If I was ever into painting, I think I would be a water color person as opposed to oil paints. I just like the look of water colors, how they effortlessly flow together and usually produces a much softer image. This on is done by Shishi Hguyen and is very detailed and has a magical feel to it.
Catherine Yao - GDS273
Sunday, December 7, 2014
Erwin Kho
Erwin Kho, the artist for this piece, specializes in low polygon 3D illustrations, which is something I have not seen much of. I like the color pallet for this one and the rough quality of the whole thing really makes it look interesting. It's like trying to decide whether to be a full 3D image or just an illustration (if that makes any sense).
Nina Geometrieva
I absolutely love the color palette used for this piece by Nina Geometrieva. I also like the use of flat shapes and the subtle glow set around everything. The diagonal lines really make the piece more dynamic.
Antonia Aleksandrova
This piece by Antonia Aleksandrova I find very captivating. The flowing hair and bodies are just done with simple and rough strokes. The faces look almost realistic and I like the hard lines between light and shadow reflecting off of them.
Collaborating with a 4 year-old
I remember reading about this a while ago and I found it really interesting. Mica Angela Hendricks, who is an illustrator, allows her daughter to draw the bodies of the heads she creates. The result is something that looks surreal due to the contrast between the realistic detailed heads and child-drawn bodies.
Poppies
This is such a beautiful infograph. When you first look at it, it just looks like some poppies swaying in the wind. But here is the description of the graph:
The remembrance poppy commemorates soldiers who have died in war. Each poppy in the diagram depicts a war of the last century (with more than 10,000 deaths). The stem grows from the year when the war started. The poppy flowers in the year the war ended. Its size shows the number of deaths.
The information is quite sad, but the artist as managed to make the information beautiful.
Thursday, October 9, 2014
Introspection
This watercolor(?) print reminds me of my festival poster in terms of the same idea of a girl's hair disintegrating into something else. Obviously this is much more elaborate. I really like the use of watercolor because it really works well with the space/nebula theme. I also like how it goes from cool toned to a warm tone, like she is escaping to a better place. The motion of the bird is also well done because the sequence really shows one bird in motion as opposed to multiple birds.
- Catherine
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