Monday, 10 December 2012

Cyril Edward Power.



Cyril Edward Power was born on 17 December 1872 in Redcliffe Street, Chelsea, the eldest child of Edward William Power who encouraged him to draw from an early age. This passion led to him studying architecture and working in his father's office before being awarded the Sloane Medallion by the Royal Institute of British Architects in 1900 for his design for an art school.

Cyril used lino prints in his work to get the desired layered effect. This meant he could build up colours and create an almost 3D effect in his pieces.This made his images look much more professional and not flat. His use of curved lines made his images look more complex than they actually were. this was because it put scale into the pictures making the smaller images at the back look further away.

Pablo Picasso


Pablo Ruiz y Picasso, known as Pablo Picasso ( 25 October 1881 – 8 April 1973), was a Spanish painter, sculptor,printmaker, ceramicist, and stage designer who spent most of his adult life in France. As one of the greatest and most influential artists of the 20th century, he is widely known for co-founding the Cubist movement, the invention of constructed sculpture, the co-invention of collage, and for the wide variety of styles that he helped develop and explore. 
Picasso showed early signs of being an artist, being able to paint realistic images in ihis early childhood and adolescent years.

Thursday, 22 November 2012

Photo Montage-Gustav Klutis.


Max Ernst was a German-born Surrealist who helped shape the emergence of Abstract Expressionism in America post-World War II. Armed with an academic understanding of Freud, Ernst often turned to his work-whether sculpture, painting, or collage-as a means of processing his experience in World War I and unpacking his feelings of dispossession in its wake. 
Photo Montage-Oscar Rejlander.


This allegorical tableau vivant, or mise-en-scène was created by Oscar Rejlander in 1857. It depicts a philosopher, or a sage, or perhaps a father leading two young men towards manhood. One (to the left) looks towards vice; gambling, wine and prostitution, and the other, with perhaps less enthusiasm,1 looks towards virtue; religion, industry and family. Penitence, in the center, looks toward the right, rejecting vice. The image was the first publicly exhibited photograph of a nude, the first major art photograph and the first photo-montage.
Photo Montage-Alexander Rodchenko.


Alexander Rodchenko is perhaps the most important avant-garde artist to have put his art in the service of political revolution. In this regard, his career is a model of the clash between modern art and radical politics. He emerged as a fairly conventional painter, but his encounters with Russian Futurists propelled him to become an influential founder of the Constructivist movement. And his commitment to the Russian Revolution subsequently encouraged him to abandon first painting and then fine art in its entirety, and to instead put his skills in the service of industry and the state, designing everything from advertisements to book covers. His life's work was a ceaseless experiment with an extraordinary array of media, from painting and sculpture to graphic design and photography. Later in his career, however, the increasingly repressive policies targeted against modern artists in Russia led him to return to painting.
Photo Montage-John Heartfield.



Of the Berlin group, John Heartfield remains the best known and revered as a result of his single-minded devotion to anti-Nazi political activism. However, his early montages were collaborative efforts that resemble the work of all the other Dadaists. He and George Grosz experimented with cut-up pieces of newspaper and photos of their fellow artists, and produced many of the early designs for Dada posters and manifestos.

He had never been afraid to express his views, even to the point of anglicising his German name in response to the horrors of the First World War. Heartfield and his brother Wieland Herzfelde founded a publishing house Malik-Verlag, which provided an outlet for his highly provocative propaganda. Much of Heartfield's best work was for the front cover of the newspaper AIZ (Arbeiter-Illustrierte Zeitung) which continued to publish in Germany until 1933, when artist and newspaper moved to Prague to escape Nazi persecution.
Photo Montage-David Hockney.

Born in Bradford, England, in 1937, David Hockney attended art school in London before moving to Los Angeles in the 1960s. There, he painted his famous swimming pool paintings. In the 1970s, Hockney began working in photography, creating photo collages he called joiners. He continues to create and exhibit art, and in 2011 he was voted the most influential British artist of the 20th century.



Hockney attended the Bradford College of Art from 1953 to 1957. Then, because he was a conscientious objector to military service, he spent two years working in hospitals to fulfill his national service requirement. In 1959, he entered graduate school at the Royal College of Art in London alongside other young artists such as Peter Blake and Allen Jones, and he experimented with different forms, including abstract expressionism. He did well as a student, and his paintings won prizes and were purchased for private collections.
Hockney’s early paintings incorporated his literary leanings, and he used fragments of poems and quotations from Walt Whitman in his work. This practice, and paintings such as We Two Boys Clinging Together, which he created in 1961, were the first nods to his homosexuality in his art
Photo Montage-Richard Hamilton.






Richard Hamilton, the most influential British artist of the 20th century, has died aged 89.
In his long, productive life he created the most important and enduring works of any British modern painter.
This may sound a surprising claim. We have our national icons and our pop celebrities. But neither Francis Bacon nor Lucian Freud nor Damien Hirst has shaped modern art as Hamilton did when he put a lolly with the word POP on it in the hand of a muscleman in his 1956 collage, Just What is it that Makes Today's Homes So Different, So Appealing?
Hamilton has a serious claim to be the inventor of pop art: this collage is a visionary, yet ironic, manifesto for a new art that would be at home in the modern world. For him, in a postwar Britain of austerity measures, pop was a utopian ideal. Big, fast cars were the metal angels of a smooth, beautiful future.


Tracey Emin.





Tracey Emin’s art is one of disclosure, using her life events as inspiration for works ranging from painting, drawing, video and installation, to photography, needlework and sculpture. Emin reveals her hopes, humiliations, failures and successes in candid and, at times, excoriating work that is frequently both tragic and humorous.
Emin’s work has an immediacy and often sexually provocative attitude that firmly locates her oeuvre within the tradition of feminist discourse. By re-appropriating conventional handicraft techniques – or ‘women’s work’ – for radical intentions, Emin’s work resonates with the feminist tenets of the ‘personal as political’. In Everyone I’ve Ever Slept With, Emin used the process of appliqué to inscribe the names of lovers, friends and family within a small tent, into which the viewer had to crawl inside, becoming both voyeur and confidante. Her interest in the work of Edvard Munch and Egon Schiele particularly inform Emin’s paintings, monoprints and drawings, which explore complex personal states and ideas of self-representation through manifestly expressionist styles and themes.

Andy Warhol.


Warhol was an US painter, film-maker and author, and a leading figure in the Pop Art movement. Between 1945 and 1949 Warhol studied at the Carnegie Institute of Technology. In 1949, he moved to New York and changed his name to Warhol. He worked as a commercial artist for magazines and also designed advertising and window displays.

In the early 1960s, he began to experiment with reproductions based on advertisements, newspaper headlines and other mass-produced images from American popular culture such as Campbell's soup tins and Coca Cola bottles. In 1962, he began his series portraits of Marilyn Monroe. Other subjects given similar treatment included Jackie Kennedy and Elvis Presley. The same year he took part in the New Realists exhibition in New York, which was the first important survey of Pop Art.
In 1963, Warhol began to make experimental films. His studio, known as the Factory, became a meeting point for young artists, actors, musicians and hangers-on. One of these, Valerie Solanas, shot and seriously wounded him in 1968.

Thursday, 18 October 2012

Chris Dent.





The hand drawn work of Chris Dent takes a unique and fresh approach to modern architecture. In many pieces of his work he focuses on only using 2 or 3 colours, this makes his work seem familiar and memorable. 
In this piece of work titled London 2012 it shows a blank space where 'The Shard' is. This shows that he left a space for the upcoming building. This is a very clever way of producing modern work. 





Tommy Penton.





Tommy has been working as an artist for the last 10 years. During this time he has worked extensively as an illustrator and painter. Tommy's paintings show an intelligent yet fresh approach to perspective art. His style is bright and fluid with a gentle sense of humour.Tommy Penton is best known for his Cover Artwork in the music Industry.
In this picture it shows 2 cows with human hands for feet. This is unrealistic but it looks very effective. The simple use of black and white reflects the stereotypical image of a cow (black and white).
I like his work very much as it look like he hasn't taken his pen off the paper while drawing the cows. The background in his image is a photograph, this mixes the real life and cartoon together. His choice of colour appear to be black, white and sepia.




Olivier Kugler.




Olivier Kugler was born in 1970 in Stuttgart, Germany. He grew up in Simmozheim, a small village, in the Black Forest. Influenced by French/Belgian bande desinées and Otto Dix. Olivier studied graphic design in Pforzheim (Germany). 
Oliviers work is simplistic and uses minimal amounts of detail. He sometimes plays with the perspective and mixes the foreground and background. 
His use of block colours makes the images look cartoon like as there is no shading there to make them appear 3D. 

I prefer this piece of his work to many others as it is simple and it is easy to tell images apart. In many of his other images his work is rather messy and it is quite difficult to see what the main aim of his work is. The colours he uses in his work are a bit unrealistic as they are block and have no variation within the image. I like his work as it shows that simple can sometimes be better than complicated. however some of his work can be intricate.



Thursday, 27 September 2012

Featured Blogger - Abduzeedo.


Abduzeedo is a collection of visual inspiration and useful tutorials.

Abduzeedo is a blog about design. There are all sorts of articles for those who want to look for inspiration. Also you will find very useful tutorials for the most used applications out there, with a special selection of Photoshop Tutorials and Illustrator Tutorials. Of course there are other forms of software used like Pixelmator, Fireworks, and web design tutorials.

Featured Blogger - The Art Cake.

The art cake is an art blog where I share my favorite art/design finds. I'm Christi, a girl originally from the south, but now living in the wonderfully quirky and perpetually rain-drenched city of Portland, Oregon with my cat Gizmo. I love discovering new art and sharing it with other people. 

Featured Blogger - 50 Watts.

Will Shofield’s blog is quite possibly the richest source of book-related design and illustration in the universe. Will displays the fervour of the most dedicated historian whilst time and again proving he has an eye for exceptional images.

Featured Blogger - Burlesque Design.


Burlesque Design. We have completed design and illustration projects for a diverse range of clients including Nike Sportswear, Target, Arcade Fire, Rhymesayers, KidRobot, Walker Art Center, Conde Nast, Stones Throw Records, Numero Group, and many others. From logos to album packaging to posters to stage design, we would love to create the visual elemtents to help you develop your brand, promote your event, and add excitement to your business.

127 Hours


127 Hours


Artist: Sixlightyears


This film poster shows a small part of the films story line.
In my opinion this picture look like the cavern in which the man falls. However the bottom of it has the resemblance of a hand. It is ironic because in the movie the mans arm is trapped under a rock and he has to cut it off. 

This shows that he mans arm is left behind. Without seeing this movie this just seems like a sinister hand in red, almost looking like fire or blood by the use of the color red, which symbolizes danger and death. This image has a mood of pain and death and the hand looks lifeless. The vulture flying in the sky shows that someone is vulnerable and is near to death this adds o the mood. With the majority of the page being black it symbolizes helplessness and loss of life. This makes the image look intimidating and sinister.




Olly Moss


Olly moss uses simple shapes and bold colours in his work by doing this it makes his images stand out and very attractive.

In the dirty harry poster he uses different shapes in a very clever way. He make the silhouette of a face using the edge of a smoking gun.
Great use of a limited colour palette and some of the designs use clever graphic elements (Clint Eastwood’s face is made from the negative space of his Magnum) and some shadows form multiple images (Rocky’s arms being help high in silhouette as part of the steps he runs up in the famous montage, training scene. 

Have a look at the rest of these posters via the link. My favourites are the Dirty Harry and the Robocop ones, although the Saul Bass Influenced Rocky poster is great as well
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In the ‘stay sharp’ image the use of the finger being a pencil uses humour with a sharpener meaning the literal term ‘stay sharp’ meaning a pencil.