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I've re-started an idea that I've had for a long time and started a series; transforming lomographic photographs from our community into paintings! I've been doing some write ups because I thought they deserved some explanation. Read more about it after the break!
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The first installment of this two part series: On the Other Side I, featured self portraits shot by photographers. The second chapter is dedicated to those artists well known and less well known, who used paint not film to depict themselves.
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Mark Rothko was a Russian-American painter known for his abstract expressionist paintings. His works are currently displayed at the Whitechapel Gallery in London. Learn more details about the exhibit after the break.
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Korean artist Nu Ryu creates some of the most whimsical paintings on canvas. The fanciful elements found on his artwork create another world for viewers. See some images and learn more about the inspiration behind them after the break.
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I've re-started an idea that I've had for a long time; transforming lomographic photographs from our community into paintings! I did my first painting almost a year ago, but I thought it deserved some explanation. Read more about it after the break!
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What do Sandro Botticelli and Naomi Campbell have in common? If you’re thinking the answer is nothing then I'm afraid you’re wrong. But you can easily find out what it is after the jump.
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To interpret paintings of people, viewers often focus on the facial expressions to look for emotions, clues, and possible stories. Interestingly, a Japanese collage artist and illustrator centered his art not on the human emotions, but on his aesthetic sense alone to create a series of portraits which he calls "Broken Faces." Read more about it after the jump.
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This year marks the 15th anniversary of ArtPalmBeach. Considered as one of the biggest art fairs in Florida, the fair offers special exhibitions, art performances and lectures. Learn more about the ArtPalmBeach after the break.
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“Painting, for me is an activity I need to get involved in, that has a total effect -- not just a conceptual but an overall physical experience.” - Isabelle Borg
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At first glance, one would think that Naoto Hattori’s paintings were created digitally. When inspected up close, you can see that his work is actually created with acrylic paint. Learn more after the break.
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Recently, Art..e Gallery hosted a series of intimate new works by Austin Camilleri, one of Malta’s leading contemporary artists. Read more about these new artworks by the international artist after the jump!
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No, I bet this isn't anything like the three-dimensional paintings or chalk art that you've seen before. What Japanese artist Riusuke Fukahori makes looks so lifelike, it won't only beguile your eyes, but maybe even trick you into finding out if it will move at the slightest touch.
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Japanese artists are known for their unique and often highly surreal masterpieces that both challenge the mind and call for a vivid imagination. Take a look at the compelling works of Matsui Fuyuko and see if it draws you to her solo exhibition.
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Kawanabe Kyosai was a renowned Japanese artist known for his dark paintings. View some of his commissioned works after the break.
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With autumn nights coming sooner in the day, the Lomography Gallery Store LA taught local Lomographers an essential photo technique for cool photos even in the darkest situations: Light Painting!!
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There are way too many things you can do with your Lomography cameras at night. This Thursday's darkness will be dedicated to the art of light painting... one of the most interesting and wild things you can do in the dark with an open shutter.
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Lucian Freud, one of the greatest, most influential British painters of our time has died at the age of 88. Get to know him a little better through text and images.
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On Friday July 22nd New York was experiencing one of its worst heat waves all summer. What a perfect night for some Libationary Light Painting at Greenwich Village!
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This workshop is just like our usual light painting workshop…but with a twist!
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Modernists will agree that anything – or anyone – that had to do with the Bauhaus is commemorable. And so we do this today, with the recent death of Bauhaus painter and photographer T. Lux Feininger.