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This is the final image of the series. It is my favourite. Doesn't it look like a painting in the style of abstract impressionism?
"Splatter Art" created by someone better than Jackson Pollock...Mother Nature.
Jackson Pollock created his "masterpieces" by running around and dropping paint on a large canvas on the floor. Some of his "art" has sold for millions of dollars, one reportedly for two hundred million dollars. If you like splatter art, Mother Nature creates it for free :-))
If you are not into splatter, click twice on the picture to see the enlargement for detail of the maple leaves and blades of grass.
Seen on a windy day in Elk Rapids, Michigan
This is showing the potential of art, a mono print by Alby Headrick, if interested send email to:
alby@rismr.com
As the night fell on the frozen shore, the trail before me glittered with a strange light. A hint of color in the distance enticed my curiosity. Casting my worries aside, I found its source. At my footsteps, a single leaf. They say a lot can be determined from the life of a single insignificant leaf. Holding the leaf in the fingers of my minds eye, I searched for its story. Reading the ley lines of its texture. Consuming its imprint of time. I found a history that was as endless as the cosmos itself. As if this simple leaf had somehow traveled the heavens. A preposterous notion, i suppose.
Continuing the "Nature on Ice" series. Having fun with more experimentation inspired by the effects of ice, colored light painting and perhaps reading too many issues of The Silver Surfer lately. ;-)
Thanks for the favs and kind compliments. They are much appreciated!
Created by blending various images to create an abstract impression for the SOTN New Absracts challenge
All textures and images are my own
“Hope and Memory have one daughter and her name is Art, and she has built her dwelling far from the desperate field where men hang out their garments upon forked boughs to be banners of battle. O beloved daughter of Hope and Memory, be with me for a while.” ~ W.B. Yeats
Brutalism • Reimagined
Brutalist architecture is one of the most controversial styles of architecture to exist. It’s what people imagine when they think about what a prison looks like, with its cold and imposing exterior. Brutalism is also what people typically picture when they think of government buildings or schools built in the 1950s-1960s.
Brutalist style is known for its heavy, imposing appearance. If there’s one word that can sum up the entirety of brutalism, it’s the word “concrete.” The style came as a response to the sleek and polished Moderne style popular during the early 20th century.
(www.immerse.education/university/what-is-brutalist-archit...)
the universe expands
there's room to breathe
comments off for this one
but I very much apprecaite the quiet company
thank you :-)
Surely, one might think this lonely place,
a frozen wasteland filled with silent echoes.
The myth quietly concluded from illusion of surface.
One simply need only peer inside the texture of ice.
Within crevices and cracks, a strange inner world of life
slowly breathing, beating, swimming and swirling.
For seeds of dissent spring loudly within the frozen shore.
Continuing the "Nature on Ice" series. Having late night fun with more experimentation inspired by the effects of ice, colored light and perhaps my recent efforts into oil painting.
Thanks for the favs and kind compliments. They are much appreciated!
Suprematism is an early twentieth-century art movement focused on the fundamentals of geometry (circles, squares, rectangles, triangles). The term refers to a form of abstract art based on the supremacy of pure artistic expression rather than on a visual or literal depiction of objects. It is entirely subjective and gives room for the artist to present what they think or perceive versus what they may see.