cubism art of the liver buildings the weather was not good today for photography so tried something different after reading a article about david hockney
This is a project I did for my Digital Imaging class a year or two ago. I bumped into it today on my old Flickr account (which doesn't let me log in for reasons unbeknownst to me) and decided to put it up again.
Explore Cody Rooney Photography's 1059 photos on Flickr!
About The Artwork Photography: C-type, Color and Digital on Paper. Archival C-type prints Limited Edition of 9. Comes with signed certificate of authenticity, and a label signed by artist with name of artist, piece and edition number. Available in 2 bigger sizes: 100 x 100 cms in a limited edition of 6 and 150 x 150 cms in a limited edition of 3 (see portfolio) Original Created:2016 Subjects:Architecture Materials:Paper Styles:ExpressionismFigurativeFine ArtCubismPhotorealism Mediums:DigitalBlack & WhiteC-type Details & Dimensions Photography:Digital on Paper Artist Produced Limited Edition of:1 Size:15.7 W x 15.7 H x 0 D in Frame:Not Framed Ready to Hang:Not applicable Packaging:Ships Rolled in a Tube Shipping & Returns Delivery Time:Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments. Handling:Ships rolled in a tube. Artists are responsible for packaging and adhering to Saatchi Art’s packaging guidelines. Ships From:United Kingdom. Customs:Shipments from United Kingdom may experience delays due to country's regulations for exporting valuable artworks. Have additional questions? Please visit our help section or contact us.
ARNHEM, THE NETHERLANDS—When the world’s best fashion schools stage their graduate shows their front rows fill up with fashion’s power players. One never knows where they’ll find the next Tisci or Theyskens, …
1618 views on Imgur: The magic of the Internet
About The Artwork Arista is an ongoing fine art series in which the subject of a picture, usually discernible, is analyzed, then dissected into geometric forms, and finally reassembled in an abstracted form. The significance of the connected geometric planes and facets comes as a result of an instinctive process of image deconstruction, where the final artwork is revealed as an expressive effect while preserving the eloquence of the subject. This faceted treatment of space and multiple viewpoints transmits a physical and psychological sense of the fluidity of consciousness according to which life is subjectively experienced as a continuum, with the past flowing into the present and the present merging into the future. Limited edition of 10, personally signed and certified. Original Created:2019 Subjects:Still Life Materials:Fine Art Paper Styles:Fine ArtAbstractConceptualCubismModern Mediums:GicléeColor Details & Dimensions Photography:Giclée on Fine Art Paper Artist Produced Limited Edition of:10 Size:24 W x 36 H x 0.1 D in Frame:Not Framed Ready to Hang:No Packaging:Ships Rolled in a Tube Shipping & Returns Delivery Time:Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments. Handling:Ships rolled in a tube. Artists are responsible for packaging and adhering to Saatchi Art’s packaging guidelines. Ships From:United States. Have additional questions? Please visit our help section or contact us.
Auckland Festival of Photography 2013courtesy of Anna Schwartz Gallery Daniel Crooks’ remapping suggests views of other possible worlds. In video and photography, Crooks records, dissects, and reconfigures sections of lived reality. Cloud Atlas (fitzroy 1:23) traces the transient, intangible material of the sky. Borrowing the title from David Mitchell’s Booker Prize-nominated novel, the artist attempts to chart physical […]
A collection of awesome creative techniques, mixed media approaches and compositional ideas to inspire Photography students.
During discussions for an exhibition of his personal photographs, David Hockney hit upon a new way of making pictures. Alain Sayag, of the Pompidou Center in Paris, had visited Hockney at his LA home in the 1970s and was looking through the 100-odd photo albums, when Hockney realized the photographs had “cheated,” as they had not captured a true sense of the events they depicted. “I had become very, very aware of this frozen moment that was very unreal to me. The photographs didn’t really have life in the way a drawing or painting did, and I realized it couldn’t because of what it is. “Compared to a Rembrandt looking at himself for hours and hours of scrutinizing his face, and putting all these hours into the picture you’re going to look at, naturally there’s many more hours there than you can give it. “A photograph is the other way round, it’s a fraction of a second, frozen. So, the moment you’ve looked at it for even four seconds, you’re looking at it far more than the camera did. “It dawned on me this was visible, actually, it is visible, and the...
self portrait - cube template View folded View On Black