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Fair Rosamund

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I was instantly drawn to this image by Fair Rosamund. I have always felt a strong affinity for deers (though not until my 20′s did I look into the symbolism of deer totem).

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The meanings associated with the deer combine both soft, gentle qualities with strength and determination:

*Gentleness
*Ability to move through life and obstacles with grace
*Being in touch with inner child, innocence
*Being sensitive and intuitive
*Vigilance, ability to change directions quickly
*Magical ability to regenerate, being in touch with life’s mysteries

Isn’t that lovely?

I’m a bit picky about fairy tale inspired art, but I think her creations have an ethereal innocence to them that I cannot help but admire.

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Fair Rosamund


Filed under: art Tagged: art

Troy Brooks

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Troy Brooks’s female subjects are not what we might call “beautiful” in the traditional sense. But these oddly elongated, crystal-eyed ladies are nonetheless compelling to look at.

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Each one seem to be a piece of a story (that writes itself differently for every viewer, no doubt).
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One can’t help but wonder what lies beneath these contemplative faces…what have they seen?
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Troy Brooks


Filed under: art

Liza Corbett

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Liza Corbett’s pieces speak of modern fairy tales untold…

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From the artist statement:

Liza Corbett’s work contemplates The Summer-Land, the spirit world that lays unseen alongside our own. Liza creates visual narratives populated with otherworldly women and animals, under heavy suns low in hazy, wan skies.

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Her subject matter is tinged with the menace of pre-modern life and suffused with an air of melancholy. Influenced by nineteenth-century spiritualism, by Dark Romanticism, by myths, fables and old tales, Liza aims to create images that, like tarot or other methods of divination, suggest a strange and unknowable significance underlying our worldly existence.

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Liza Corbett


Filed under: art Tagged: art

Rose-Lynn Fisher: The Topography of Tears

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The Topography of Tears is a fascinating visual study of tear crystalization under a standard light microscope, exploring the terrains of numerous emotions and forms of lacrimal activity. I want to paste some of the artist’s statement here, to give you her own lens on the work.

Elation:
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The random compositions I find in magnified tears often evoke a sense of place, like aerial views of emotional terrain. Although the empirical nature of tears is a chemistry of water, proteins, minerals, hormones, antibodies and enzymes, the topography of tears is a momentary landscape, transient as the fingerprint of someone in a dream. This series ls like an ephemeral atlas.

Onions:
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Roaming microscopic vistas, I marvel at the visual similarities between micro and macro realms, how the patterning of nature seems so consistent, regardless of scale. Patterns of erosion etched into earth over millions of years may look quite similar to the branched crystalline patterns of an evaporated tear that took less than a minute to occur.

Grief:
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Tears are the medium of our most primal language in moments as unrelenting as death, as basic as hunger, and as complex as a rite of passage. They are the evidence of our inner life overflowing its boundaries, spilling over into consciousness. Wordless and spontaneous, they release us to the possibility of realignment, reunion, catharsis: shedding tears, shedding old skin. It’s as though each one of our tears carries a microcosm of the collective human experience, like one drop of an ocean.

The Topography of Tears


Filed under: art, photography, science Tagged: art, photography, science

Gojin Ishihara

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My friend Stacey linked me to this awesome collection of Japanese monster illustrations by Gojin Ishihara.

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The books came out in the 70′s, designed for kids. I wish my childhood library contained them!
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I think these are some of my favorite vintage Japanese monster illustrations out there
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See more here.


Filed under: art, japan, monsters, retro Tagged: art, japan, monsters, retro

Julianna Menna

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From afar, you might think you’re looking at panels and portraits by one of the old masters.

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But stepping closer you will see that Julianna Menna’s subjects differ ever so slightly from those in classical portraiture…in that they are inhuman and have no flesh.

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Adornments spring from imaginary period costumes, unique yet strangely congruent with something that we…or a vaguely anthropomorphic species…might have invented in another time and place.

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Julianna Menna


Filed under: anthropomorphic, art Tagged: anthropomorphic, art

Michael Halbert

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Michael Halbert has a series of “inventors” that look like antique etchings. I love seeing revivals of this style.

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And enjoy a bonus video of the scratchboard illustration for this great piece for Steamworks Beer:

Michael Halbert


Filed under: art Tagged: art

Alicia Martin Lopez


Camille Rose Garcia: La Danse Macabre

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Roq La Rue now has the latest collection from one of my all time favorite artists Camille Rose Garcia: La Danse Macabre.

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And I must say, she delivers once again with this one!

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Her worlds come alive in the ambiguous ground between a fairy tale and fever dream.

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She makes each of her collections unique with their own distinct color scheme (ah, it was a pink/beach/black that drew me in all those years ago!). I’m definitely digging the royal blue here.
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I LOVE the way she paints hands; delicate, sinister, long bony fingers…
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Camille Rose Garcia
La Danse Macabre

See also: Camille Rose Garcia’s Alice in Wonderland


Filed under: art Tagged: art

Jason de Graaf

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While the whole concept of hyperrealism is to defy the eye in mimicry of real scenery or photographs, I’m nevertheless stunned to see the heights of talent some artists reach in this area. Case in point: Jason de Graaf.

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The exactness of proportion and contour needed to pull off multiple reflective spheres in this kind of work is nothing short of incredible.

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In reference to his work, he states “My paintings are about staging an alternate reality, an illusion of verisimilitude on the painted surface. I try to use objects as a vehicle to express myself, tell a story or least hint at something beyond what is actually painted. Therefore I try to choose objects that have meaning to me or are artifacts from my life.”

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Jason de Graaf
Source


Filed under: art, hyperrealism Tagged: art, hyperrealism

Paul Roustan: The Camouflaged Moth

Adrian Baxter

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Adrian Baxter defines his work as Traditional illustrations, based on life, death, the Universe, the natural world and human philosophy.

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Rich in symbolism, gently calling forth sacred geometry, alchemical principles and the intricacies of nature, each of these pieces has a lot to say.

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Adrian Baxter


Filed under: art Tagged: art

Naoto Hattori: Nothing But Perception

Lukasz Wodynski

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I’ve been staring at Lukasz Wodynski’s Human Light series, admiring his brilliant use of color. The glow he achieves in these flares of luminosity is rather lovely, isn’t it?

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I also find Machinations of Dementia quite moving. Obscured faces manage to convey desperation and sadness…

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See more of his work here.


Filed under: art Tagged: art

Desktop Goodies 4/17

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Welcome to this edition of desktop goodies!
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Would you buy Kellog’s corn flakes after seeing a child in the ad who looks like he’s be propped and posed postmortem?
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Antique “eye massager,” for when your eyes need a little therapeutic squishin’!
Eye Massager.

AXOLOTL in a portrait! (See some axolotl info here, and an artistic interpretation here)
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Don’t mind him…he’s really into that “sitting in a wall” thing.
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The most complete system ever? Really?
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I’m going to give you a great life tip here, folks. So listen up: be sure to set the iron to medium heat so as not to burn your crocodile.
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The world’s most wistful butter substitute:
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You can conveniently sell your sister by placing a check mark in the appropriate box.
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Don’t say it, Dana…don’t say this piece of kitsch is…”corny.” D’OH!
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Filed under: absurd, advertising, antiques, art, food, humor, kitsch, oddities, photography, vintage Tagged: absurd, advertising, antiques, art, food, humor, kitsch, oddities, photography, vintage

Colette Calascione

Adrienne Slane

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My friend Liesje introduced me to the lovely collage work of Adrienne Slane.

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From the artist statement:
I combine images of plants, insects, animals, human anatomy, and religious figures into detailed, colorful collages where individual elements fit together like pieces in a puzzle. Inspired by the history of the curiosity cabinet, the Victorian concept of momento mori, and Christian iconography and ritual, my work celebrates the beauty and interconnectivity of nature while also acknowledging the cyclical aspect of life, death, and decay. My work blends elements of science, myth, and religion into images that pay homage to the past within a contemporary context.

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Needless to say, her entire range of subject matter appeals to me.

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Adrienne Slane


Filed under: art Tagged: art

Meredith Dittmar

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Meredith Dittmar creates amazing 3-dimensional sculptures, showing oddly mechanized creatures and interwoven nature themes.

A couple of them, like this one below, remind me of ancient alchemical art.
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Click images to enlarge.

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From the artist bio:
Dittmar’s human-animal-plant-energy amalgams contain threads of common elements and colors to express deep levels of union across themes of biology, technology, and consciousness . Her characters are frequently involved in quiet expressive moments, or lounge facing their audience so they can share their inner space. Dittmar believes it is this space we recognize in ourselves, and through convening in that space, the interconnectedness of all things is revealed.

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Born near Boston Mass, she grew up in a world of pet pigs, horses, hay-forts and spy games . Follow this with an education in computer science, a career in interactive design, a compulsive need to create, and a drive to Seek and you get the major elements of her person and work.

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I wish these pieces contained a listing of size and materials used. I want to get a sense of what they would look like in person.

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Meredith Dittmar


Filed under: art, craft, sculpture Tagged: art, craft, sculpture

Henry Schreiber

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Henry Schreiber has a marmot obsession. These fuzzy inhabitants of mountainous terrain take on many different roles in Shreiber’s work.

Terminator marmot! (Two words I never thought I’d say together)
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I rather love the fact that he sticks with one beloved creature in a variety of forms, ranging from deadly to regal. Marmots have been drastically underrepresented in the art world.
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What marmot would YOU want to see if you made a request?
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Henry Schreiber


Filed under: art Tagged: art

Tati Suarez

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