Working from her Brooklyn studio, fellow pastel artist, Zaria Forman, captures the natural world in all its beauty and vulnerability. Having travelled the coast of Greenland, retracing the 1869 journey of American painter
William Bradford, documenting the rapidly changing arctic landscape in 2012, she then moved on to document the Maldives, a country facing the very real threat of climate change and with it, rising sea-levels.
Showing posts with label Art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Art. Show all posts
Tuesday, 12 May 2015
Friday, 11 July 2014
Sean Cheetham
Sean Cheetham is recognised as one of the most acclaimed young figurative painters working today. In 2005 he exhibited in the Portrait Award, at the National Portrait Gallery, London, and was included in American Artist Magazine as one of their 25 Artists Of Tomorrow.
Below is a collection of his looser portrait work. You can feel a real connection to the painters of the late 19th century, too, like Delacroix, Corot or Courbet, or even further back than that. And that's what makes them so appealing to me: the continuation of an important way of creating art that has been largely ignored since the beginning of impressionism.
Wednesday, 2 July 2014
Jared Muralt's sketchbook
Every now and then you come across an artist whose work just flaws you. And not just one incredible piece of artistry, but every picture of theirs you see. This is true of the Swiss illustrator, Jared Muralt, founder of the illustration and graphic design studio, BlackYard.
Jared attended art school for a year in his native Bern, Switzerland. He is largely self-taught, receiving much of his study through books regarding art history, anatomy and comics. All of which are explored in his work and clearly visible in his sketchbook drawings below. There are so many of these drawings that it was damn hard trying to pick only a few.
For more of his work check out his website or his instagram feed. Seriously, every post is unbelievably good.
Saturday, 31 May 2014
Mario Wagner
I always pay attention to the shows that Spoke Art and their sister gallery, Hashimoto Contemporary in San Francisco, put on. And one recent show at the latter gallery was "A Glow That Transfers Creativity", a solo show by artist and illustrator, Mario Wagner. The exhibition contained technicolour paintings and installations including collage work and TVs.
Tuesday, 29 April 2014
Liz Brizzi
Born in France to Italian parents, Liz Brizzi grew up in Los Angeles. Working from her downtown graphic design studio, she captures the desolate beauty of the urban outskirts of the city in her mixed media paintings.
Manipulated photographs are collaged onto wood panel, with layers of acrylic washes on top. The back streets of LA are presented with a raw edge which shows the rapidly disappearing history of a city in constant change.
Labels:
Art,
Liz Brizzi,
Los Angeles,
mixed media,
painting,
urban art
Friday, 28 February 2014
Robert Mars: The golden age of America
Cars, motels, logos, and other hulking monuments of the 1950’s
and 60's saturate Robert Mars’ often desolate landscapes. These instantly
recognisable symbols of American history still resonate in today’s mass-advertising
world with the independent aesthetic of the highway having been replaced by a standardised
corporate culture.
At this time in history, information was not instantly
available to millions and there were no instant Internet celebrities. Nowadays,
we are left with the enduring myth of the unique and unforgettable personalities
of this golden age like Marilyn Monroe and James Dean. And it’s with his latest
work that Mars searches for today’s equivalent celebrity, if they even exist.

Labels:
1950s,
1960s,
Americana,
Art,
cars,
contemporary art,
logos,
motels,
photography,
Robert Mars,
vintage
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