View allAll Photos Tagged geometricabstract
This is detail from a wall of fabric bolts. I duplicated and flopped the photo then combined the two mirror-image halves to create this abstract. This was taken in the fashion district in downtown Los Angeles.
'Manly cubes of color': finally prints just as it should in this swatch on faux suede printed by Spoonflower.
Manly cubes of color in reds, reddish browns and blues and yellows with chartreuse hints. Chalk on canvas. © Su Schaefer 2012
Color check: The thread in the picture is Gutermann polyester col. 46 (deep red).
[Manly cubes of color Faux suede swatch IMG_5384]
Most of the Getty Museum in Brentwood is white: white beams, white floor tiles, white cladding on the exteriors. Without bold blocks of color the eye is drawn to more subtle patches of light and shadow and the patterns created by tile seams or structural angles.
A kaleidoscope view of the City National Bank Building (née Arco Tower) in downtown Los Angeles
In the largest size, you can see minor details inside some of the office windows.
This is part of an escalator lobby in the underground shops at 505 South Flower Street (formerly known as Arco Plaza) in downtown L.A. The walls are covered on both sides in mirrored panels alternating with blue glazed tiles on one wall and green on the other. From some angles the reflections run off into infinity. I boosted the saturation a little bit here but the tiles are vividly colored in real life. The stainless steel of the escalators, which are seen here reflected in the mirrors, are lit by some sort of incandescent lighting because they appear orange-gold to the camera. Those are normally silver, of course, and it's only the lighting that creates the gold tone.
Although much of the underground area was remodeled a few years ago, this portion dates back to at least the 80s and maybe earlier. The two towers were built in 1972.
Seed Beads and Sequins embroidered on canvas. 2023. Professionally matted and framed in blond wood edge frame with UV glass, 23" x 23".
see detail view: www.flickr.com/photos/dembicer/52784188545
500 Recycled community sourced plastic white caps, sequins, beads, and stitched construction mounted on canvas, 11" x 11" x 3", 2023
see Side View: www.flickr.com/photos/dembicer/52727047512
Close crop of the City National Bank Building in downtown L.A.
Around 8:30 in the morning the sun catches the inside edge of the window frames on the twin skyscrapers and makes an interesting repeating pattern. It's a pretty boring-looking building otherwise.
Ilya Bolotowsky, Russian/American (1907 - 1981)
Ілля БОЛОТОВСЬКИЙ • Илья БОЛОТОВСКИЙ
Oval Composition in Reds and Blues
ca, 1971
6 Color Serigraph on Heavy Paper
Bears Publishers embossed stamp.
Paper Size: 35” x 26”
Image Size: 28" x 17"
Signature in lower right and numbered 88/125 in lower left.
Acquired at DuMouchelles Auction House in Detroit, Michigan, USA - Summer 2012
Ilya Bolotowsky was a mid 20th century artist who was influenced greatly by the De Stijl and Neoplasticism movement set into place by artists like Piet Mondrian, Theo Van Doesburg, Bart Van Der Leck and Fritz Glarner. Mainly defined by vertical and horizontal lines and primary colors. This movement is central to my art collection - which has the theme: De Stijl, Neoplasticism and its contemporary influences.
As always, I'm at www.brycehudson.com - stop by - say hi!
Modern Chair at the Reykjavik Museum of Photography in July 2009. I did not sit in the chair but just by looks alone it seemed more stylish than comfortable.
Check out the wild and wavy balconies on this building on Columbus Drive in Chicago. It was just finishing construction in mid-February.
2011 (#2)
Acrylic and Oil on Arches Water Color Paper
22" x 30"
2011
All of the recent paintings in a collection are here:
Geometric Abstraction by Bryce Hudson on Flickr
My website with all of the work in all media is at:
Come and join me on Facebook - I love connecting with other artists and art/design enthusiasts!:
I am very much influenced by geometric abstraction and the Neoplasticism movement from the early and mid 20th century.
I was playing with the abstracts shapes from a previously unposted shot of the Westin Bonaventure Hotel in downtown Los Angeles.
This is an intersection of two elevated walkways and one of the four large cylindrical cores that surround the building's central tower.
Third in a series of mirrored-image views of a building in the Jewelry District in downtown Los Angeles
This one is not in false color and my favorite because of the variation in light , dark and color.
You can also see a cropped view of the building without all of the kaleidoscopic processing.
17 x 28
Fluid acrylics on canvas
2015
You can see more of my paintings at my blog, Exploring Geometric Abstraction.
2011 (#10)
Acrylic and Oil on Arches Water Color Paper
22" x 30"
2011
All of the recent paintings in a collection are here:
Geometric Abstraction by Bryce Hudson on Flickr
My website with all of the work in all media is at:
Come and join me on Facebook - I love connecting with other artists and art/design enthusiasts!:
I am very much influenced by geometric abstraction and the Neoplasticism movement from the early and mid 20th century.
This is the outside wall of the public restrooms at the East L.A. Civic Center. I've seen color calibration tests for computer monitors that resemble this.