International award-winning photographer Dave Sandford shares his latest photography affair with the ocean.
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"The typical New Yorker seems to never be strolling. Whether it’s 5am or the middle of the night, the New Yorker rushes and dashes through the city. And even when he wants to stroll, he can’t – others will literally run over him. In this city, time is a luxury comparable in value to living space. And strangely enough, the people who aren’t running always end up waiting for something. You wait in line for a restaurant, for a concert or to get into the movies. You wait for a taxi, for the subway, for a hot dog on the corner. Waiting is as much a part of New York life as running and rushing.."
New York City: Wait or Run Directed by OSK in collaboration with Karsten Boysen
The Mill just dropped an awesome showreel summing up their recent VFX projects. Take a deep breath and enjoy. Sending respect for the lovely soundtrack guys used in the video (as they usually do), bless it's not another progressive house ear-bomb
Frida Kahlo, South America’s most famous woman artist best known for her numerous self-portraits, is portrayed once more as hyperrealist Kazuhiro Tsuji’s latest subject. Rendered with a heightened realism, Tsuji’s Frida is made of resin, platinum silicone, and other materials by the same technique that he once practiced as a special effects makeup artist. Find out more on artist's Facebook via Hi-Fructose
Alonsa Guevara lives and works in Brooklyn, New York. "If the painting doesn't make you wonder or try to find a mystery or when a person just looks at something and it's too easy to understand or it doesn't make you feel something in your heart, of course it's not successful."
For his installation, “Tube,” New York-based artist Zilvinas Kempinas stretched strips of VHS tape to create an 80 foot long walkway.
Maciek Jasik (previously) is fascinated by the tales behind fruits and vegetables and seeks to reintroduce these mystical qualities back into their being through his eerie depictions of squash, pineapples, horned melons, and others. “The Secret Lives of Fruits and Vegetables” aims to bring back the characteristics “that have been lost amidst the clamor of nutritional statistics,” says Jasik. “Each offers its own indelible powers beyond our narrow habits of thought.” via Colossal