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Inspiration dessin

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A Separate Reality: New Paintings of Dystopian Worlds by Alex Andreev. Trying to categorize or summarize the genre of Alex Andreev’s (previously) digital paintings is nearly impossible. Part science fiction, part dystopian future, the scenes are equally disturbing and beautiful, his characters inhabiting a world Andreev tells me is deeply influenced by Soviet-era literature, music and movies. Based in St. Petersburg, Russia he works primarily with Adobe Photoshop and Corel Paint and relies only on a small selection of brushes and colors to create each illustration, meaning there are no special effects or 3d-rendering of anything. Andreev recently published an art book, A Separate Reality, which is available through Blurb.com. Nephilistic | Illustrations by Kristof Tarisznyas. Brilliant Illustrations of Break Dancers in Motion. Florian Nicolle | graphic designer & illustrator | neo. Andrew Salgado Art.

New Portraits by Andrew Salgado. One of my favorite portrait artists, Andrew Salgado (previously) who lives and works in London has completed a number of new works in advance of his second solo show, The Misanthrope, which opens at Beers.Lambert on October 11, 2012. You can see see much more of his recent work on his website. DEER Art Print by Amanda Mocci. PAUL Art Print by Amanda Mocci. Johan Thörnqvist. Flyer-1r41.jpg (792×1008) Stunning Oil Portraits by Harding Meyer. Brazilian-born artist Harding Meyer lives and works in Berlin and Karlsruhe where he paints these stunning, large-scale oil portraits. I imagine nothing short of standing in front of these giant canvases truly does them justice, but you can see them in extremely high resolution over on Meyer’s blog. His work will appear in a number of group shows later this year at Würth and the Arts and Museum Dr.

Guislain in Gent, and you can see much more of his work at Galerie Voss. Illustrator Mark Crilley Shreads a Playing Card and Draws a Photo Realistic Copy. Michigan-based author and illustrator Mark Crilley has been working on a series of “realism challenges” on his YouTube channel. In his third installment he tackled the realistic drawing of a torn playing card. Pretty incredible. (via boing boing, thnx brian!) Ricardo.jpg (600×6080) Mathiole.jpg (600×5430) ::: l'illustre fabrique ::: Agnes.jpg (600×5325)