Showing posts with label Painting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Painting. Show all posts

Monday, 1 February 2016

NYC Winter Storm Photo Strangely Look like an Impressionist Painting



In the midst of Winter Storm Jonas, photographer “Michele Palazzo” braved the breezy weather in optimisms that he'd capture a one-of-a-kind shot. Hence, luckily, he came across New York City's Flatiron Building and that's when something supernatural happened. As tufts of snow swirled in the wind, Palazzo aimed his Ricoh GR camera and snapped the building, nearby streets, and snowy meteorological conditions. 

Therefore, after improving the image in VSCO Cam, the artist carefully noticed that the snow swirls shaped patterns resembling swift brush strokes. Thus, as a whole, the photograph amazingly echoes an impressionist painting. So, if you look closely, you'll realize that the Flatiron's windows feature an origami installation by artist Chelsea Hrynick Browne. Her hand-cut paper creations flawlessly add to the ethereal, Winter Storm Jonas moment.

Wednesday, 9 April 2014

The Deep Feeling Painting of Shin Jong Sik



Shin Jong Sik is a popular water color artist due to its vibrant and transparent colors painting. His beautiful paintings really express the colorful, dignified and deep feeling.  He has taken flowers, fruits, dishes and hemp cloth as materials. He does not compose as they are seen but recomposes with novel ideas. His admirable talent of lighting the hue reaches the vivid expression of emphasizing the main materials according to hue and the background of his paintings. In his lovely composition you can easily feel the delicacy, flimsiness and boldness are coexisting which are raising affections of appreciators. Shin Jong Sik paints exclusively with Mission Gold Watercolors; a new premium line of watercolors distributed in the United States and Canada. The talented painter is an artist and is the first time user of Mission watercolor in Korea. He had used three different brands of imported watercolor paints until 2009, when he wholly turned to mission after monitoring mission watercolor.


















Sunday, 9 March 2014

Artist experiments with colorful tinted paints & water to create beautifully abstract, hypnotizing formations.



Artist Kim Keever who belongs to New York, experiments with colourful tinted paints and water to create stunning abstract hypnotizing formations. Keever was former thermal engineer for NASA project tends to veer his work towards the scientific and experimental. To create this specific style, the gifted artist drops several amounts of color into water and documents the swirling liquids as they blend and mingle. Keever uses a huge 200-gallon fish tank as the setting for much of his effort, which offers sufficiently of space for the extremely unpredictable reactions to emerge. Staring at the enthralling photographs is a related experience to pointing out shapes between the clouds. Within the blobs, swirls, and trickles of color, spectators might instigate to imagine recognizable forms like fabric or faces, and specific of the swirls almost solid enough to touch.











Tuesday, 4 February 2014

German Artists Digital Paintings with Remarkable Skies and Fantastic Storms



The German artist’s awe-inspiring skies full of penetrating light and billowing clouds direct the digital artwork of Alexander Rommel well-known artistically as Evergreen arts. The digital paintings of radiant skies showcase the imagined magnificence of nature concentrating on the play of sun, sky, water and wind. Definite science fictions and fantasy aspects give his magnificent sky-scapes a dreamlike setting. Beams of light descend down to the pinnacle of a pyramid and ships lift from the waves to float over the clouds. Though the landscapes are simple and could definitely be real places, the surreal skies are the key focus. A stunning aurora borealis reflects over a lagoon and huge thunderstorms and tornadoes loom over then peaceful surroundings. There is an irrefutable magic to these fantastic digital creations.