View allAll Photos Tagged canvas
A test canvas for a photography art show I am mounting for 2020.
Canvas Wrap, 20"x20", Square.
Shameless plug... but generating this image was hell, technically. The whole process has been hell frankly.
Le Temple Neuf - Metz - Lorraine
A wonderful afternoon with a sublte light that comes a the right moment ...
I just love that city !!!
My own sentiment.
The fifth painting inspired by Christy Tomlinson's amazing She Art-class! I'll probably keep this one, because I really like it!
TFL! :)
9x12 inches, watercolor on canvas
Thanks to Curt Blanchard for the original photo from his trip to Copper Canyon.
I loved the pose and wanted to try it, and I also wanted to try a Fredrixs watercolor canvas that had been sitting unused, I like the canvas, with the muted way the surface accepts color, and how easily color can be lifted. That is, of course a mixed blessing because sometimes the color comes off when I don't intend it to. I evened out some areas like the dark on the right by using a watercolor pencil to lay down pigment without lifting what was underneath.
The idea behind Canvas Ray is to captivate the viewer and allow their minds to focus on and understand the deeper intention and significance of the tattoo. These images reflect the possibility of body modification through art rather than the common equation of tattoos with body mutilation. Light highlights the emotions that are tattooed within the subjects’ skin.
Skin such as a canvas
Yours to mark, scar, decorate
Unusual and one of a kind
Each line a bit of pain
Each curve leaving more splendor
Once sharp lines now faded and dull
Leaving memory to do the work
From the first prick until the last free inch of space
Your skin your canvas
Truly beautiful yours forever to keep
4x5 View Camera
Printed;
Book and double sided mattes produced for project.
If you like my work click the "Follow" button on Flickr.
Other places to see my work rumimume.blogspot.ca/, Google+ google+, twitter
Homebase Mariniersweg 58 t/m 66, Rotterdam
Homebase is een tijdelijke winkel/galerie die zich richt op alle aspecten binnen de street art-cultuur met betaalbare schilderijen, prints en t-shirts.
Met werk van o.a: Last Plak , Oxie Alienski , Oles, Pinwin, Sake, GRRT, Boortorrie, Meer Beer, Stoog,Thor, KBTR, Eelco Virus, Mr June, Joachim (België), FRED (België), Serge Kortenbroek, Doodkonijn, 6of7, Edo Rath, Pop Eye, Nol, Mark Goss (Engeland), Dotsy (Zweden), Ready2Rumbl, Sniek, Andrei van der Spek, Dolle Baas, Rola, Angst, Studio Maky en nog veel meer!
Openingstijden:
maandag en dinsdag gesloten
woensdag 11:00 t/m 18:00
donderdag 11:00 t/m 18:00
vrijdag 11:00 t/m 21:00
zaterdag 11:00 t/m 18:00
zondag 12:00 t/m 17:00
Mariniersweg 58 t/m 66
Rotterdam Homebase
Still using photographs for subject matter and I am trying for faster simplier pared down paintings, maybe could describe them as a bit superficial and decorative.
Acrylic on canvas 700mm x 600mm
Wings of Dust: The Cosmic Bat – LDN 43
Soaring silently across the Opiuchus constellation, LDN 43 stretches its cosmic wings against a canvas of starlight. This dark nebula is composed of thick interstellar dust that obscures the background stars, creating the silhouette of what resembles a celestial bat in flight.
But this bat isn’t just made of shadow - within its dark folds, new stars are being born. LDN 43 is part of a complex region of star formation, where gravity pulls dense dust clouds together until nuclear fusion ignites. The surrounding golden and blue hues come from background stars peeking through less-dense patches of dust, subtly illuminating the edges of this celestial phantom.
Explore the high-res version:
Follow my journey through the dark and dusty corners of our galaxy:
Acquisition & Processing:
Luminance: 32×300″ (2h 40′)
Red: 31×300″ (2h 35′)
Green: 30×300″ (2h 30′)
Blue: 33×300″ (2h 45′)
Image captured under varying moon phases, with transparency ranging from 21% to 76%. Processing focused on preserving the soft gradations of dust while gently enhancing color and contrast.
Total Integration: 10h 30′ in LRGB from Telescope.Live (credit).
Copyright: Rod Prazeres Astrophotography