Yoon Ji Seon's embroidered portraits blend fiber and photography. Much of work consists of self-portraits, with varying degrees of emotions, abstraction, and detail. Her "Rag Face" series goes back to 2006, when she started experimenting with these mixed-media pieces.
Arise your tangles sweet spring This piece is inspired by Spring and worked with threads, antique fabrics and embellishemnts, metals and melted plastics. The title 'arise your tangles sweet spring' d
© RZ © RZ
This piece consists of different fabric manipulation and fiber techniques to create a vivid mixture of colors and textures
Elfi Cella is a wonderful artist from Lausanne (Switzerland), who mixes colors and textiles into surprisingly… by constantius
Artist Elliot Hundley fuses a dizzying array of media in his epically scaled, deeply immersive tableaux
In a fantastic collision of natural and human-made elements, Minneapolis-based artist Gregory Euclide explores aspects of nature, impermenance, and the human experience in unusual relief artworks that seem to grow and drip from vertical surfaces. Some sculptures are framed inside boxes, contained worlds of topographical chaos incorporating plastic, foam, paper, model elements, architectural and geometric elements, paint, ink, and a host of other mediums. Other artworks are mounted atop standard whiteboards found in classrooms, a nod to his role as a teacher where he’s been known to paint elaborate sumi ink landscapes during his lunch break—all of which are subsequently erased. More
Sofar 48cm x 60cm, mixed media on linen, 2009
Our Stitch picks series of articles offers expert recommendations for the best tools, materials, and resources to help you bring your textile art to life.
The textured paintings and assemblages of artist Gregory Euclide (previously) combine organic and man-made materials to present the rapid changes happening to the landscapes around us. In his upcoming solo exhibition Preservation Paradox at Hashimoto Contemporary the Minneapolis-based artist examines the contradictions found in our simultaneous desire to protect some areas of nature while destroying others. The exhibition includes pieces from his most recent series Scrapes. More
Detail of "I <3 Glasgow" Mixed media textile sculpture [email protected] www.hreilly.tumblr.com
I’ve been carving out some time to start another little house. Over the summer I have collected some seed heads and grasses, mostly the quiet humble hedgerow ones on my walks. This year, a field we…
Starting with vintage photography and illustrations of models sporting fashions from the 1950s, Amsterdam-based artist Hinke Schreuders applies a rich layer of hand-stitched embroidery, beading, lace, and flourishes of ink to entirely new images that can be both unsettling and exuberant. The pieces seen here are part of an ongoing series called Works on Paper, started in 2008. With her work Schreuders says she seeks to “subtly confuse notions of feminine vulnerability and reinforce the position of embroidery as an artistic medium,” something I think we can all agree she has done masterfully. More
"Not Enough of Anything" 14 x 11" mixed media collage This is an older piece but one that I really like. It incorporates a lot of different ...
Have you discovered colourful lutradur yet? You can create amazing mixed media textile art and it is perfect for art quilting! Find out more about lutradur fabric www.colouricious.com/shop/lutradur-textile-art-artists-de...
Untitled is a creation by the artist Philomena Famulok. Category People, Portrait, Female, Mixed media. 2019/21. own photos, laser printer, scanner. mixed media. 8 distinctions, 2K views, 127 appreciations, 10 comments, 34 favourites, 2 group projects.
Explore louiserichardsonartist.com's 176 photos on Flickr!
Mixedmedia canvas layout
Starting with vintage photography and illustrations of models sporting fashions from the 1950s, Amsterdam-based artist Hinke Schreuders applies a rich layer of hand-stitched embroidery, beading, lace, and flourishes of ink to entirely new images that can be both unsettling and exuberant. The pieces seen here are part of an ongoing series called Works on Paper, started in 2008. With her work Schreuders says she seeks to “subtly confuse notions of feminine vulnerability and reinforce the position of embroidery as an artistic medium,” something I think we can all agree she has done masterfully. More