Saturday, August 20, 2016

Hyper Realistic Paintings by Young-Sung KimKorean artist...





















Hyper Realistic Paintings by Young-Sung Kim

Korean artist Young-Sung Kim was born in Seoul in 1973 and graduated from Department of Painting, College of Fine Art, Hongik University.

Through his paintings, Young Sung Kim visually critiques the level at which we place “value” on objects both commercially and ethically. Kim uses contrasting subject matter to illustrate the distinction between the living and the material. It seems that as a society our ideas of how something is valued are intrinsically rooted in commerce. Kim seeks for the viewer to question the meaning and “value” of living creatures in our modern society.

Artist concentrates his exploration of life on small creatures such as snails, frogs, and goldfish. He paints these species resting on man-made objects such as cutlery and glassware. Stay up to date with his work by following him on Twitter.


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posted by Margaret via

nonconcept: The Infinite Bridge, located on the picturesque...





nonconcept:

The Infinite Bridge, located on the picturesque coastal landscape of Aarhus, Denmark by Gjøde & Povlsgaard Arkitekter.


Photographer Cayetano Ferrnadez uses toy dolls to build stories...





















Photographer Cayetano Ferrnadez uses toy dolls to build stories

Spanish artist Cayetano Ferrández prepares scenarios radically minimalist, suitable for a phenomenology of the essential, armed with an illumination of chiaroscuro where light is part of the language that modulates the meanings. The light becomes one means of concealing and revealing, to say without saying, make us also see in the shadows that hide facial features or members of the body / text Enric Mira 


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posted by Margaret

Indoor paintings by Adnate Adnate’s style is technically based...


Indoor paintings by Adnate


Indoor paintings by Adnate


Indoor paintings by Adnate


Indoor paintings by Adnate


Indoor paintings by Adnate


Indoor paintings by Adnate


Indoor paintings by Adnate


Indoor paintings by Adnate

Indoor paintings by Adnate

 Adnate’s style is technically based on the Italian Renaissance painting technique chiaroscuro. He uses acrylic and spray paint and creates a feeling of the harsh yet warm Australian desert. Adnate replicates the Australian landscape in the old eyes of the young aborigine child. It clearly makes reference to The Stolen Generations who were the children of Australian Aboriginal and were removed from their families by the Australian Federal and State government agencies and church missions.

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