Here's a huge collection of some cool AI Art prompts for inspiration. Did you know you can go to Nightcafe and search for the posts with "settings open"?
Text art ! here you get an unique and cool collection of ASCII art copy and paste anywhere you want simply by one click. So what are you waiting for ?
Crayola that is known for inspiring creativity for 120 years, is launching a new campaign during which will return 1000 artworks to the adults who created them when they were kids decades ago.
Text art ! here you get an unique and cool collection of ASCII art copy and paste anywhere you want simply by one click. So what are you waiting for ?
Here are over 1,900 AI Art Prompt ideas to try out. In this (new) ongoing project, I'm trying these AI Art Prompts out. I will link to the results for you to
Text art ! here you get an unique and cool collection of ASCII art copy and paste anywhere you want simply by one click. So what are you waiting for ?
Image from the Prinzhorn Collection A few weeks ago I listened to a Radio 4 Programme, All in the Mind, featuring the American Professor of psychology, Gail A. Hornstein talking about her new book Agnes's Jacket: A Phsychologist's Search for the Meanings of Madness. My ears pricked up immediately when I heard Claudia Hammond, the presenter, comment that Tracey Emin had raved over the extraordinary artwork of the book's title. Agnes Richter was a patient in an asylum near Dresden in Germany during the 1890's, admitted against her will and held for 26 years from the age of 40 to the end of her life. In her former life, before her institutionalisation, she had been a seamstress. The jacket she created is now held in the Prinzhorn Collection in Heidelberg. This is an extract from Gail A Hornstein's book: "...The felt is frayed, but the course linen underneath looks indestructible. The flared cuffs, fitted bodice, and perfectly formed buttonholes reveal a skilled seamstress at work. But it isn't the jacket's design that mesmerizes every person who enters the room. It's the intricate text that has been embroidered in five colours over practically every inch of the garment. A needle-and-thread narrative unlike any other." (page ix; Introduction) The jacket was issued as part of her hospital uniform, but Agnes picked it apart and reconstructed it. During that process she embroidered her own text into every surface. It is more or less indecipherable, although there are many references to 'ich' i.e. herself. I was trained as a lettering artist and also have a particular interest in the 'ghost' life and resonance of objects such as clothing and furniture - the powerful legacy of these formerly inhabited things; the presence held in such personal items. So this discovery feels a bit like a missing piece of jigsaw. Kathryn Campbell Dodd detail from 'The Bone Dice quilt 2009' Having researched the jacket a little further, I found a blog - Lulu Bird - with lovely images from the author's own visit to the Prinzhorn Collection: Images from Lulu Bird Yesterday, I learned about a fellow lettering artist Rosalind Wyatt who has created a body of work called The Stitch Life of Others and the resonances with Agnes's jacket are unmissable. Image from The Guardian Online I have thought again about Tracey Emin - I wonder when she first saw the jacket ? Her work is so strongly resonant. Image from BBC
3 p. \U+fffd\., 53 p., 1 \U+fffd\., 192 pl. 25 cm
“Everything has to go”—the new edition of Previously on Hans Lucas (#9) brings together a diverse—and at times unstable—range of images, texts and video that in their sum propel us forward with the force of a parade.
Maggi Hambling talks about the sea, life, death and love in her work, how, despite being nearly 70, she’s still learning about painting, and why sometimes a painting has to be killed off
You deserve to be paid for your work. Let’s repeat it, this time louder, so that even the folks in the back row hear: You deserve to be paid for your work!