The UK’s biggest celebration of film and TV comedy just landed: Comedy Genius takes place at BFI Southbank, on BFI Player and at venues across the UK, 22 October 2018 – 31 January 2019.
Stan Shuttleworth
25 Original Artworks curated by Rebecca Wilson, For OH. Original Art Collection created on 4/11/2013.
Vegas chorus girls, n.d.
My Tor piece is out today! You can read Friends 'Til the End by Bethany Neal HERE. This is the first time I've done a 100% digital illustration, I couldn't get that slightly-transparent ghostliness...
Birgitta Bachmann
be humble for you are made of earth | be noble for you are made of stars
PH5 Fall 2021 Ready-to-Wear collection, runway looks, beauty, models, and reviews.
tatianaonegina: image from the film “Ivan the Terrible” by Sergei Eisenstein
悪役バリのいい顔するじゃん
The turtlenecks! The high-waist pants! That backless sweater!
Conrad Kiesel - After the ball
Fruto de Amor, 1926. Cazadores Primitivos, 1953. Pepita, 1929. Juventud de Baco, 1932. Pasión, 1926. La Favorita, 1947. Idilio, 1926. Fauno Galante, 1929. Turba sin Dios, 1934. *** Autorretrato, 1930. Francisco Soria Aedo (3 May 1897, Granada - 2 November 1965, Madrid), Spanish figurative painter. He had his first professional art instruction at the age of fifteen, and at twenty-two he left for Madrid for further study. Not long after, he won the patronage of the Duque del Infantado, and was able to travel and continue his studies. He would go on to win prestigious awards, such as the second prize in the National Exhibition of 1924, and the first in the International Exhibition of Barcelona in 1929. That same year he married and he and his wife would have two children; his daughter would also become an artist. He began to show internationally, but the Spanish Civil War intervened; his home in Madrid was destroyed in the bombing, and his family moved to Valencia for the duration. After the war, in 1939, they moved to his hometown of Granada where they spent the next eight years. He continued to show widely, but mostly in Spain. In 1947, he became professor of color theory at the Escuela Superior de Bellas Artes de San Fernando in Madrid. a position he would hold until two months before his death. Much of his work was devoted to the representation of Andalusian, Castilian, and Moroccan character types. And in almost all of his paintings, he employed dramatic lighting effects alongside a lavish display of chromatic richness. Bodegón, 1943. (I couldn't help but include this "off-topic" - but gorgeous - still-life.)
One of the great Japanese woodblock artists, Hiroshi Yoshida (1876-1950) was especially noted for his exquisitely detailed, evocative prints of landscapes around the world. His work is beautiful, subtle and often atmospheric, displaying a real mastery of his technique, which allowed him to capture the subtleties of light and form. Yoshida often reused the same woodblocks, varying the colours and saturation to suggest alternate moods of the same scene – a different time of day, or even different weather conditions. Initially trained as a painter (of some renown), Yoshida began working with woodblocks in the early 1920s, and after a meeting with the owner of the Watanabe Print Store in Tokyo he had his first series of prints published. The woodblock technique is notoriously time-consuming and difficult, but Yoshida seemed able to capture the most delicate graduations of colour and the tiniest details in a temple façade or mountain face. Yoshida was a keen traveller and visited numerous countries from the early 1900s onwards - his cosmopolitan attitude is reflected in the landscapes and studies he created in countries like India and America. The traditional Japanese techniques in his work applied to a changing foreign world at the beginning of the 20th Century make for some fascinating, unexpected images, which sit comfortably alongside his more elegiac landscapes. Whilst the world has changed almost immeasurably in the 50 or so years since Yoshida died, when viewed today, well-kept examples of his woodblocks still have a real vibrancy and warmth to them. Yoshida died in 1950 but his two sons Toshi and Hodaka both became respected woodblock artists in their own right, carrying on the family tradtion. In fact, since the mid-1800s the same Yoshida family - Hiroshi's forebears - has produced eight artists of serious renown – a veritable woodblock dynasty. Boat in dry dock, Kinoe Grand Canyon (Bright Variant), 1925 The Cherry Tree In Kawagoe, 1935 Obatan Parrot II, 1926 Yarigate, date unknown Yomei Gate, 1937 Taj Mahal, 1931 Taj Mahal, Night, 1931 Snake Charmers, 1932 Sketch of a Tiger, 1926 Kinkaku, 1933 Kameido Bridge, 1927 Iris Garden In Horikiri, 1928 Obatan Parrot, 1926 Icho In Autumn, 1926 Udaipur 1931 Early Morning, Fujiyama, 1928 Elephant, 1931 Eboshidake, 1926 Cryptomeria Avenue, 1937 Climbing Snow Valley, 1926 Cave Temple In Ellora, 1932 Breithorn, date unknown Avenue Of Cherry Trees, 1935 Konoshima, 1935 All images © Estate of Hiroshi Yoshida
Károly Lotz, 1833-1904 (DSC_8834fin1)
> nelipotme http://t.co/k5n1zRn9p6
Tumblr Blog
15 Original Artworks curated by Rebecca Wilson, The French Connection: 13 Artists to Discover in France. Original Art Collection created on 2/12/2014.
The Swing Artist: Jean Honore Fragonard Size: 75 x 60 cm (29.5 x 23.6") Oil Painting Reproductions
The Wolfgang Tillmans box set contains three of Tillmans most definitive books, released by Taschen
Explore leahblah's 290 photos on Flickr!
23 Original Artworks curated by Rebecca Wilson, Fifty Shades of Grey NSFW. Original Art Collection created on 1/25/2015.
"Feeling good about your work is one thing, but offering it as something for other people to be happy about is truly something to dedicate your time to," Spellman states. Tagged: Office, Chair, Painted Wood Floor, Desk, Craft Room Room Type, and Lamps.
#트레틀 #이메레스 개인적으로 만들었던 걸 살짝 다듬어서 배포합니다 상업이용을 제외하고는 편하게 사용해주세요o//o
The reason I like The Cure is partly because no matter what song is playing, you can tell that it's them just by their sound. This is the kind of continuity I value in my own aesthetics as well. Underlying concepts create themes, which I build upon each time I make a new collection. But no matter wh
por Kelly Beeman Contradictoriamente alejándose de la moda como el eje impulsor de su trabajo, las acuarelas de la artista Kelly Beema...
Palacio de Cristal en Parque del Retiro, visited it when I was in Madrid.
lets get serious....
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