Source: frombudapestwithlove
What makes a work of art ‘good’ for you is not something that is already ‘inside’ it, but something that happens inside you.
(via explore-blog)
Cui Fei - Read by Touch, 2005-6
this is the second of two pieces i recently created based on another series of images i made years ago ( http://goo.gl/6ZTLv ). it’s computer generated starting with adobe illustrator and is then layered in photoshop with scanned textures. working in this way allows me a degree of control over the image while still being open to random happenstance.
Source: killthecurator
this is one of two pieces i recently created based on another series of images i made years ago ( http://goo.gl/6ZTLv ). it’s computer generated starting with adobe illustrator and is then layered in photoshop with scanned textures. working in this way allows me a degree of control over the image while still being open to random happenstance.
life:
Today we present 40 portraits that help us see the human beings behind some of the 20th century’s most vital works of art.
Pictured: Roy Lichtenstein, 1963
(John Loengard—Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images)
As iconic as an artwork might be, how often can you picture the artist who created it? This slideshow from LIFE helps to do just that. Enjoy!
Source: life
just wrapped this image up…i call it “black woman 3” and it’s another in the series of digital art portrait pieces i’ve been working on lately.
Cy Twombly - Scenes from an Ideal Marriage (1986) - Acrylic and pencil on paper
(via whatwhokthannah)
Source: likeafieldmouse
Paul Klee (German, born Switzerland, 1879-1940), Head (As It Were a Portrait), 1924, oil and gouache on paper, 375 x 283 mm.
(via bobsolomon)
Source: le-desir-de-lautre








