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Scheiro Deligne

thypott art - 2 views

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    We present a new kind of web gallery. Even if many could disagree, we intend to include only those artist or painting masterpieces that we consider to be the most original, revolutionary and famous in art history. We will put aside those that were only ephemeral pieces that reflected the taste or trend of a certain period. The purpose of this web page is education, and we hope to create an anthology of the evolution of the creation of beauty and crafmanship in the field of painting.
scottandrewusa

How to get 1000's of Subscribers + 4000 Watch Time with youtube Ads Only Rs 500 - 0 views

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    How to get 1000's of Subscribers + 4000 Watch Time with youtube Ads Only Rs 500
Trendbuddies paktrendbuddies

Rapper Lil Durk Quotes and Reactions Cut his New song 2021 - 0 views

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    Rapper Lil Durk Quotes and Reactions Cut his New song 2021 Rapper Lil Durk Quotes & the Voice is the sixth studio album by American rapper Lil Durk. It was released on December 24, 2020, by Only... #news #rapper #americanrapper #lildurk #tattoos #thevoicenewalbum #releasedverysoon #trenbuddies https://trendbuddies.com/rapper-lil-durk-quotes-and-reactions-on-cut-songs/
timmhaubrich532

Buy Bing Ads Accounts - 100% Verified, Ready, Cheap Price & Instant Delivery - 0 views

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    Bing Ads is a pay-per-click (PPC) advertising platform, meaning that advertisers only pay when someone clicks on their ad. Businesses may develop and manage advertising campaigns on the Bing search engine using Bing Ads Accounts, a service. Businesses may target their advertising to display on Bing when users search for particular terms, and they can also monitor the number of times their ads are clicked.
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    Bing Ads is a pay-per-click (PPC) advertising platform, meaning that advertisers only pay when someone clicks on their ad. Businesses may develop and manage advertising campaigns on the Bing search engine using Bing Ads Accounts, a service. Businesses may target their advertising to display on Bing when users search for particular terms, and they can also monitor the number of times their ads are clicked.
Taylor Wilson

Tim Burton exhibition at LACMA - 3 views

  • The Los Angeles County Museum of Art presents a major retrospective exploring the full range of Tim Burton's creative work, both as a film director and as an artist, illustrator, photographer, and writer.
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    LOVE the detail sketches from TIm Burton. Don't miss out this show. It will be there only until end of OCT!
Taylor Wilson

Contemporary lighting « Interior Design blog - 2 views

  • Spidey-Sense This one-of-a-kind contemporary lighting fixture resembles an eerie spider with long-reaching “arms” and “legs” outfitted with spotlights.
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    Traditional lighting has reigned supreme for decades but it's only been more recently that designers have looked outside the lightbox and reinvented a myriad of lighting fixtures - today there's no shortage of contemporary lighting to choose from. Created like works of art and used as task as well as accent lighting, here are eight modish fixtures that demonstrate the wide range of stylish possibilities.
stvalentine stvalentine

The World's Most Amazing Vertical Gardens - 1 views

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    You are walking along a city street when suddenly you are confronted by the totally unexpected. A wall of greenery rises vertically up the face of a building nearby, and architecture takes on a whole new dimension. Not only are those who instigate this type of cladding being environmentally friendly. They are saving money as well.
Ian Yang

PSDTuts - Photoshop Tutorials and Links - Making a Print-Ready Business Card Using Only... - 0 views

  • In this tutorial we are going to design up a simple business card in Photoshop and get it ready for print with crop marks and bleed. Normally you'd do some of this with a tool like InDesign but it is in fact possible to get by with just our trusty old Photoshop.
Ian Yang

Art Community & Forum : Art Face Off :: Top 10 Reasons Why Galleries Reject Artists - 0 views

  • Most artists harbor the fantasy that if they could only find one art dealer that loved and believed in their work, their career would be set. They secretly believe that there exists a special person that can catapult them to fame. Many artists spend most of their careers searching for "the perfect gallery." And, as all quests towards perfection, it is never ending. If they already have a gallery, it's not good enough; if they are looking for their first gallery, they dream about the moment when someone sets eyes on their work and offers them a solo show immediately. The harsh reality of the situation is having a gallery love your work, is only one very small part of what goes into the decision to represent an artist.
  • From a gallery's point of view, adding an artist to their stable is much like adding a stock to one's portfolio. There are many complicated factors to take into consideration, and liking the "stock" usually has very little to do with the decision.
  • Too Experienced
  • ...9 more annotations...
  • Too Inexperienced
  • Too Difficult
  • the artist and the gallery need to have a level of trust and comfort that will guarantee honest communication. If a gallery perceives you as being a difficult person to work with, they tend to veer away.
  • Too Cheap
  • Too Expensive
  • Prices are established by the law of supply of demand (Read Pricing Your Art). If a gallery feels they can not price your work fairly and still make a 50% commission, they will not be willing to take a chance on you.
  • Too Different
  • Too Similar
  • A gallery looks at the group of artists they represent, much like an artist looks at a painting. It is not so much the individual artist that is considered, but, rather, how that art fits into the existing group.
Ian Yang

Photoshop Creative Challenge - 0 views

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    The challenge: create a high-res, jaw-dropping piece of digital art, based on the theme "Infinite Future Chaos". We're giving away a stunning 30-inch Apple Cinema Display.
    It's bloody huge, and has beautiful color reproduction. Photoshop never looked so good. Check out the specs: dimensions:sit back a bit.. it just barely fits on your deskrefresh rate:4000 times per picosecondlovely:yesmax. resolution:64 gazilla-pixelsawesome factor:10 "But.. WTF is Infinite Future Chaos?", we hear you ask. Fair question. To be honest, we don't really know what it means. It's possibly something to do with jetpacks... or perhaps trees taking over the city... or trees wearing jetpacks taking over the city with lasoos. Only time will tell. The winners of the 30" Apple Cinema Display and the RedBubble voucher, plus four runners-up, will have their work published in the November issue of Photoshop Creative. How To Enter: Sign up Upload your creations Tag your work with "photoshopcreative07" The Rules Go anywhere you want with the theme. There are some http://www.re
Ian Yang

Art Community & Forum : Art Face Off :: View topic - Top 10 Reasons Why Galleries Rejec... - 0 views

  • Too Similar: A gallery looks at the group of artists they represent, much like an artist looks at a painting. It is not so much the individual artist that is considered, but, rather, how that art fits into the existing group. Often galleries are reluctant to take artists that are too similar to an artist they already represent. Too Different: All galleries try to create a niche for themselves by representing artists that are stylistically similar and would appeal to their core group of collectors. If your work is outside the arbitrary parameters they have established, you are out of luck. Too Far Away: Unless you have already established a reputation elsewhere, galleries are reluctant to work with artists outside their regional area. Issues surrounding shipping costs and the inconvenience of getting and returning work in an expedient manner make it often not worth it. Too Fragile/Difficult to Store: Regardless of how big a gallery is, there is never enough storage space. Galleries shy away from work that is 3 dimensional, easily breakable, heavy or hard to handle. Too Expensive: Most artists undervalue their work. But, occasionally I will come across an artist with a totally unrealistic sense of how to price their work. Prices are established by the law of supply of demand (Read Pricing Your Art). If a gallery feels they can not price your work fairly and still make a 50% commission, they will not be willing to take a chance on you. Too Cheap: Artists who only do works on paper, photographers, etc often can not generate enough income from sales to make an exhibition worth it to a gallery. If you have 20 pieces in a show, and each piece sells for $500, and your show completely sells out…your gallery has only made $5000… barely enough to cover the costs of the postage, announcement and opening reception. Too Difficult: Entering into a relationship with a gallery is in many ways similar to entering into a marriage. It's a relationship that needs to be able to endure candid dialog about the things that are often the most difficult to discuss with anyone…your artwork and money. Both the artist and the gallery need to have a level of trust and comfort that will guarantee honest communication. If a gallery perceives you as being a difficult person to work with, they tend to veer away. Too Inexperienced: Many artists start approaching galleries too soon, before their work has fully matured. Most critics and curators say it takes an artist several years after college for their work to fully develop stylistically. Galleries want to make sure that once they commit to you, your work will not make radical and/or unpredictable changes. Even if a gallery LOVES your work, they may want to watch your development over a period of years to confirm their initial opinion. Artists must also have enough work of a similar sensibility to mount an exhibition. Too Experienced: The gallery fear of failure is strong, particularly in this economic climate. Careful to be sensitive to a price point that is right for their audience, galleries may not be financially able to risk representing artists who are farther along in their career, therefore demanding higher prices, than emerging younger artists. Artists with a long sales history of gradually appreciating prices may find themselves priced out of the current market.
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    Something that every artist should keep in his/her mind.
Ian Yang

Membership Removal - 19 views

Hello everyone, It's sad but true: I have decided to remove those members who not only have never shared a single bookmark (not to mention comments!) ever since they joined in this group but haven...

news group

Benjamin Hansen

Animekandi - Art & Design Links - 0 views

shared by Benjamin Hansen on 29 May 09 - Cached
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    Everyone in this group should use stumble upon to find resources for this group. You can narrow your stumbles to only one subject. I have mine set only to graphic design. With stumble upon you install a button on your browser when you press the buttton it takes you to a random site related to your interest.
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    Some sweet links here despite the name (AnimeKandi.org...) I went through a couple of the illustration links and was pleased. I didn't find any anime. This is worth exploring.
Ian Yang

Photoshop Tutorials - Psdtuts+ - 0 views

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    RSS feed for all Tutorials and ArticlesRSS feed for all Tutorials and Articles - Just HeadlinesRSS feed for VideosRSS feed for FreebiesRSS feed for Community LinksEmail Subscriptions for all Tutorials and ArticlesTwitter Follow for all Tutorials and Articles
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    About:\nPsdtuts+ is a blog/Photoshop site made to house and showcase some of the best Photoshop tutorials around. We publish tutorials that not only produce great graphics and effects, but explain the techniques behind them in a friendly, approachable manner.
Skeptical Debunker

Celebrating Caravaggio: First Of The Bad-Boy Artists : NPR - 2 views

  • Art scholar Stefania Macioce points out the modernity of these works. "If you think of the age, 16th century, there is same way to use the light like modern photography," she says. "It’s fantastic."Caravaggio's use of light and shadow mirrored the ups and downs of his turbulent life.It was the time of Galileo and Monteverdi, and the painter's life reads like a play by Shakespeare, another of his contemporaries.Born in Milan in 1571, Caravaggio arrived in Rome at the height of the Inquisition, when the church was all-powerful. But Rome also had a rich low-life of courtesans, gamblers and brawlers. Caravaggio led a double life, dividing his time between the gilded salons of the powerful cardinals who were his art patrons, and the back-alley demimonde of whorehouses and taverns — the inspiration for his paintings.Art historian Maurizio Calvesi says the artist rejected the uplifting Baroque style so dear to the church, and plunged biblical narratives into the gloom and desperation of contemporary reality. "Caravaggio is the opposite of the Baroque, which glorifies wealth, luxury and the triumphant Catholic Church," Calvesi says. "He was deeply revolutionary; he brought the human aspect of God back to earth." For models, Caravaggio used laborers, prostitutes and gypsies. The church was outraged. Painting after painting was rejected: a dead Virgin that looked like a bloated corpse, a jailer yanking Christ's hair, saints with dirty feet.Cardinal Federico Borromeo wrote in indignation, "Contaminated men must not deal with the sacred."The 19th century art critic John Ruskin called him the "ruffian Caravaggio," and described his work as ''horror and ugliness and filthiness of sin.''Rome's Sant'Agostino Church is filled with treasures — a Raphael, a Sansovino and a Bernini — but visitors all flock first to a corner chapel on the left and drop coins in a machine to illuminate the canvas. Madonna of Loreto shows a barefoot Virgin holding the baby Jesus. She stands in a doorway in the evening shadow, one leg saucily crossed over the other. Visitor Cinzia Margotti is enthralled. "The church couldn't possibly like a Madonna like this one," Margotti says. "Just look at her. She's real and beautiful but too free for the 16th century church."Many of Caravaggio's works were filled with grief, suffering and violence — images in contrast with the church's predilection for rosy cherubs and angels in the heavens. Francine Prose, author of Caravaggio: Painter of Miracles, says his paintings reflected the violence of the times. "Beheadings were a daily fact of life in Rome," she says. "So if you look at Judith and Holofernes or the Beheading of John the Baptist, which is in Malta, they are paintings of executions. His crucifixions, the deaths of saints are executions, so he lived in a very violent time."Under papal orders, heretics were burned at the stake. Caravaggio may have even witnessed the execution of the philosopher and theologian Giordano Bruno in Campo dei Fiori in 1600.Caravaggio also led a violent life. He left no letters, so all that is known about him comes through judicial records of his many scuffles with the law. Sentenced to death in 1606 for murdering a man, he fled Rome.The next four years were spent in flight: to Naples, to Malta, to Sicily and back to Naples. In Malta, he got in trouble again. He was arrested but managed to escape by scaling the fortress-prison walls. His works got darker and more dramatic — he believed papal hit men were on his heels. He painted David with the Head of Goliath, portraying a delicate young man holding a severed head that was Caravaggio's own self-portrait, a tormented mask of agony and horror.Suddenly, he got long-hoped-for news: He was pardoned, and he headed back to Rome.As one of his biographers wrote, "Bad luck did not abandon him."On a hot July day in 1610, a semiconscious Caravaggio was found lying on a beach along the Tuscan coast.It remains a mystery whether he had come down with malaria or some other illness, or whether he had been wounded in a duel. Two days later in the local hospital, the greatest artist of his time ended his all-too-brief career. After his death, Caravaggio was forgotten for 300 years. It wasn't until the 20th century that the visionary genius was rediscovered.
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    This year marks the 400th anniversary of the death of the Italian artist Caravaggio, believed by many art lovers to be the greatest painter of all time. Rome, the city where he was both hailed and rejected, is hosting a major exhibition of masterpieces from all over the world showcasing the first of the bad-boy artists.\n\nExhibition visitors are plunged into near-total darkness - only the canvases are lighted: Lute Player, Cardsharps, Judith and Holofernes, the Conversion of Saul and many more.\n\nClaudia Palmira Acunto is admiring a painting of a young Bacchus, the god of wine. "I'm just marveling at the sensuality of the skin," she says, "and the contrast of textures from the fruit to the wine to the fabric; it's chiaroscuro."\n\nCaravaggio invented this groundbreaking technique of light and darkness, with a single, powerful ray of light coming from outside the frame. In his time, the norm in painting was a vague and diffuse light. Caravaggio's contrast of shadow and light produced a totally new intensity and stark realism.
stvalentine stvalentine

Innovative Office Tower in Brisbane - 1 views

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    In troubled economic times, there is only one high rise office tower being built in Brisbane. So enamoured was the client, GPT, with the design by Cox Rayner Architects that he decided to proceed on the basis that the building's aesthetic, environmental and workplace benefits would lure prospective tenants. The tower's structure is organic in that the columns twist and turn up its 45 storey height, emerging through the roof to form a tree-like canopy. The resulting filigree of structure reflects the city's two iconic Fig Trees in the building's forecourt, but the rationale for the concept was initially pragmatic. This was because the tower is being built over a wide existing loading dock such that there were few points on the ground where columns could land. Cox Rayner Architects with their engineers ARUP devised a structural system where loads could be gradually transferred diagonally down to the land predominantly on one side of the site, avoiding the dock. The concept evolved with several attributes. The columns in the 'web' are abnormally thin at 600 - 400 wide, maximising views to the river. Less concrete is required than in conventional typologies entailing reduced embodied energy in construction. Overall the tower is currently measured to be above 6 star rating under the Green Building Council of Australia's Green Star Design Rating System. The tower has a corner services core that also maximises the availability of views to the office areas, with the structural frame wrapping around the remaining volume inside a glass skin with operable blinds responding to solar orientations. The ground plane is designed as a public thoroughfare space linking the city to its main ferry terminal, such that the foyers are at the first level above. This design enriches the sense of lightness and space for which the building will become renowned
Mark Harding

Google Earth alphabet - The Netherlands - Numbers and Punctuation on Flickr - Photo Sha... - 0 views

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    Google Earth Alphabet (numbers and punctuation) using only locations in The Netherlands. Also check out the other images with capitals (www.flickr.com/photos/thomasdebruin/3830425866/) and lower case (www.flickr.com/photos/thomasdebruin/3829628239/).
Mark Harding

Google Earth alphabet - The Netherlands - Lower Case on Flickr - Photo Sharing! - 0 views

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    Google Earth Alphabet (lower case) using only locations in The Netherlands. Also check out the other images with capitals: (www.flickr.com/photos/thomasdebruin/3830425866/) and numbers and punctuation (www.flickr.com/photos/thomasdebruin/3830425338/).
Mark Harding

Google Earth alphabet - The Netherlands - Capitals on Flickr - Photo Sharing! - 0 views

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    Google Earth Alphabet (capitals) using only locations in The Netherlands. Also check out the other images with lower case (www.flickr.com/photos/thomasdebruin/3829628239/) and numbers and punctuation (www.flickr.com/photos/thomasdebruin/3830425338/).
Trendbuddies paktrendbuddies

Brilliant Justin Timberlake Silas Randall Timberlake share an Emotional Father's Day Po... - 0 views

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    Brilliant Justin Timberlake Silas Randall Timberlake share an Emotional Father's Day Post in 2020 In celebration of Father's Day, Justin Timberlake shared several photos of his son, Silas Randall, who turned five on April 8, and is Timberlake's only child with wife Jessica Biel... #news #singer #trendbuddies #father'sday #justintimberlake #severalphotos #silasrandalltimberlake https://trendbuddies.com/justin-timberlake-silas-randall-timberlake-post/
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