Typographic Syntax Project
Click on this post to view my latest graphic design project showing the process. For this project I’m working with a rocket.
Click on this post to view my latest graphic design project showing the process. For this project I’m working with a rocket.
Today’s comic artists may be great at their technique and what not, but Jack Kirby is considered to be in the league of his own; as someone said, “oceans apart” from the rest of the comic gang.
Scott Weaver began on this complex sculpture 35 years ago, and the project, like the “Never Ending Story” continues to evolve. What was I doing when this guy started it? Oh, I remember, I wasn’t even born yet.
Chinese artist Li Wei from Beijing does what can be best described as “impossible art”. None of his images are photoshopped believe it or not, well, let me correct myself.
Jarod Charzewski is an installation artist. He creates variety of large installations experimenting with different objects and materials and even does multimedia installation.
Gavin Worth does about every kind of art, even web design. He is a pretty versatile and gifted artist, but I’m only going to concentrate on his wire sculpture
Metalmorphosis is a mirrored water fountain erected by David Černý a Czech sculptor. This 14-ton head is made from massive stainless steel layers that rotate 360 degrees and from time to time align to present a human head.
Aske can be best described as a grafiti artist. Although he does not actively pursue graffiti anymore, writing graffiti on Moscow urban walls is how he launched his art career.
Jason deCaires Taylor is an “eco-sculptor” who creates underwater concrete sculptures, offering viewers mysterious look of another world where art gradually changes from the effects of nature.
When I looked at his art piece at the Boise Art Museum, it was one of a few that stood out, and I was intrigued that his comic had no words, no narrative.
No, this is not a series of Photoshopped images, or photo manipulations created by digital artists, this is a real development. Well, it is not 100% real, because those are not real buildings but only prints of the building walls,
If you never saw what “think outside the box” looks like visually, then this work from Yuki Matsueda will help you see it. Yuki’s boundary breaking art, called the “Escape”, transforms 2D art into 3D, or at least some elements of it, thus calling it boundary breaking.