Posters by Bartosz Kosowski
Talented graphic designer Bartosz Kosowski from Lodz, Poland creates posters for the movies and personalities he likes
Talented graphic designer Bartosz Kosowski from Lodz, Poland creates posters for the movies and personalities he likes
Taipei-based artist Hsiao-Ron Cheng (previously) shares his new Selected Portraits drawn using serenity colour palette.
Recently opened Kyiv-based The Blue Cup coffee shop attracts our attention by the interior created by local Kley Design (case study) lead by Yova Yager and decorated by Nastya Ptichek (best known for her Emoji Nation project). The whole set was photographed by another talented Ukrainian - Anya Garienchik (previously)
Together with Italian design firm Seletti, Diesel Living created a set of porcelain plates that bring the solar system to the dinner table. Entitled ‘Cosmic Diner’, the collection consists of dishes representing the sun, moon and planets, complemented by a rocket-shaped salt and pepper grinders, meteorite glasses and an astronaut-shaped vase. via
"Xavier Casalta (previously) is a 23 year old artist from the South of France. His piece “Autumn” is part of a series representing the four seasons. It’s also the result of 370 hours spent meticulously inking 7 million dots to create every shape and shade! "
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.
South Russian artist Michael Zajkov creates jaw dropping hyper realistic dolls, where your perception breaks apart while see him hold their heads in his hands. "Zajkov graduated from Kuban State University of Russia in 2009. From 2010 to 2013 he worked at a puppet theater while also attending a graduate school. He was propelled to fame after the 2013 “Art Dolls” expo in Moscow. Zajkov’s creations have multiple joints. He uses polymer clay for the dolls, hand painted glass eyes from Germany, and French mohair for hair." says BP
Talented Spanish photographer Miguel Vallinas dedicates his time mostly for urban and natural landscape photography but hence widely known for his personal projects. Last year his "Segundas Pieles" or "Second Skin" went widely across creative blogs. Recently he continued his anthropomorphic series of animals dressed as human. His other series "Raiz" (Roots) went a bit crazy by replacing human heads with flowers, what also lead to numerous hidden meanings.
Berlin-based award-winning glasses company MYKITA took their boundary-breaking ethos to a whole new level with their parametrically-designed MY VERY OWN collection.
A collaboration with Swedish 3D-body-modeling company Volumental, the MVO label’s custom frames are made using 3D scans and algorithms that calculate a design that adapts perfectly to your face. To match this new level of bespoke-magic eyewear, Sensucht worked alongside director Stephan Wever to create a piece of visual “Slow Food“—the distilled essence in images of sensual, custom-made quality.
View full Making Of on Behance
"Athens-based 314 Architecture Studio designed an eyewear store featuring a courtyard framed by a floating cube nestled between two exposed brick walls. Located in Chalkida on the Greek island of Euboea, the store is named C_29 / Optimist, and was designed with a gallery space in mind. Inside, white stone and concrete create a serene atmosphere, complemented by glass tables mirrors that aid the flow between exterior and interior." via iGNANT
Multi-layered distorted portraits on canvas of Benjamín García (Instagram) creates an instant sense of dimmed conversion between the artist and the viewer. His work is the result of a meditative process using paint, and images to construct some sort of intuitive symbolic artworks.
It's hard to believe but this space artworks are made of oil on canvas by talented hyper-realism artist Damian Loeb (previously)
"Nowadays young children know more brands and logo’s than bird or tree species. Advertisements are so present in our environment, it seems our dreams are the last safe and add-free place. But what happens when advertisers gain the technology to enter our dreams? This animated short by our friends of Studio Smack introduces us in a dream infected by a brand we all know…" via
Russian fashion photographers Andrey Yakovlev and Lili Aleeva took over paintings, shred them through Russian constructivism principles and recreated them in portraits as an editorial photo session. The results can be seen on Behance
New York based art director David McLeod (Instagram) released a personal project exploring Polymorphism in motion
Maria B’s (Tumblr) newest project ‘Kaleidoscopic’ is a visually captivating series that alters everyday space with unexpected layers of reality.
‘There’s a certain beauty in the gestures that are almost invisible in our daily lives. With the opposition of movement and the calmness of the subject, there’s a feeling of both reality and fiction,’ she explains.
"A series of symmetrical buildings on the banks of the River Danube by Budapest-based photographer Zsolt Hlinka. The images emphasize the uniform proportions of each structure by removing their surroundings and placing them in homogeneous, monochromatic backgrounds."via