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I don't normally shoot someone else's art but this was so dynamic I couldn't resist. This was one of a series of sculptures seen at the Bluff area of Chattanooga. I regret I don't know the artist's name.
"The Rite of Spring (7)" inspired by Pina Bausch
The Rite Of Spring
18.9.2014 - 25.10.2014
Cafe Hegelhof
Johannesgasse 16
1010 Vienna
#contemporary #dance #photomanipulation #digiart by @peter_seelig
digital/rtp/matt Kodak Endura ulta
50 x 40 cm
limited edition
"Art reveals who we are and who we long to be."- Erwin McManus ☆HOLIDAY SALE 50% OFF! ♤♡♧◇ 》 etsy.me/2PtWMCD
Recently purchased a Splash Art kit from the UK and having all sorts of fun with it. Still getting my head around flash sync speeds and the controls but definitely a good investment for those rainy days and clear sky weekends. :)
"It isn't sufficient to want, you have to ask yourself what you are going to do to get the things you want."-R Rosen
ART SHOP: etsy.me/2fnjLA9
This is one of the sculptures in the sculpture garden at the Museum of Arts and Sciences in Daytona Beach. I have taken many shots of these sculptures and find the work fascinating. I believe they were done using real people and casts of them. The sculptures are "embedded" into columns, and show various body parts as if they are coming out of the blocks. The faces and bodies are of 4 different young people- 2 women and 2 men.
Judy's Hand...
This is a 7-ton, 21-foot-high sculpture of a hand on the plaza just the east of the Museum of Contemporary Art Cleveland (MOCA). Chicago artist Tony Tasset created the sculpture from a cast of his wife's hand for the 2018 FRONT International Cleveland Triennial art exhibition. The piece was co-commissioned by Case Western Reserve and is a permanent installation.
Two decorative umbrellas combined in one photo.
Taken at the Mariposa Market in Orillia - www.mariposamarket.ca/
abstract digital art:
all elements of this image were created by me
I've had an idea about painting on canvas and then using a needle to poke through the canvas and add threads to the image. It's fun to try it digitally to see what it might look like. My idea was to have the threads all hang vertically and be lose at the bottom. It seems that horizontal threads would either have to be stretched straight across the canvas or hang in lose arcs unless I stitch in and out of the canvas to made them wavy. Or perhaps I can have the threads cross over each other, so it is impossible to tell which thread is which.
October 19, 2018: I've finally gotten around to woking on a handmade work based on this image. It is actually quite different in color, composition and even in the shape of the canvas (square). Once it is completed, I'll take a photo and post it, then add a link to it here. It will probably take me a few more days to complete it.
See another recent work I created using thread:
www.flickr.com/photos/cj_proartz/44582639434/in/dateposte...