View allAll Photos Tagged Studio
Title: 130x97 Work
Materials: Synthetic enamel and pieces of wood on panel
Size: 130 x 97 cm
Date: 2021
Title: 160x160 Work
Materials: Oil on canvas
Size: 160 x 160 cm
Date: 2019
Title: 119x89 Work
Materials: Synthetic enamel and pieces of wood on panel
Size: 119 x 89 x 10 cm
Date: 2021
Title: 119x89 Work
Materials: Synthetic enamel and pieces of wood on panel
Size: 119 x 89 x 15 cm
Date: 2021
J. Barrie Robinson was a teacher in Hull. This is a supplement from my copy of 'The Studio' Dec 1913 and had a write up in their section called Art School Notes.
'M. J Barrie Robinson is one of a small band of workers at the Kingston-upon-Hull Municipal School of Art who have been attracted by the modern revival of earlier reproductive arts, and in the accompanying illiustrations some results of his experiments in the manner of the early woodblock printers are shown. Always a close student of nature, he of necessity at first interpreted her chiefly in her simpler moods, making the most of the technical advantages offered by the silhouette. With increased power of expression, however, greater subtleties of tones have ensued, as in the evening dock scene at Hull, and this development no doubt heralds a still wider range of expression including colour. Mr. Robinson was very successfyulwith his prints in the last National Competition though he had only taken up wood engraving a short time previously, and had only the spare time left over from his occupation as a school teacher to pursue his art studies'
I bet he was well chuffed with that!
Image size 7inch x 5inch
A famous recording studio, best known as the site of many of Elvis Presley's early recordings. Note the historical marker in front and the guitar on the corner behind the lamppost.
Digitized from film negative
Did you ever wonder what the studio space looks like? Well this is it. I cleared out a space in the garage and that is where I work.
stARTup Studios is the up and coming new Artist Co-op space in Macon, GA. Stop by and learn more about their art classes or just watch artists working in the studio.
This is a shot of my studio. I've been building storage furniture from spare lumber and I've finally attached the printing press to this bench. It's much less cluttered than it used to be.
Recent Studio shoot, edited using a combination of Lightroom and Photoshop CS6.
Single strobe, with fitted soft box from left hand side.
Model - Danny Baker
Please check out my other images and feel free to comment, many thanks
Had to have some sunshine so i moved some of my creative supplies into my oldest daughters bedroom-she has been on her won for a couple years now.
Here's my inspiration board. It's made of wine corks - lots and lots of corks. It was fun to make and a great addition to my studio.
Model: Stephanie Danielson
Stylist: Luann Ottinger
MUA/Hair: Cynthia Servin
Lighting: AB800 back camera right. Gridded AB800 camera left strafing the wall.
This installation by sculptor Tom Burckhardt is formed completely from corrugated cardboard and much black paint. Apparently he experienced some flooding in his studio and that lead him to this piece of sculpture in which everything is upside down. It is a walk through piece and this is just a book case that as you can see the water is on top and half covering a row of books . Somehow this seems relevant to the large hurricane that is crossing Florida into Georgia as as I write this. An interesting selection of book titles-how many have you read. Below is a bit of further explanation excerpted from a review of an installation in New York City last year.
The radical twist here is that this to-scale structure, with its pieced-together yet exquisitely detailed walls, ceiling, floor, bathroom, windows, shelves, tubes and jars of paint, black paintings, coffee cans, books, tools, and sundry other items —all the usual stuff of an artist’s lair, and all fashioned from cardboard by hand —is an overturned artist’s studio. Look through a window into the bathroom. The toilet is high overhead. Look through another window at the city outside. Skyscrapers are upside down, also a car. Look at the rows of books, their handwritten titles on the spines, or the striking, upside-down cardboard skull nestling at the end of a shelf. Look down, and what should be the pressed tin ceiling (demarcated solely by black outlined squares) is now the floor, while what should be the floor is the ceiling, which is covered with swirling and curving, almost cartoonish black marks indicating coursing water. As indicated by the title, this is a studio overwhelmed by a flood.