FACELESS PAINTINGS OF MARK KOSTABI

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Mark Kostabi is an American artist and composer best known for his paintings of faceless mannequin-like figures, often set in surrealistic landscapes or scenes from art history. His work explores a variety of themes, including suicide, love, and the role of technology in the modern world. The artist is commonly associated with his painting Use Your Illusion, which was the cover art for Guns N’ Roses’s album of the same name. Born on November 27, 1960 in Los Angeles, CA to Estonian immigrants, he studied art at California State University in Fullerton before moving to New York in 1982. During the mid-1980’s, Kostabi was an active participant in the East Village cultural scene, and became well known in the area for publishing self-interviews. Over the course of his career, the artist has cultivated a controversial media persona after claiming credit for works that were designed and executed by his assistants. Kostabi’s works are in the collections of the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., the Princeton University Art Museum, The Museum of Modern Art in New York, and the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York, among others. He currently divides his time between New York, NY and Rome, Italy.

SOURCE:http://www.artnet.com/artists/mark-kostabi/

AMY JUDD’S MYTHOLOGICAL ART PIECES

London based painter Amy Judd paints collection’s of sensitive silent moments; some full of whimsical intrigue, others more surreal and seductive. These paintings draw inspiration from the enchanting and imaginative relationship between women and nature found in traditional mythologies and folklores.

The composition, light and positioning of the subject, creates curious images, which conjure up new “mythological” narratives or creatures within the paintings. A recurring theme is the use of Feathers as armour, and birds as familiars. The more surreal nude compositions are bold and strong, the feathers allude to strength, flight and bravery, rather than fragility.

However the paintings depicting women with birds (owls) have a calmer atmosphere, the use of negative space in the image lets the viewer breathe, the clothes worn by the figures and the muted colour palette create a nostalgic dream like feel to the paintings.

Amy Judd has looked to Chinese mythology for some of her latest works. ‘Huli Jing seduction’ takes its inspiration from stories written in the 18th century by Pu Songling and translates as ‘Fox Spirit’. The fox spirits encountered in these tales are usually females and appear as young, beautiful women. Typically fox spirits were seen as dangerous, but some of the stories in Pu’s Liaozhai Zhiyi are love stories between a fox appearing as a beautiful girl and a young human male.

PAUL BOND’S MAGICAL SURREAL ART PIECES 

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Paul Bond’s art lives in the spaces between dreaming and reality. Drawing from the Latin American genre of Magic Realism where symbolic, surreal and fantastic elements blend with realistic atmospheres, they unveil a world where anything is possible. Bond shares the following about his work:

“When viewing a scene, object or line in a novel that moves me, my mind’s eye is continually imagining what elements I could introduce or alter to make a grander statement about what I am experiencing. The physical world to me is heartbreakingly beautiful and profound. And the best way I can know how to channel those deep emotions life inspires in me is by adding to it through a world of my own creation. A world intended to both deepen my own life experience and to stir the souls of my fellow travelers.”

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JACEK YERKA’S SURREALISM

Jacek was born in Torun, Northern Poland, and both his mother and father were students of the local Fine Arts Academy. His earliest memories are of the smell of paints, which were a part of his childhood. His father was the source of imaginative ideas, and his mother made them work through artistic means. Yerka’s paternal grandmother was his source of play and awareness of nature, while his parents were busy creating his awareness of the artistic world.

In an attempt to choose a different path than his parents, Jacek was going to attend college to study astronomy or medicine initially, but before taking the entrance exams, he turned to painting.
Jacek initially tried to develop contemporary painting styles from impressionism to abstraction. He found himself fascinated with colors, and therefore with artists such as Cezanne and Paul Klee. The fifteenth century artists and Dutch tablet paintings were also a great influence in his painting evolution. Artists such as Hieronymus Bosch and Jan van Eyck were great inspirations to Yerka. Jacek attended the Faculty of Fine Arts at Nicolaus Copernicus University in Torun, and found himself also interested in graphic design.
Yerka was able to create clear and interesting messages, and enjoyed success on local and international levels as a poster designer. In 1972, his first poster won a prize, and he created many more successful posters before graduation. In 1980, Yerka painted exclusively, and fulfilled many commissioned works of art. In 1996, he added pastels to his typically acrylic works. Pastels are used before finally applying acrylic paints. His art is filled with vivid color, and is rich with imagination. The central figures in his art consist of trees, towns, houses, and water. Imagination is used to change the natural places of objects. Mountains may become waves, or rivers may run upwards. Yerka believes that nature is the determining force in human existence. His Flemish technique, sharply-focused acrylic application, and surreal placement of subjects make his style reminiscent of others, yet very unique as well.
He has named himself the Surrealist Cagliostro, yet his imagination is all his own, to continue to produce stimulating art.

SOURCE:http://totallyhistory.com/jacek-yerka/

REMEDIOS VARO’S SURREALISM

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Remedios Varo Uranga, one of the world famous para-surrealist painters of the 20th Century, was born in 1908 in a small town called Angles in the province of Girona in Spain. Her unique art was a result of her upbringing and socialization in a world of art and philosophy, her life struggles as well as her amazing imagination.

Her father, Rodrigo Varo was an intellectual man who was very instrumental in mentoring Remedios from her early age to develop her artistic career. At a very tender age, Rodrigo helped her daughter develop the abilities of technical drawing. He also encouraged Remedios to become an independent thinker. He introduced Remedios to science and fiction by buying her adventure and science books. Her mother, though indirectly, contributed to the artistic development of Remedios. Her mother, Ignacia Uranga, was a devout Catholic and was determined to taking her daughter to a convent school. It was precisely because of this that Remedios developed a critical opinion of religion and opposed religious ideology. Her father encouraged Remedios’ early philosophical thinking. Remedios ended up embracing a Universalist and liberal ideals.

These moves exposed Remedios to various cultures and widened her world view and this was to later reflect in her art. In 1923, when she was a student at the School of arts in Madrid, Remedios made her first work of art. She painted her portrait as well as that of her family. In 1924, she joined the best school of arts in Madrid, San Fernando Fine Arts Academy, where she graduated with a drawing teacher diploma in 1930. It was in this academy that she was introduced to surrealism, a cultural movement and philosophy that encouraged capturing of the real functionality of the human thought, without controls like reason and morality. The surrealist artwork was used to express the philosophical movement.

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Remedios was not only a surrealist but also an anarchist. She believed that the state was an unnecessary evil that opposed the conduct of human relations. Her philosophical thought of the state could have been a result of her experience in Europe. This philosophy was also reflected in her isolationist art style. Feminism was another school of thought that influenced the art style of Remedios. At the time when she was a surrealist painter, the male surrealist did not see their female counterparts as talented. Tis created an environment where female artists were isolated. The misconceived talents of the women were reflected in her art as images of sad women in isolated and confined places. This was her way of responding to the feminine injustices in the world of art at the time.

Her art style was unique, described by others as disturbing. She captured the feature of surprise in her art as well as unexpected juxtapositions. Her surrealist unique brand captured the captivity of a true woman of the 20th Century. She used solitary and mystical characters involved in scientific activities. This was inspired to a large extent by the scientific indulgence of her father at an early age. She used imagination and the concept of magic in her art. She used androgynous characters that mimic her physical features. Facial features such as large eyes, an aquiline nose and heart-shaped faces are common in her art and resemble her own facial features.

The art also used autobiographical characters that seemed to be held by unknown forces. This was a response to female marginalization in the art world because it exposed the superiority complex of the male surrealist artists. What is also common in her art is use of mythical creatures, alchemy, misty swirls and utopian vehicles that can go through land, air and water with sails, gears and transmissions responding to superior energy. The unusual attitude of her art reflects passive, contemplative, instability and symbolism. Those who look close enough at her work of art can capture and appreciate this amazing imagination.

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SOURCE: http://totallyhistory.com/remedios-varo/

SENSUAL PAINTER FRANCINE VAN HOVE

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Francine Van Hove draws and paints young women. Her models participate search together with the artist the best poses that they must hold for hours. Preparatory drawing sessions enable the painter to capture the casual gesture as well as its graphic and sculptural qualities.

Under an apparent simplicity, her everyday life scenes keep a kind of mystery. In a safe place, unconscious or unconcerned by their own beauty, young girls let themselves enjoy laziness or everyday pleasures: reading, having tea, daydreaming or sleeping. Sometimes pensive, other times melancholic, they forbid us the access to their inner life and stay in a way elusive. Francine Van Hove’s work reflects a feeling of impossibility of communication and a saving loneliness, as a retreat deliberately chosen to be protected from the noise of the world.

Influenced by Greek sculpture, Flemish painting and the Italian Renaissance, Francine Van Hove seeks to perpetuate the classical tradition of painting: her refined work brings a sensation of wonder through the play of light, the rendering of the textures and the richness of details. Her skillfully modelled bodies impose a dreamy harmony through the perfection of their confident gestures.

FRANCINE VAN HOVE YOUTUBE VIDEO

BIOGRAPHY :

http://www.artsper.com/en/contemporary-artists/france/3382/francine-van-hove

23 YEAR OLD FREELANCE ILLUSTRATOR AND DESIGNER ;ANNYA KARINA MARTTINEN

She is from Canada but currently reside in Southern Ontario. Annya received her diploma in graphic design in 2013 but recently she spend most of her time painting & being the bunny mother of Oats, Peaches and Olive. Her work is mainly inspired by quiet everyday moments and vintage fashion. She mainly work in both traditional and digital mediums.
“My life is and has always ceased to be solitary, so a life of dreaming has greatly shaped my work. In this I become inspired by animals, plants, and the beautiful people I see in films. I have always been inspired by classic books and their delicate and intricate descriptions. My surroundings effect me greatly so I try hard to make sure my bedroom from which I work is always clean and filled with inspiration. I simply cannot work or be happy in a messy or dark space! I collect a lot of prints/postcards of my favorite illustrators, mainly Emily Martin. I seem to own so many of her prints! There’s also a lot of old fairytale illustrations from the 18th and 19th centuries on my walls. These eras and subject matter inspire me greatly. I also have a closet full of beautiful vintage items such as night-gowns, silky blouses, midi-skirts, cardigans and so on. They really have inspired me to paint clothing from different eras. My paintings of dreamy girls are, more often than not, in another time period fashion-wise”.

Annya Karina Marttinen

23 YEAR OLD FREELANCE ILLUSTRATOR AND DESIGNER ;ANNYA KARINA MARTTINEN

DEBORAH DEWIT MARCHANT’S ART

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Deborah Dewit was born March 28th,1956 in Portland, Oregon to naturalized Americans. Her father, mother infant brother arrived by ship in 1950 San Pedro , California via South America fron Holland.One side of her father’s family were etchers, illustrators and painters. On her mother’s side of family were Dutch plantation owners and British traders in the the Dutch East . Her father’s career in the gain business took her and her family tol ive in many parts of the U.S and all around the world. This varied and somewhat exotic backgrounded had a strong influence on Deborah’s professional yearnings.At the age of fifteen she found that the camera suited her quest and in her twenties set abour discovering the world with young eyes recording her travels with image and word. Her photographs received immediate praise she began the life of working as a artist in 1976.

BIOGRAPHY OF DEBORAH DEWIT

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