Canadian artist Rob Gonsalves had two things growing up, a love for daydreaming and a love for art. As he grew older he managed to combine these two aspects of himself into his art. As well as a surreal feel, his art also has an optical illusion side to it, where your eyes and brain have to do a double take in order to process the image. Gonsalves calls his style Magic Realism and the paintings below will definitely show you why. Dreaming is an enjoyable emotion that is almost free, the only thing it is going to cost you is time, a price worth paying for... Written Worlds. The Arboreal Office. Carved in Stone. Big Air. Autumn Cycling. A Change of Scenery II. Beyond the Reef. As Above - So Below. Night Lights. New Moon Eclipsed. The Chalkboard Universe. When the Lights Were Out. White Blanket. Still Waters. On the High Seas. Sailing Islands. The Dancing Wind. Toward the Horizon. Water Dancing. Towers of Knowledge. Chess Master. Space Between the Words. Time Pieces. Flight Plan. Making Waves. Bedtime Aviation. Roots and Wings.
Lukas Hoefer, aka inoubli4ble, is a self-taught digital artist from Cologne, Germany, who creates intriguing and surreal worlds by combining multiple images in Affinity Photo.
Imagine a world where your dreams and the way they distort reality can be reproduced on canvas, paper or some other material on which artists paint. Doesn’t that sound amazing? Well, if you are the type to let your imagination take over and rule over your interest in the world of art, then you will like it surrealism and the paintings that are inspired by it. The thing about surrealism is that it strives to represent the images of the unconscious mind making it very bizarre albeit fascinating to look at. In fact, taking a teenager to look at surrealistic art is the best way on how to involve teenagers in art projects.
Photos of or world which, with the assistance of Photo Manipulation, are made into a world of surrealism. French Graphic Designer Natacha Einat, uses software, the same way a magician performs a magic act. Both have in common, a great reveal and a gobsmacked audience, that is trying to figure out what is going on and how the trick was achieved. The moon is very prevalent in photo manipulation, this is probably because it is the closest object in space to us. It has been a continued source of fascination and mystery, that has entertained humans, since they first looked up and wandered, what they were looking at. Moon Dust. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Reach for the moon. Press the Image to Enlarge it. A city and a home on the moon. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Painting night time. Press the Image to Enlarge it. It must have all started somewhere. Press the Image to Enlarge it. The power of books. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Scaling the solar system. Press the Image to Enlarge it. The planets are within reach. Press the Image to Enlarge it. The Eiffel Tower. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Rose ravaged by time. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Books can bring anything to life. Press the Image to Enlarge it. A dark figure. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Fishing in the city. Press the Image to Enlarge it.
The things that do not exist in real world is what Superfine Modern Surrealism Art And Painting Ideas is all about and what our lovely surreal artists draw.
I am Murat Akyol, a 19-year-old from Mardin. I love to tell people about my dreams through photos, and I just love art in general. If you'd like to support me, you can follow me on Instagram.
Rene Magritte was undoubtedly one of the most enigmatic artists of the 20th century. He helped shape the visual language of Surrealism through rendering the most commonplace things as strange by placing them in uncanny scenes and circumstances. Classically trained, Magritte utilized the conventions of painting to subvert representation and highlight the oddness surrounding his recognizable images. There is a wonderful tension between his transparent technique and his opaque subject matter, adding a level of irony and humor to his paintings — a trait unique to the Belgian Surrealist, setting him apart in an often dark art movement. "The mind loves the unknown. It loves images whose meaning is unknown, since the meaning of the mind itself is unknown.” — Rene Magritte Though recognition and critical praise was somewhat elusive for the artist for most of his life, he is known and beloved worldwide today as one of most innovative and creative of all the Surrealists. Read on to learn more about this visionary of the 20th-century avant garde. Childhood and Early Life Magritte claimed to have few memories of his childhood and little is known about his early life, but using what we do know, we can find clues to his early influences. Magritte was born in 1898 in Lessines, Belgium. His father was a tailor and his mother a milliner before she was married, foreshadowing the artist’s famous paintings of formulaic bourgeois men in bowler hats and tailored suits. His mother tragically committed suicide in 1912 by drowning herself in the Sambre River and was found in the water with her nightdress covering her face — a haunting detail that may have stuck with Magritte. The Lovers, 1928, Museum of Modern Art, New York However, some of Magritte’s most vivid early experiences were rather whimsical and serendipitous. Once, in a highly strange and humorous occurrence, a runaway hot air balloon fell onto the roof of his family’s home and required maneuvers by a team of men to retrieve. The absurdity of the situation must not have been lost on the young Magritte. In another charming anecdote, he first met his future wife, Georgette Berger, at a fair when they were both teenagers, but the two wouldn’t meet again for seven years. In 1920, they reconnected in Brussels, and Georgette subsequently became Magritte’s model, muse and wife. They would stay together the rest of his life. The Beautiful Relations, 1967, Private Collection At age 18, he enrolled at the Académie des Beaux-Arts in Brussels where he took little interest in the traditional style of instruction but surrounded himself with fascinating young members of the avant garde. His earliest works leaned toward Impressionism, Futurism and Cubism, but an encounter with a copy of a painting by Giorgio de Chirico, The Song of Love, inspired him in a different direction — Surrealism. The Song of Love by Giorgio de Chirico, Museum of Modern Art, New York Surrealist Beginnings Early in his career, Magritte supported himself as an artist by working as a draftsman for a wallpaper company and a freelance commercial artist creating advertising posters. He was eventually able to devote himself to painting full time after receiving a contract with Galerie Le Centaure in Brussels. From there, he began to blossom as an artist and painted his first Surrealist composition, The Lost Jockey. The Lost Jockey, 1926, Private collection Shortly after, in 1927, he held his first solo exhibition at Le Centaure. Unfortunately, the critics were not impressed, leaving Magritte devastated and depressed. He and Georgette decided to move to Paris, which would give him his next push towards Surrealism. In Paris, he became friends with André Breton, the father of Surrealism, who welcomed Magritte into a group of like-minded artists including Salvador Dalí, Joan Miró and Max Ernst. With this encouragement, he began developing his own style of Surrealism marked by humor, simple graphics and everyday imagery placed in unusual contexts, and he quickly became a leader in the movement. During this time, Magritte began experimenting with text on his canvases. This would lead to one of his greatest works, The Treachery of Images, in which he painted a simple tobacco pipe against a plain background with the words, "Ceci n'est pas une pipe," French for "This is not a pipe." It was not a pipe, but rather a drawing of a pipe, and its goal was to challenge the viewers' perceptions of what an image is and is not. It was the birth of the Magrittean phenomenon of an object being a copy without an original. The Treachery of Images, 1929, Los Angeles County Museum of Art The pipe perplexed. Magritte said of the reaction to it, “The famous pipe. How people reproached me for it! And yet, could you stuff my pipe? No, it's just a representation, is it not? So if I had written on my picture 'This is a pipe', I'd have been lying!” Some critics derided his work as too representational or commercial, an aesthetic likely stemming from his time as an advertising artist. However, his style would be influential on Pop and Abstract Expressionist artists like Andy Warhol and Jasper Johns who famously painted images that blurred the lines between reality and representation. WWII and Sunlit Surrealism Despite his artistic breakthroughs, Magritte was struggling financially, forcing his move back to Brussels in 1930. There, he opened an ad agency with his brother and had little time for painting over the next few years. Gradually, he returned to his art and in 1936 was granted his first solo show in the United States at the Julien Levy Gallery in New York; this was followed by a place in the Fantastic Art, Dada, Surrealism exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art. These successes would lead to an exhibition in London the following year. At the onset of World War II, German occupation forced Magritte to flee Belgium for Carcassonne, France. The artist reacted to the brutality and darkness of the war through a drastic shift in his style. Hitler’s success in causing widespread panic and confusion had deeply disturbed Magritte, and he felt that Surrealism’s often dark and chaotic moods must change in response. He began to paint in a markedly more colorful, painterly style but maintained the dreamy, mysterious air of his earlier work. After the war had ended, he distanced himself from the Surrealist group and authored a manifesto entitled Surrealism in Full Sunlight. Although a lesser-know artistic period for Magritte, his output from this time is an important and rare look into a more personal side of the artist and how to find light in dark times. International Recognition Nearing the end of the 1940s, Magritte returned to the styles and themes of his pre-war art, and in the 1950s, his international fame began to grow. In 1954, the Palais des Beaux-Arts in Brussels presented the first retrospective of his work, and two years later, he was awarded the prestigious Guggenheim Award and participated in the first Guggenheim International Award exhibition. He was a favorite artist of Peggy Guggenheim, and she collected many of his works. Other retrospectives followed, including one at the Museum of Modern Art in New York in 1965. This marked Magritte’s first and only visit to America. The Empire of Light, 1954, Peggy Guggenheim Collection Sadly, Magritte’s death came just as the recognition he had sought for so long was arriving. He died in 1967 in Brussels shortly after the opening of yet another exhibition of his work at the Museum Boymans-van Beuningen in Rotterdam. Following his death, four more retrospectives were planned all over the globe. In the decades after his passing, Magritte’s paintings became coveted by museums and collectors, and not one, but two Magritte museums have since opened in Belgium. His work has inspired other fine artists and pop culture, influencing songs, movies, books and plays. His images have become iconic across the world, and he remains a fascination. References: Foster, Hal, Rosalind E. Krauss, Yve-Alain Bois, B. H. D. Buchloh, and David Joselit. Art since 1900. 1900-1944: Modernism, Antimodernism, Postmodernism. New York, NY: Thames & Hudson, 2016. Hammacher, A. M., and James Brockway. René Magritte. New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1985. “Painting Under Crisis: Magritte and World War II · SFMOMA.” · SFMOMA. Accessed April 1, 2020. https://www.sfmoma.org/read/painting-under-crisis-magritte-and-world-war-ii/.
The magic realism and surrealism art of Paul Bond.
A one of a kind view of the world expressed in drawings. You know that maxim, "A picture is worth a thousand words"? That is how I would summarise Miles Johnston's work. Beautiful concepts hidden in illustrations waiting to be discovered. When found by different people, as if by magic, they unearth different meanings. Having given these surreal pieces titles, made the images even more fascinating and helped me crystallise these drawings into meaningful pieces of art. For more of Johnston's work here on DesignStack, press this LINK. Turn the world upside down. Press the Image to Enlarge it. We feel trapped by the way we look. Press the Image to Enlarge it. At what point do you start thinking maybe... I'm right? Press the Image to Enlarge it. Is this the equivalent of rings in a tree? Press the Image to Enlarge it. Manipulation can be ever so subtle... Press the Image to Enlarge it. Threads of love. Press the Image to Enlarge it. The many versions of us. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Look below the surface to find the answers. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Inverted. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Take a better look at yourself. Press the Image to Enlarge it. You are not part of the background. Press the Image to Enlarge it.
Imagine a world where your dreams and the way they distort reality can be reproduced on canvas, paper or some other material on which artists paint. Doesn’t that sound amazing? Well, if you are the type to let your imagination take over and rule over your interest in the world of art, then you will like it surrealism and the paintings that are inspired by it. The thing about surrealism is that it strives to represent the images of the unconscious mind making it very bizarre albeit fascinating to look at. In fact, taking a teenager to look at surrealistic art is the best way on how to involve teenagers in art projects.
Photos of or world which, with the assistance of Photo Manipulation, are made into a world of surrealism. French Graphic Designer Natacha Einat, uses software, the same way a magician performs a magic act. Both have in common, a great reveal and a gobsmacked audience, that is trying to figure out what is going on and how the trick was achieved. The moon is very prevalent in photo manipulation, this is probably because it is the closest object in space to us. It has been a continued source of fascination and mystery, that has entertained humans, since they first looked up and wandered, what they were looking at. Moon Dust. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Reach for the moon. Press the Image to Enlarge it. A city and a home on the moon. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Painting night time. Press the Image to Enlarge it. It must have all started somewhere. Press the Image to Enlarge it. The power of books. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Scaling the solar system. Press the Image to Enlarge it. The planets are within reach. Press the Image to Enlarge it. The Eiffel Tower. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Rose ravaged by time. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Books can bring anything to life. Press the Image to Enlarge it. A dark figure. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Fishing in the city. Press the Image to Enlarge it.
Is there anything more breathtaking and surreal than outer space? Often, I feel like there absolutely isn't. Maybe it's because of all the celestial masterpieces stars, galaxies, and planets paint, effortlessly sweeping us off our feet? Or maybe we feel this way about space because it's something we can't touch, tame, or change? Or perhaps, it's because of that nostalgic feeling you get when it's a warm summer night and you raise your head and look up at the sky and all the stars simultaneously remind you of how truly small you are (but in the best way possible)?
The magic realism and surrealism art of Paul Bond.
Imagine a world where your dreams and the way they distort reality can be reproduced on canvas, paper or some other material on which artists paint. Doesn’t that sound amazing? Well, if you are the type to let your imagination take over and rule over your interest in the world of art, then you will like it surrealism and the paintings that are inspired by it. The thing about surrealism is that it strives to represent the images of the unconscious mind making it very bizarre albeit fascinating to look at. In fact, taking a teenager to look at surrealistic art is the best way on how to involve teenagers in art projects.
The secret to discovery is to never believe existing facts.
Imagine a world where your dreams and the way they distort reality can be reproduced on canvas, paper or some other material on which artists paint. Doesn’t that sound amazing? Well, if you are the type to let your imagination take over and rule over your interest in the world of art, then you will like it surrealism and the paintings that are inspired by it. The thing about surrealism is that it strives to represent the images of the unconscious mind making it very bizarre albeit fascinating to look at. In fact, taking a teenager to look at surrealistic art is the best way on how to involve teenagers in art projects.
Growing up can be a challenge, especially in the teenage years. Some people use writing or art as a creative outlet for all the emotions they keep inside.
De kunstenaar is zelfs zo aardig om je eigen portret gratis in een surrealistisch meesterwerkje te veranderen.
About The Artwork This artwork is number 0031 in my Surrealism Art de Guaizi series.NFT purchase link:https://opensea.io/assets/matic/0xf40824b24762fc3cab5934bc0b346e5faf22442d/31/ All of my art pieces are unique digital collectibles, each consisting of a one-of-a-kind NFT minted only once on Opensea and a one-of-a-kind edition print not exceeding A0 size, signed and stamped with my personal seal. The original size of the NFT minted on Opensea for this art piece is 115cm x 205cm, but when printed, it measures approximately 62cm x 112cm. The customers who receive the printed version can provide me with an Polygon wallet address to receive the corresponding NFT for this artwork (this service is free). Please send your Polygon wallet address to [email protected] via email and indicate the name of the product you have purchased. Original Created:2023 Subjects:Fantasy Materials:PaperOther Styles:Fine ArtModernSurrealism Mediums:DigitalNft Details & Dimensions Digital:Digital on Paper Original:One-of-a-kind Artwork Size:25 W x 44 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:France. Have additional questions? Please visit our help section or contact us.
Is there anything more breathtaking and surreal than outer space? Often, I feel like there absolutely isn't. Maybe it's because of all the celestial masterpieces stars, galaxies, and planets paint, effortlessly sweeping us off our feet? Or maybe we feel this way about space because it's something we can't touch, tame, or change? Or perhaps, it's because of that nostalgic feeling you get when it's a warm summer night and you raise your head and look up at the sky and all the stars simultaneously remind you of how truly small you are (but in the best way possible)?
Nascido em Kielce, na Polônia, o renomado artista Rafal Olbinski estudou arquitetura no Departamento de Arquitetura da Escola Politécnica de Varsóvia antes de se dedicar à pintura e ao design. Mudo…
Hello everyone! My name is Kerem, I'm a 19-year-old from Istanbul. I create photo manipulations and transform my dreams into creative designs. If you want to support me for more imagination artwork, you can follow my projects via Instagram.
Time is a really popular theme in photo manipulation. The most used item is the clock that is creatively added in most of the time inspired photo manipulations. Another item is the hourglass that is also used to depict the time passing illusion. Here you have an interesting time Photoshop tutorial that you might want to check out.
Explore HOW TO WIN FRIENDS AND INFLUENCE PEOPLE's 872 photos on Flickr!
Boston-based photographer Alicia Savage takes intriguing and surreal self-portraits wherever she may be. Having discovered her passion for photography in