View allAll Photos Tagged Abstracted
abstracted blue color photograph of an 80s horror movie about a decayed old man with long white hair and hat who lives in a rotten phantom shack in the woods and collects teeth and bones, building a figure of sticks, and a possessed little boy, photorealistic, night, moonlight, unusual perspective, coming out of mirror, lightning, glowing aura, paul mccarthy, maldoror, dark blue color, art photography, creepy, dark, moody, atmospheric, avant garde, experimental, HQ, 4k
Working in the studio this week on another abstracted landscape. Source: Cornish Seascapes- distorted panoramic images - sketched and reduced to minimal linear compositions. Now collaged and ready to start layering mixed media into canvas- all exciting stuff! :)
Abstracted detail of the ASMS (Australian Science and Mathematics School) at the Sturt Precinct of the Flinders University Campus, Adelaide, SA.
Young fronds of Bladder Wrack seaweed (Fucus vesiculosus), standing upright in the sunlight at low tide, Cornwall.
Former Studio Artist Jocelyn Foye, assistant Michelle and dancer Kelly Valignota rehearse Jocelyn's piece "Balley Abstracted" for the upcoming exhibition "Actions, Conversations and Intersections" at the Municipal Gallery of the City of Los Angeles. "Actions, Conversations and Intersections" is co-curated by former AGCC Studio Artist Edith Abeyta
Abstracted color study of gatorade bottles in my kitchen.....plenty of photoshop manipulation in post.
A display in a shop window...captured from an angle and through a glass window. Somerset Mall. Troy, Michigan. November 2015.
Translations is a collaborative work by Tom Burtonwood and Jacob C. Hammes. It has been selected for the inaugural Art Loop Open an art competition in Chicago. Translations is exhibited in the lobby of the Hard Rock Hotel located at 230 N. Michigan. Members of the public are invited to view the piece from October 15th – 29th and vote on it. Translations was first presented at Three Walls as part of their “Chasing Two Rabbits” program in Winter 2010.
Art Loop Open: www.artloopopen.com/artists/tom-burtonwood-jacob-c-hammes
Translations on Vimeo: vimeo.com/10750465
About the video:
Contained within our unique animal identity is a strong desire to witness and experience symmetry, a desire informed by an overwhelming lack of its immediate presence in our waking lives. Symmetry and uniformity are present in the video collaboration between Burtonwood and Hammes, abstracted in terms of geometry and pure tones. Folding cubes and squares are accompanied by modulated, warbling sine waves and occasional bursts of distorted guttural voices, suggesting a human presence in a world of pure geometric and sonic abstraction.
Tom Burtonwood is an artist originally from the UK living and working in Oak Park, IL. He is interested in an array of subjects and issues relating to image making, ubiquitous technology and interactive objects. Currently he is working on a series of modular color studies relating to the video game Tetris. Recent exhibitions include The Center for Book and Paper Arts, Columbia College, Chicago; Three Walls, Chicago; Fountain, Brooklyn; Apex Art, New York. Burtonwood teaches at Columbia College and the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.
Jacob C Hammes is a Chicago based interdisciplinary artist whose range of projects investigate the strained relationships and sites of interaction between humans and the natural world. Hammes is primarily interested in emphasizing the disconnection between the desire to emulate nature and our ability to understand it. Primarily using sculpture, digital media, and hypnosis, Hammes attempts to reveal the struggle to connect with our own animal identity.
Hammes has exhibited and performed extensively throughout the midwest and internationally. Hammes' work and various projects have been reviewed in publications such as Art Papers, Proximity Magazine, and the Leonardo Music journal.
One of a photo collection taken at the Pima Air & Space Museum in Tucson, Ariznoa. They have an amazing collection, and a friendly and knowledgeable staff. We had a great day there with the whole family. The kids love it… and so do the grown-ups. I had not been since I was a child… anyway. I hope you enjoy the image.
Reynolda Gardens in Reynolda Village, Winston-Salem, NC. Played around with contrast and color saturation using Microsoft Picture Manager.
window curtain curtains net shadows shadow blowing sunlight contrast hidden hiding abstract abstracted through open mystery ed hopper hopperesque
I like this completely abstracted picture because I can, perhaps
Rorschach test fashion, read all sorts of things into it. I see a
woman, with a low-cut gown and high hair, leaning back in pleasure or
horror as a devilish character, a vampire perhaps, leans into her
decolletage. A teddy-bear-like angel (or imp?) hovers in the upper
left corner. Flames lick up from the underworld.
"Yeah, yeah," you say?
This is one of the images I found on the roll of Fuji 120 film that a
friend found in her backyard. I got it developed because she was
afraid of what might have been on it. Who knows what camera it was
shot in, except that it was 6x6cm format.
EDIT, 3 Aug 2012: After posting these pictures, I heard back from my friend. The pictures made her realise she had not given me the roll from over the fence, but rather a roll that had been kicking around in her house for 35 years. She could date it fairly well by the pictures of her then boyfriend and her pet cat which died in 1978.