A sense of solitude and the finitude of time pervade the quiet, introspective works by Sung Hwa Kim. Rendering overgrown landscapes shrouded by night, the Korean artist wields the connection between ephemerality and memory, sometimes invoking nostalgia, as well. His acrylic paintings focus on fleeting acts like a glowing lightning bug or butterfly hovering above theContinue reading "Solitude and Nature’s Ephemerality Emanates from the Illuminated Forms in Sung Hwa Kim’s Paintings"
I made this project example for my Drawing and Painting I students.
As seen in the 10th issue of Twin Magazine Photographer Scott Trindle Model: Vivien Solari Stylist Celestine Cooney Hair stylist: Mark Hampton Make-Up Artist Hiromi Ueda Images via The Fashionograp…
Often working at night, Lee envisions quiet, unpopulated landscapes that become an escape from the electrifying energy of the city.
For thousands of years, humans have imagined what it would mean to view the Earth from celestial heights, raising the question of how to reconcile our bounded lives with our longing for the cosmos.
Spine title
Prima di diventare l'animale simbolo della Pasqua, lepri e conigli hanno popolato le pagine dei codici medievali. Molto spesso con intenti bellicosi.
Ok got that out. Now the rest of this I've re-written this 10 times. I was simply going to do the standard, "hey look where I've been featured post", but I can't. I feel like I need to tell you a little more.
Lines of Poetry: in the October issue of Apollo, Matthew Sperling reflects on the neglected work of the Welsh artist and poet David Jones
My Grade 6 students are in the middle of a Medieval Art unit. They recently finished up their illuminated initials. I started off by sh...
When I first started as a self-taught newspaper/magazine designer all those many years ago, my inspiration came from illuminated manuscripts. This lead me, naturally, to initial capital letters used in 19th-century book and periodical design. I went crazy making letters that somehow illustrated the text but also stood on their own as letters or typography. When I became art director of The New York Times Book Review, space was often at a minimum, so I’d hire wonderful illustr
May 2017 bring you a healthy and inspiring adventure. As for that kick-start inspiration, Vitaly Friedman hopes this article will help get you back in the creative mindset. The above illustration has a style that I'm sure everyone will admire. The combination of colors used is simply marvelous — so simple, yet so complex.
Edward Hopper and Alfred Hitchcock brought to life in the collections of lamps made in Spain