Artists Describing Their Art:
Michael Iskra - My appreciation of the female nude is evidenced by the fact that I make her the quintessential figure of my work. My nudes become your reality through the mediums of photography, oils, pen and ink and computer imagery. MICHAEL ISKRA ...
Syed Waqas Saghir - The key to accomplishment lies in breaking barriers and phobias that keep us from being what we truly are, a free spirit with unfathomable capacities enough to knock on heavenaEURtms door. Art is the expression of such a spirit that takes into account everything which exists in the tangible world and mixes it with the metaphysical. This page is dedicated to all the endeavors one goes through to achieve the seemingly impossible because the journey within ourselves is seldom explored. My freedom of expression takes inspiration through connecting the dots to unravel reality itself, its greatest mysteries, and the struggle we all face in our lives. My work takes into account various creative platforms, including aEURC/ Digital Art aEURC/ Illustration aEURC/ Doodle aEURC/ Sketch aEURC/ Digital Sketches aEURC/ all other ideation related materials Be sure to like and comment on my work, critique is accepted so that I can further improve myself. ...
Barbara Shepard - Although I had a grounding in many techniques and processes and an academic training in drawing and painting from nature, archetecture and the model, my early work became abstracted and sometimes it was in 3d or relief using mixed media. Gradually it honed down into painting and drawing mainly due to studio restriction and other themes to do with the body started to emerge. I moved away from abstraction and in the late 1980's and early 1990's themes were to do with redefining the feminine and picturing the female nude from a female perspective. My current work is concerned with different aspects of human expression and especially a different face of masculinity. It seeks to re-configure the male in art. I am interested in how this translates into the aesthetics of a pictorial image, creating beauty in composition, colour and mark making. Taken from a close up perspective, they explore female desire and male vulnerability. The male model is the observed rather than the observer. It isn't an attempt to do a role reversal and objectify the male but to illuminate aspects of male character little seen on public view. Composed of close up parts of ...
Lazaro Hurtado - Lazaro Hurtado is an artist currently living in Buenos Aires, were he works . Since early childhood he have the overwhelming need to create and explore the reality in a personal way. So thats how he would spend his afternoons after school , making mud sculptures and giving life to them by putting live insects inside . Seeing entire landscapes and beens on the moisture of the walls, feeling himself carried inside those worlds. He states than more than an artist, he is a thinker. His paintings and artworks are the projection of his mind process . The spectators would often find themselves been tickle by the ideas and concepts on reality and human behaviour that he seems to contemplate and rebuilt on his mind. The images you see are the working mechanics of a brain on a mind made world... ...
Gottfried In Berlin - A photographer/artist, whose works were conceived over a period of forty years on three continents. They are produced in oil, crayon, pencil, and very predominantly, negative and transparency film. Some of these are now reproduced in small, worldwide strictly limited editions, generally of no more than 30 prints, each with a Certificate of Authenticity. Others are available in open editions in various formats. ...
Andrew Bartosz - One of the critics wrote: 'Andrew's gift for portraying the woman's body is inspiring. With master strokes Andrew captures both the beauty and complexity of a woman's nature. Andrew strikes us first with the evocative, soft, dreamy and colourful expression of a woman's body. But then he skilfully contrasts it, through structured elements and toned down colours of the background, with sharper, less perfect and darker images or moods. As result we have a unique experience of a sensual fusion between the abstract and the real. This theme of contrast continues in Andrew's stunning impressions of Australian majestic rock landscapes.' ...