Art is always personal, but it can never remain isolated. Whether we like it or not, we are subject to the influence of other creators. Sometimes we are touched by writers, sometimes by painters and composers, and the works that are created in this way are an expression of the deepest respect and admiration for artistic greats. So here's what it looks like...
Andy Warhol is often quoted as saying that “I’ve never met a person I couldn’t call a beauty,” however he was especially captivated by Karin Kain, a longtime principal ballet dancer for the National Ballet of Canada. In 1979, Warhol began using diamond dust in the ink of his prints, as seen in this portrait of Karen Kain.
By using the style that Warhol used in his work, this triptych of mine was created.
I am a great admirer and lover of the art of Paul Klee.
At first glance, this work of mine does not have much in common with his work. My composition is much more abstract and does not follow Klee's clear geometric lines and childish rendering of figures.
However, the key element is the warmth that emanates from his paintings. Through the play of light and the feeling of intimacy and softness in tones and colors, I tried to revive the memory of his painting and artistic aesthetics.
I may have at least partially succeeded ...
"Songs on the Death of Children" is a song cycle (1904) for voice and orchestra by Gustav Mahler. The words of the songs are 5 poems by Friedrich Rückert, and I chose the title of one of them, as the title of my work.
Rückert found inspiration for his verses in the fate of his two children who died of scarlet fever.
To add to the tragedy, Mahler's daughter Maria also died of the same disease, 3 years after Mahler completed his poignant work.
With the help of an abstract composition and using predominantly dark and suffocating tones, I tried to visually convey the emotional tension between life and death, that is, between presence and absence. I also wanted to revive the dark romanticism of Mahler's music not just as an echo of a bygone era, but as a universal, timeless reflection on loss.
This work is a dialogue with the famous Van Gogh's Chair. Everything is so simple and easy with him, that we think we can make something similar ourselves...
Edgar Allan Poe father of horror, science fiction and detective story, mysterious and unique, master of darkness. Nevermore ...
Steve McCurry is an American photographer, freelancer, and photojournalist, who in 2013 made a series of photos about Brazil for the Pirelli Calendar. I particularly liked one of them, so I tried to create something else with the same Brazilian atmosphere by playing with shapes and colors.
I hope he doesn't mind me.
Left panel: "Adam and Eve Expelled From Paradise"
Central panel: "The crucifixion"
Right panel: "The final judgement"
Vrancke van der Stockt (before 1420 - 1495) was an early Netherlandish painter, and "Redemption Triptych" is one of his most famous works. This is my version of the classic motif.
Enrique Santos Discépolo, author of many essential tangos, declared that “Tango is a sad thought that is danced”. Every word in this phrase demands explanations that will never exhaust their meaning.
If you want a detailed explanation, find it in the blog: "What Is Tango?" by Marcelo Solis.
And maybe you should listen to people in Argentina when they say: "el Tango te espera" (Tango is waiting for you), which is the message of my work.
Constructivism was a movement that was active from 1915 to the 1940’s and created by the Russian avant-garde. Constructivist art is committed to complete abstraction with a devotion to modernity, where themes are often geometric, experimental and rarely emotional. My lowly contribution ...
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