rea kolarova for @yearningheart
colorful painting reminiscent of the 1960 and 1970 style of a silhouette of a person engulfed in psychedelic rays
In recent years, there has been a growing concern for the welfare of a tiny, yet extremely important, species of insect that graces our planet – the bees. Apiculturists (beekeepers) have been repo…
Two new paintings by Kerry James Marshall feature a central crow that looms over a botanical backdrop. One or two birdhouses, which have entrances that are too small for the blackbirds to fit through, are perched on the leafy branches along with more petite species. Part of an ongoing series, the acrylic paintings are based on John James Audubon’s Birds of America, an archetypal text cataloging 435 life-size watercolors of avian creatures. More
Some of my artwork is available in limited edition prints. Head over to the Store to see what is available. Click the thumbnails below to view full image - Please contact me for inquiries on originals
The Ghanaian-Canadian artist is creating a new iconography – one brick at a time
Portraits and abstract images encompass the bulk of her work — showcasing a variety of ideas and inclinations. Irish and African-American styles mix seamlessly into her art; an amalgamation of two…
"We create a kind of a story for ourselves that gives us the opportunity to not be scared to death every day," Thomas says.
James Drake is a remarkably versatile artist who is a superb draftsman, an expert sculptor specializing in welded steel installations, and a penetrating photographer and video artist.
Calm, flexible, and undeniably adorable, Lucia Heffernan’s brood of chicks would likely be the star students of any yoga class. The fluffy creatures curl into backends, contort into triangles, and stretch their feathered little bodies into warriors and dancers in perfect alignment. Heffernan is showing the lunging and twisting characters through December 15 at CODA Gallery in Palm Desert, California, and even though all originals are sold, you can still shop prints on Etsy and see the entire troupe on Instagram. More
For his multiyear project titled “The Prophecy,” Belgian-Beninese photographer Fabrice Monteiro confronts global issues of ecological devastation. The striking images in the project combine haute couture, spiritual figures, and staged scenes of pollution and decimation. Made in collaboration with Senegalese fashion designer Doulsy and set primarily in Africa, the series took Monteiro two years to complete. Models representing the children of the Earth Goddess Gaia (known as djinn) are dressed in costumes fashioned to look like the environmental ruin and refuse that surrounds them. More
Gouache on watercolour paper14.8 x 21 cm (A5)2023 Unframed
"The Art of Saving a Life," commissioned by the Gates Foundation, is drawing together artists in all media to depict the life-saving role of vaccination.
Kenyan photographer Osborne Macharia traverses the realms of Afrofuturism and Eastern African geography through his newest series.
Juri Hayasaka - Juri Hayasaka may illustrate what some people consider as “stereotypical girly stuff,” but she does it with so much technical skill tha...
Detail of Springtime by Pierre-Auguste Cot (1873)
Amanda Clyne manipulates the process of print photography using impregnable paper and a brush to achieve these celestial copies of European masterpieces. “Inspired by portraiture, couture and the history of painting, I look to images where artifice reigns, in the historical portraits… that feign perfection. In the studio, I provoke their metamorphosis through experimental processes […]
Finnish sculptor Kim Simonsson draws inspiration from pop culture and Nordic fairytales in his series of flocked ceramic figures.
Encircled by oversized crowns of paper, two new masks by Patrick Cabral celebrate Filipino culture through elaborately fashioned works defined by their colors. Titled Mananayaw ng Langit at Lupa, or Dancers of Heaven and Earth, the ongoing series was commissioned by the Iloilo Museum of Contemporary Art for the Dinagyang Festival. The cultural celebration is held annually the last week in January with the Ati Tribe competition, which involves warrior dancers performing to loud chants and drum beats, as the main event. More
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