Friday, December 19, 2014

10 Awesome Stairs Street Art

Street art is visual art created in public locations. Those public locations can be walls, streets, pavements and even stairs. Check out these Awesome Stairs Street Art, and there is surely something which can inspire you.
























Monday, December 15, 2014

Watercolor Paintings by Baby Clown Art








At first glance, these paintings look normal, but if you see deeper through a different perspective, then it all becomes very interesting. Ziluo Xie, or Baby Clown Art, as how this artist want to be known, use the watercolor medium in most of her paintings. Based in Beijing - China, she was able to provide a high level of detail in her tiny-sized paintings. Even more, you can always see the emotion in each of her works... just perfect! http://instagram.com/babyclown_art

Tuesday, November 4, 2014

Gravity-Defying Stone Balancing Art By Michael Grab




Canada-born and Colorado-based artist and photographer Michael Grab is a master of stone balancing. Perhaps magician’s a better word for it, actually, as it’s difficult to comprehend how he could have created his graceful works of balance art.
Fortunately, Grab’s videos shows the artist engage in the meditative process behind these works of art, which require enormous amounts of patience and care.
Over the past few years of practicing rock balance, simple curiosity has evolved into therapeutic ritual, ultimately nurturing meditative presence, mental well-being, and artistry of design,” writes Grab on his artist statement. “Alongside the art, setting rocks into balance has also become a way of showing appreciation, offering thanksgiving, and inducing meditation.

More info: gravityglue.com Facebook | Vimeo Twitter














Monday, October 20, 2014

PROFILE: Michael Zavros


Michael Zavros (b.1974) is a leading Australian artist. His work has been exhibited in major museums throughout Australia, New Zealand, Asia and Europe.

Michael Zavros graduated from Queensland College of Art with a Bachelor of Visual Arts in 1996.
In 2012 Michael Zavros was awarded the inaugural Bulgari Art Award through the Art Gallery of New South Wales. In 2010 he was awarded the Doug Moran National Portrait Prize, the world’s richest prize for portraiture. He has won three major Australian drawing prizes: the 2002 Jacaranda Acquisitive Drawing Award, the 2005 Robert Jacks Drawing Prize and the 2007 Kedumba Drawing Award, and has been a multiple Archibald Prize finalist. He was the recipient of the 2004 MCA Primavera Collex Art Award.

Zavros’s international exhibitions include Selectively Revealed, an Asialink and Experimenta Media Arts exhibition that toured to Korea, Indonesia and Thailand in 2011/2012, New Nature at Govett Brewster Gallery, New Zealand in 2007, Uncanny (the unnaturally strange), Artspace, Auckland, New Zealand and Quiet Collision: Current Practice/Australian Style, Associazione ViaFarini, Milan, Italy 2003.
Zavros’s selected Australian group exhibitions include Wilderness at the Art Gallery of New South Wales, 2010, Scott Redford Vs Michael Zavros at the Institute of Modern Art, 2010, Contemporary Australia: Optimism at the Gallery of Modern Art, Brisbane, 2008, and Primavera at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney 2000.
Solo exhibitions include Bad Dad at Starkwhite,
Auckland, 2014, A Private Collection: Artist Choice, Queensland Art Gallery of Modern Art, The Prince, Rockhampton Art Gallery and Griffith University Art Gallery, The Good Son: Works on Paper, a survey exhibition in 2009 at Gold Coast City Art Gallery Everything I wanted at the Institute of Modern Art, Brisbane in 2003/2004 and Egoiste at Wollongong Regional Gallery, 2007.
 



Zavros has been the recipient of several international residencies including the Australia Council Greene Street Studio, New York, 2014 Milan studio residency in 2001, and the Barcelona studio in both 2005 and 2010. In 2003 he was awarded a Cite International des Arts Residency in Paris through the Power Institute, University of Sydney. In 2004 he was awarded a studio residency at the Gunnery Studios, Sydney, from the NSW Ministry for the Arts.
In 2013 he was commissioned by the Australian War Memorial to paint a portrait of Victoria Cross winner Ben Roberts-Smith. He served on the Visual Arts Board of the Australia Council for the Arts between 2007 and 2011 and currently serves on the National Association for the Visual Arts (NAVA) board.

His work is held in numerous private and public collections, including The National Gallery of Australia, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Queensland Art Gallery, University of Queensland Art Museum, Artbank, National Portrait Gallery, Collex, ABN AMRO, Griffith University Art Collection, Gold Coast City Art Gallery, Grafton Regional Art Gallery, Newcastle Region Art Gallery, Tweed River Art Gallery, Wollongong City Art Gallery and Tasmanian Museum and Gallery.




Friday, October 17, 2014

Designer Turns Real Flower Petals Into Fashion Illustrations



Grace Ciao is a 22-year-old artist from Singapore who uses a unique style in her fashion illustrations. Instead of using watercolours, ink, fabric, or other conventional means, she preserves the beauty of dying flower petals by transforming them into clothing sketches. This way, the petals become not only gorgeous substitutes for lines, curves, and colours, but also become a source of inspiration themselves, introducing new kinds of forms and textures to her clothing designs.
Although she was interested in fashion design since she was a little girl, Ciao only recently came up with the idea of using flower petals in her work. The thought came to her when she wanted to preserve the beauty of a dying rose that she got from a boy. The discovery helped her realize the aesthetic and artistic advantages of this original use of petals.
They help me create prints which I otherwise couldn’t have thought of,” Ciao told Buzzfeed. “I think petals work really well for illustration also because their delicacy and exquisiteness mimic those of a soft fabric.
Ciao currently studies at business school, but she constantly works on new fashion illustrations as a freelancer, creating designs for everyday clothing, bridal wear, and haute couture.
Also see the plant artworks of Elżbieta Wodała which are similar in style with these beautiful designs.

Source: graceciao.com | Instagram (via)













Thursday, October 16, 2014

Colored Drawings By Young Artist Dino Tomic




Norway based artist Dino Tomic  was born in Croatia 1988, he is a young Croatian tattoo artist who creates beautiful hyper realistic drawings which are a must see for you guys.After high school he started college in Notodden / Telemark where he got his Bachelor degree as faglæarer in arts and crafts. Tomic explores a broad range of stylistics drawings on sci-fi, fantasy, horror, and other fictional themes to fuel his work, but not without realistic animal and people as well.

Dino Tomic Says “While you do that you create your own style. You learn a thing from one artist and something else from someone else.” Tomic also adds one more inspiring thought: “Pablo Picasso says it all: All children are artists. The problem is how to remain an artist once he grows up.”