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Showing posts with label photo realistic art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label photo realistic art. Show all posts
These Are PAINTINGS And No, I'm Not April Fooling You.
I thought this would be the perfect post for the first of April, a day when most people are punking, pranking, and just plain joking, because this artwork is pretty hard to believe. But it's for real.
Mundane Made Magnificent: Michael Ward Paints The Mystery Of The Ordinary.
A self-taught artist, Michael Ward captures what British-born philosopher Alan Watts called "the mystery of the ordinary" in his acrylic paintings of things we often overlook in our daily lives. Based on photographic images, his neo-realistic interpretations of unspectacular environments and people in the world around us are composed and rendered in such a way as to bring out the beauty in what one might have previously considered mundane, if not ugly.
Here are several of his paintings:
Biography (courtesy of the artist):
I began my artistic career doing pen and ink renderings of historical architecture. I began painting in 1980, first in gouache, then in acrylics. Artists whose work I admire and draw inspiration from include Edward Hopper, Charles Sheeler, Richard Estes and Vermeer. I am most interested in depicting what Alan Watts called the mystery of the ordinary; the workaday world we live in without seeing until we are forced to focus upon it, as in a painting.
Nearly all my paintings are based on photographs I have taken, primarily of Southern California scenes, over the years. Though it was never my intention to depict nostalgic scenes, many of the images I have painted have disappeared or been radically altered in the ever-changing landscape that is Southern California. Thus nostalgia is thrust upon the works. But what I am really after is bearing witness, and making people stop what they're doing and pay attention, to something they may have never seen before, but that makes them feel “I know this.”
I am currently working on a series of house paintings. These simple, ordinary, unnoticed places have hidden interior lives, though they do not reveal them to us. The houses are from a variety of locations in the United States and Mexico. They are the place you grew up in, a place of nurture, experience, trial, memory and forgetting. They are all a common size, to symbolize our shared experience of being human.
Phyllis Lutjeans, Museum Educator and former curator, has said of my work: “Although Michael Ward may be called a neo-realist painter his work can ultimately be described as abstract realism. The picture image is photographically realistic, but within the context of the painting his compositions are complex and almost abstract. Deciphering the work section by section one sees how a multitiude of individual complete compositions are put together to form the entire work. For me the viewer is confronted by a realistic image that puzzles us and clearly tells the story simultaneously.”
As a painter, I am self-taught.
Michael Ward Art and Design
A book of his works is available here on Blurb
See his paintings at Pasadena's Tirage Gallery
Other galleries that represent Michael Ward:
Mesa Art
789 W. 19th St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627
949.548.3570
Studio Gallery
18001 Skypark Circle, Suite R, Irvine, CA
949.851.9181
Contact the artist directly here.
Consider Your Mind Blown. The Phenomenally Realistic Graphite Drawings of Kelvin Okafor.
above: graphite drawing in progress by Kelvin Okafor
Kelvin Okafor describes himself as a "Passionate penciled artist. Highly interested in detail and precision." I'd say that's an understatement once you see the phenomenally realistic graphite drawings created by this UK Illustrator. As astounding as the finished pieces are (it's truly difficult to discern whether or not they are photographs until you look extremely closely), the evolution of the drawings shown on his blog, and as videos on his YouTube channel, will blow your mind.
above, clockwise from top left: Timeless, Undeviating and Mana drawings by Kelvin Okafor
I'm sharing my five favorite finished works of his along with some images of his work in progress for you to see what I'm talking about. He almost always begins with the eyes and finishes with the clothing. His ability to render hair is beyond compare. My mind is blown and after viewing these yours will be, too.
Mana
His second drawing of model Mana.
Medium: Graphite pencils/Charcoal/black coloured pencil/on sketching paper.
Pencil brand - Faber-Castell
Paper type - Acid Free Cartridge paper 17 x 24 inches
In progress:
Final drawing of Mana on board:
"Undeviating" (Emmanuel)
A drawing of model Emmanuel, entitled "Undeviating"
Medium: Graphite pencils/black charcoal/black coloured pencil/on sketching paper.
Pencil brand - Faber-Castell
Paper type - Acid Free Cartridge paper 18 x 22 inches
In progress:
Final drawing of Undeviating (Emmanuel) on board:
Aisha II
His second drawing of Aisha.
Medium: Graphite pencils/black charcoal/black coloured pencil/on sketching paper.
Pencil brand - Faber-Castell
Paper type - Acid Free Cartridge paper 17 x 24 inches
In progress:
Final drawing of Aisha II on board:
"Timeless" (Jamal)
A drawing of model Jamal, entitled "Timeless."
Medium: Graphite pencils/black charcoal/black coloured pencil/on sketching paper.
Pencil brand - Faber-Castell
Paper type - Acid Free Cartridge paper 17 x 24 inches
In progress:
Final drawing of Timeless (Jamal) on board:
Adam II
His second drawing of Adam.
Medium: Graphite pencils/black charcoal/black coloured pencil/on sketching paper.
Pencil brand - Faber-Castell
Paper type - Acid Free Cartridge paper 15 x 24 inches
In progress:
Final drawing of Adam II on board:
Kelvin is a graduate from Middlesex University with a B.A. (Hon)s in Fine Art. On his flickr profile he claims that "He aspires to create art as vivid as eyes could see."
I think he's done it.
See all of his work over here on his flickr account.
A big thanks to Vicki Mayer for bringing Kelvin's work to my attention.
Two Different Artists Paint The Same Unusual Subject: Rubber Band Balls.
It may seem like an odd subject to you, but clearly not to artists Canadian Joanna Strong and Sandy Wilcox of the U.S., both of whom were separately inspired to paint a series of the same exact subject: Rubber band balls.
above left: Joanna Strong, A Joyous Voyage; above right: Sandy Wilcox, RBB#9
Painting them as a singular subject in the style of contemporary realism, Strong's paintings are slightly more photo-realistic with dramatic lighting and on a black background, making the bright colors pop. Wilcox's images of the same subject are painted in a smaller format, a little softer in execution and color and are featured on pale neutral backgrounds with soft shadows.
I have chosen to feature 14 paintings by each artist. I find both equally appealing and would love to own one of each.
Joanna Strong's Entanglement Series (sizes range from 16"x 16" to 48" x 48"):
A Joyous Voyage:
Birthday Party:
Climbing Trees At Sunset:
Gone Shopping, Back Soon:
Halleluia:
It's A Beautiful Evening:
Picking Wild Strawberries at The Beach:
Sail Away:
The News:
Undiscovered Country:
Up In The Airy Mountain:
We Could Be So Happy:
Wrapped Up:
all of the above paintings by Joanna Strong have been sold, to see more of her work, visit her site
Sandy Wilcox's Rubber Band Balls (sizes range from 10" x 10" to 20" x 16.5":
RBB #5:
RBB #6:
RBB #7:
RBB #8:
Rubber Band Ball #1 (sold):
Rubber Band Ball #2:
Rubber Band Ball #3:
Rubber Band Ball #4:
Rubber Band Ball #5:
Rubber Band Ball #10:
Rubber Band Ball #14:
Rubber Band Ball #15:
Rubber Band Ball #16:
To purchase one of Sandy Wilcox's Rubber band ball paintings, visit her site.
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