I noticed my style goes back and forth between George Stavrinos and David Downton. I keep thinking of what is my style. I'll just let my work evolve is best.
Рисунок, Виктория Боня Drawing, Fashion Illustration, Victoria Bonya Рисунок, Виктория Боня Drawing, Fashion Illustration, Victoria Bonya
My third illustration for Urban Walkabout came out today! This one is for the South Yarra/Prahran/Windsor guide...
Bocas muy rojas y vestidos fluorescentes; pelos eléctricos y faldas ajustadas. Más allá de su ...
StyleBop and illustrator Julie Houts team up for a tongue-in-cheek take on the sartorial season.
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City dweller, successful fella, worked in a bank as a clerk but he thought to himself, “I want to live a life that’s a lot less monetary.” So he taught himself to paint and draw and all his friends who saw his work said “Cor! You ought to take this up, seriously.” And that, in the musical stylings of Blur, is a brief introduction to Artuš Scheiner (1863-1938), the quiet little white collar worker who gave up his career as a pencil-pushing, number-cruncher at the Financial General in Prague, to become one of Bohemia’s most successful artists and who produced a phenomenal amount of work during his seventy-five years. Yet, for such an industrious and commercially successful artist, there is, perhaps surprisingly, little written, well, in English at least, about Scheiner other than he lived, he worked and he died, which is really quite fine as it means we get to concentrate solely on the work he produced. In his twenties, Scheiner started selling comic illustrations to the local newspapers and magazines. He had taught himself how to draw and paint but kept his passion a secret in fear he would be ridiculed for having such high...
Blog vintage : déco, jouets, livres et autres petites trouvailles pour enfants
Illustrations by Cécile Dormeau
Back in January, Laura Callaghan "told us":http://www.itsnicethat.com/features/laura-callaghan-this-year-i-will-squarespace-cover-pages-190116 she resolved to “embrace the trashy, weird and ugly aspects” of her work. In an exhibition of new work opening at KK Outlet in June, she’s proving that she’s a woman of her word, albeit doing so in a way that’s as compelling and culturally relevant as ever.