Illustration of Natalie Foss
Natalie Foss (Instagram) is a Norwegian freelance illustrator based in Oslo. She works in different fields, primarily with coloured pencils, focusing on strong colours, portraits and emotions.
Natalie Foss (Instagram) is a Norwegian freelance illustrator based in Oslo. She works in different fields, primarily with coloured pencils, focusing on strong colours, portraits and emotions.
Barcelona is the best city for me to align my heart and soul together and place to explore new experiences for example at OFFF Festival. Here is the best hyperlapse video of Barcelona I have seen so far. Enjoy the melting pot of South Western Europe
SSENSE commissioned Thomas Traum studio to create a short CGI film to reveal the technological splendor of the Homme Plissé Issey Miyake Spring 2016 Collection. We reimagined the clothing focusing on the line’s innovation on textiles and cut.
"Our idea was inspired by the simplicity of Issey Miyake’s clothes, expressed in particular through the images created by Irving Penn for Miyake’s collections in the ‘80s. In our film, we wanted to create a modern high-tech take of their approach, but keeping the spirit of these images created decades earlier. We wanted to strip the film back to the core essence: Clothes as a container and amplifier of the human body in movement."
Creative Direction — Thomas Eberwein Cloth Modeling — Fabian Rosenkranz Animation — TTEAM Production — Julie Vergez Sound Design— Loom
Germany based fashion photographer Elizaveta Porodina is back with a new captivating series of portraits made for EIKON // OE Magazine
Muse Klaudyna at GAGA MODELS Style Yilmaz Aktepe Hair and make up Marco Heulsebus Light Josef Beyer
"Misplaced Series is a project that takes notable New York buildings from their existing surrounding environments and inserts them into desolate locations out of context. By sequestering these structures from the hustle that usually swallows them, their architectural form becomes more defined and easily understood. The juxtaposition of these concrete volumes and glossy glass windows against sand dunes and rocky cliffs forms a new way of perceiving and appreciating these otherwise familiar architectural landmarks.Short fictional stories accompanying each building are written to help readers experience the ambiguity and absurdness of each scene. Architects are confused with the irrational task of designing something in the desert, self-expanding constructions that seek for new places to exist, unsold tickets to museums that are nowhere to be found and luxury hotels with no guests. Each story might have been a short scene from the movie that is never going to be watched, same way as those building are never going to be somewhere else." text by Jon Earle for Anton Repponen.
Photographer Nir Arieli captures what happens dancers let go of the precision, the control, the stamina — and simply be. The series is titled “Flocks,” which, in the artist’s native language of Hebrew, means both “company,” as in dance company, and “flock,” as in a flock of animals. In the images, Arieli explores the relationship between a team of similarly passionate and talented individuals and a herd designated by nature and circumstance.
"Hiroshi Kondo captures the the energy and the loneliness of living in such a vast metropolis in his experimental short, The Others. The slit-scanning film bends time and place into a moving portrait of a Tokyo square by highlighting the individual and the crowd moving both separately and in haunting unison. "
"Back in 2009, Gianluca Gimini picked up an unusual hobby. The Bologna-based Italian-American designer started approaching his friends — and complete strangers — and asking them to draw a bicycle from memory...By 2016, the pile had grown to 376 drawings from a broad array of participants from seven different countries, males and females as young as 3 years and as old as 88. He decided to begin creating highly polished renderings of these sketches, and the results — which you can see on Behance — are equal parts brilliant, hilarious and frightening."
via BBC
"Matthieu Venot is a self-taught French photographer whose pictures capture the urban environment in a most graphic and transformative of ways. Focusing on the part rather than the whole, his photographs abstract his surroundings into colourful graphical vistas turning the quotidian into the iconic."
via Yatzer
Artist Sofia Bonati (Instagram) creates portraits of enchanting women with a look of mystery in their eyes. She attributes the development of her surrealist style to the likes of Charles Bragg, and takes equal inspiration from the likes of Klimt, Klee and Modigliani.
Read interview with artist on Juniqe
Andrey Poletaev is a self-taught artist who specializes in ballpoint pen art and graphics and creates some of the most technically complex artworks in the area of Cityscapes investing between 200 and 300 hours of painstaking work for each piece. His best things can be found on www.poletaevart.com and Instagram
"First I wanted to document the people who live there, but when I began to photograph their daily lives I started to focus more and more on the buildings. The idea was to explore the past of the place, its future and present. I wanted to highlight the generation of elderly people who started living in those buildings when they were made and to draw a parallel between the aging of architecture and that of the human beings housed within. These neighbourhoods are often marginalised, their inhabitants side-lined. However, these buildings are more futuristic than ever—more than La Défense, the modern financial district of Paris. You could never say what era these buildings belong to." says Laurent Kronental about his series "Souvenir d'un Futur" in i-D Magazine interview
The happiest designer in the world Stefan Sagmeister is about to debut his long waited The Happy Film at the Tribeca Film Festival happening now. If you have been to OFFF Festivals in recent years you must not missed Stefan talking about this film (presenting it in 2011)
The Happy Film is a feature-length documentary in which graphic designer Stefan Sagmeister undergoes a series of self-experiments outlined by popular psychology to test once and for all if it’s possible for a person to have a meaningful impact on their own happiness.
Directed by Stefan Sagmeister, Ben Nabors, Hillman Curtis (d.2012)
LA based artist Soey Milk doing awesome female related paintings strangely reminding me Vereshchagin's and Bryullov's realism of 19 century.
The short film Dancing Plague is the new work of a long collaboration of more than thirteen years between Diego Agulló and Jorge Ruiz Abánades . Based on three images of Peter Brueghel the Elder, and taking as a handwritten texts that recount the phenomenon of multitudes known as ” dancing mania ” or “Dance of San Vito ” , this film delves into the theme of the dance and its close affinity with the uncontrollable forces of chaos : immediate ability to interrupt work time , enabling another exceptional time of the bizarre, the jovial and festive but also of social disorder and catastrophe
BASED on Pieter Bruegel the Elder´s paintings:
The Tower of Babel (c. 1563)
The Fight Between Carnival and Lent (c. 1559)
The Triumph of Death (c. 1562)
Talented London-based art and fashion photographer Anna Radchenko shares her last work directed together with Mikhail Svjatogor
Directed by: Anna Radchenko, Mikhail Svjatogor
DOP: Roman Yudin Stylist: Ira Kaufman Stylist's assistants: Lena Ladygina, Quentin Hubert Make-up: Maria Afanasyeva Hair: Marina Melentyeva Model: Alina Mikheeva Set design: Neproneft / Hyperjack 1st day gaffer: Alexandr Okovitski 2nd day gaffer: Denis Shatokhin Video production: Superskazki, Pirate Smile Moscow Producers: Anastasia Limarenko, Anna Radchenko, Mikhail Svjatogor Producer's assistant: Ivan Kazakov Heavy smoke: Andrey Андрей Кобзарь Editor: Mikhail Svjatogor Color grading: Alex Rodriguez Special effects: Mirsaid Bakiev, Mr.Seven, Dobrobot Music: Andrey Novikov, PolyCrave&Clive Sound fx: The Cosmic Setter Fashion film by Radchenko & Svjatogor production Directed by: Anna Radchenko, Mikhail Svjatogor Art Director: Anna Radchenko
The game is on my friends! We teamed up with Depositphotos, Curioos e-shop and Youthworldwide London collective to celebrate Designcollector's 13th Anniversary. Today we set the start of the new 4th Digital Decade art collaboration of 2016.The title of this year’s event is: "There Is No Planet B" and it will be held in London in summer. The idea is to bring attention to the problems our planet is currently facing - economic, environmental, political - and what our world would look like without them. Currently we asked 20 artists selected by our team to create an artwork for the expo that portrays a major issue as either solved by humans or even non existent.
Now we invite you to overcome this group of artists and create your artwork. You can think of "Imagine there is no…", as you approach this project. The winners get a place in upcoming London's exhibition alongside with 20+ Selected Artists.
Marvel just released long waiting trailer of Doctor Strange featuring gifted Benedict Cumberbatch
via Cumberbuddy
Beau Bernier Frank (@beaubfrank) is a 22-year-old French-American surrealist painter currently working from his studio in the city of Pacific Grove, located on the California coast. Coping with disease and not being able to walk or work for several months gave Beau an opportunity to brainstorm and explore his artistic inclinations. He eventually developed a new innovative and unique style of collages of landscapes with portraits. These paintings would mark the beginning of his new career as an emerging artist and the creation of his latest collection, “Off the Grid.”