Kate Wilson is one of my favourite illustrators, i love her delicate style and coloring and most of her illustrations include birds, tea or cake, my three favourite things.
Sunday, 2 June 2013
Living in my Head
These illustrations titled Living in my head by Pat Perry are so lovely and delicate, i love this idea that the illustration is of what the person is thinking of at the time or where they want to be like an insight into their thoughts.
Johan Snarlik
Johan Snarlik takes pictures on his phone and then makes fun illustrations to go on them playing with scale and space. i really like this combination of photography and illustration it really lets your imagination play and create surreal imagery.
Teagan White
Teagan White is one of my favourite illustrators, i love her cute creatures and themes of nature and animals.
Shintaro Ohata
Shintaro Ohata combines paintings and 3d sculptures to make these installations or art. I really love how as you move around the sculpture it creates a different image with the background depending on where your view point is like many different in one.
I would rather be ashes than dust - Comic Strip
a really nice little comic strip by Jack London, click link to see full strip.
Keng Lye
www.thisiscolossal.com/2013/04/three-dimensional-animals-painted-in-layers-of-resin-by-keng-lye
How amazing are these, can't believe there not real!
Singapore-based artist Keng Lye creates near life-like sculptures of animals relying on little but paint, resin and a phenomenal sense of perspective. Lye slowly fills bowls, buckets, and boxes with alternating layers of acrylic paint and resin, creating aquatic animal life that looks so real it could almost pass for a photograph. The artist is using a technique very similar to Japanese painter Riusuke Fukahori who was featured on this blog a little over a year ago, though Lye seems to take things a step further by making his paint creations protrude from the surface, adding another level of dimension to a remarkable medium. See much more of this series titled Alive Without Breath over on deviantART.
How amazing are these, can't believe there not real!
Singapore-based artist Keng Lye creates near life-like sculptures of animals relying on little but paint, resin and a phenomenal sense of perspective. Lye slowly fills bowls, buckets, and boxes with alternating layers of acrylic paint and resin, creating aquatic animal life that looks so real it could almost pass for a photograph. The artist is using a technique very similar to Japanese painter Riusuke Fukahori who was featured on this blog a little over a year ago, though Lye seems to take things a step further by making his paint creations protrude from the surface, adding another level of dimension to a remarkable medium. See much more of this series titled Alive Without Breath over on deviantART.
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