Trends of 2019. As design becomes more and more digitized, designers and artists look back to the most simplest forms of colour, elements, materials to bring their art back to the real world. Something that links us to the ground beneath our feet.
Since the ancient Greeks, realism has been aspired by Western art lovers, but during the late 1960s and '70s the popularity of highly-realistic drawings reached its peak. Thus, Photorealism and Hyperrealism were born. These perspective drawing genres are still popular, and some artists master their technique so successfully that it becomes hard to tell an oil painting or a pencil drawing from a photograph. Bored Panda collected some of the best examples of this cool art and made a stunning list for you to enjoy.
Explore fdecomite's 35917 photos on Flickr!
Because fungus is challenging to find and photograph, fungi photos are less common than flower pics, but they're just as beautiful.
This piece is an instance of growth using a model of 3D isotropic dendritic solidification. The form is grown in a simulation based on crystal solidification in a supercooled environment. This piece is part of a series exploring the concept of laplacian growth. Laplacian growth involves a structure which expands at a rate proportional to the gradient of a laplacian field. Under the right circumstances, this leads to instabilities causing intricate, fractal branching structure to emerge. This type of growth can be seen in a myriad of systems, including crystal growth, dielectric breakdown, corals, Hele-Shaw cells, and random matrix theory. This series of works aims to examine the space of structure generated by these systems. MATERIAL Selectively Laser Sintered Nylon -- we finally 3d-printed some of the Laplacian growth experiments from earlier this year
Because fungus is challenging to find and photograph, fungi photos are less common than flower pics, but they're just as beautiful.
9th in the series Dahlia
Thin slice of red onion, illuminated from below through a diffuser and with reflected light from above. Taken for the Macro Mondays group Theme: Good in Soup. Note: check out my Good in Soup set to see other shots that didn't make the cut.