Tim Reynolds
Tim Reynolds is an exhibit designer and illustrator based in Milwaukee currently experimenting with low-polly 3D graphics. Tim’s work showcases some of the best examples of this technique. http://dribbble.com/turnislefthome
Tim Reynolds is an exhibit designer and illustrator based in Milwaukee currently experimenting with low-polly 3D graphics. Tim’s work showcases some of the best examples of this technique. http://dribbble.com/turnislefthome
Even this coolest winter in European history has its pluses if you are a creative head. For Canadian environmental artist Nicole Dextras a severe weather is just another challenge to create massive ice messages to the human being or penguins. http://www.flickr.com/photos/ndextras/
When the ice texts are installed on site, the temperature determines how long it will take for them to change state from solid to liquid. This phase of transition becomes symbolic of the interconnectedness of language and culture to the land as they are affected by time and by a constant shifting and transforming nature.
This is the delicate paper art of Anatoly Vorobyev from Siberia. Much of his work looks like regular printed illustrations, but the magical part is when you see a close-up picture of the cutout shapes. The patterns are detailed and precisely cut with a Japanese X-Acto knife. http://www.flickr.com/photos/v_a_a/ http://www.etsy.com/shop/Papercutout via
Impressive surreal paintings by Norway-base self-taught artist Henrik Aarrestad Uldalen. The atmosphere in his subject matter is often depict in a limbo or dream-like state. Despite his realistic approach, photographic accuracy is not what he seeks to achieve.
Have you ever played "Associations"? Imagine artist Dina Kelberman is doing that with images from Google. Everyday she starts with previous image and finds it siblings or close visual association sorting by many options from colour to objects used on it. Endless and priceless state of digital art! http://dinakelberman.tumblr.com/
I’m Google is an ongoing tumblr blog in which batches of images and videos that I cull from the internet are compiled into a long stream-of-consciousness. The batches move seamlessly from one subject to the next based on similarities in form, composition, color, and theme. [... ] I feel that my experience wandering through Google Image Search and YouTube hunting for obscure information and encountering unexpected results is a very common one. My blog serves as a visual representation of this phenomenon. This ability to endlessly drift from one topic to the next is the inherently fascinating quality that makes the internet so amazing.
Belgrade based illustrator and graphic designer Bratislav Milenkovic has many good artworks to share with visitors on http://www.bratislavmilenkovic.com/
iNO has been a graffiti writer since 2000. The earlier years he produced mostly letters and bombing but after 2008 he focused in developing his style in characters. He studied Fine Arts and is active as a street artist. He is working constantly to evolute his spray painting technique and produce large scale murals.
http://vimeo.com/62858341
Defragmentados is an amazing serie of photography created by Yago Partal. This spanish artist shot a man’s portraits re-creating a fragmented effect thanks to some photo manipulation. The whole serie is quite stunning. via
Instead of using paintbrushes, Italian artist Paolo Troilo dips his fingers into jars of black and white paint, and then smudges and splashes it onto large canvases. Each hand stroke is expressive and filtered into his subject matter of nude men yelling and fighting. via
http://vimeo.com/40214766
Photographer Stephen Wilkes has created a project called “Day to Night” where he combined day and night photos of various iconic New York places
Talented Russian artist Lora Zombie did a live paint session infront of Mike Droog's camera
http://www.vimeo.com/62100985
“Sawyer” is a bicycle with a lowrider geometry conceived by dutch designer Jurgen Kuipers. The frame is constructed out of Plywood. The design has won an IBDC/IF award 2013 (International Bicycle Design Competition in Taipei)
The blog Google Street Scene "collects" moments from cinema captured by Google Street View cameras. Some pearls ahead.
"Between Light and Darkness" is a visual poem created by photographer Ville Andersson. A sort of infinite exploration of a human-being vs subconsciousness mixed with feelings and senesces.
I think this deserves to be posted on our pages. Real tough guys don't need guns, they just need a positive, can-do attitude. That what "Thumbs and Ammo" project is about http://thumbsandammo.blogspot.fr/. No comments.
What if Picasso and Rembrandt had met to have cocktails in 1953? You can imagine the talks they would have had: electric, inspired, and maybe even heated. The work that could have spawned from such a conversation might have looked a bit like that of Cesar Santos. His paintings seemingly bring the works of masters – from the Renaissance to the nineteenth century to Modernism – together, juxtaposing their styles one on top of the other. He call the series (and it is) Syncretism
Creative duo Wriggles & Robbins rethink-ed the way to advertise local drawing classes The Book Club and recorded a smart film by editing each drawing with the next, moving around the circle of easels. http://vimeo.com/62126310
Daniel Franke created a moving sculpture from the recorded motion data of a real person. A dancer had been recorded by three cameras while visualizing a musical piece with her body
http://vimeo.com/38840688