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Posts Tagged ‘Surrealist’

Unnatural Wonders: Magical Surrealist Artwork Worthy of Dalí & Escher

25 Sep

[ By WebUrbanist in Art & Drawing & Digital. ]

roof-bricks

In the same magic-realist vein as artistic giants like Salvador Dalí, M.C. Escher and Renê Margritte, Rob Gonsalves crafts elaborate and interconnected scenes that shift subtly to form remarkable illusions of dizzying depth and scale.

magical-realism

The 55-year-old Canadian of Portuguese descent takes settings that look ordinary at first glance, then layers and intersects them to form fantastic fictional realities. Many of his pieces tackle overlap, blurring the boundaries of natural and built environments, man-made and organic phenomena.

night-skyscraper-trees

Trees falling from the tree on a street form a canopy for a second, semi-secret world below. Books slowly turn into steps as they make their way around a domed library. Bricks become rooftops as children walk along a path. Skyscrapers morph into trees, blending nature and cities.

trees-biking

After college, Gonsalves worked as an architect and painted trompe-l’œil murals and theater sets on the side. As the popularity of his artistic works grew, he turned to painting as a profession.

library-morph

ocean-sky

“Although Gonsalves’ work is often categorized as surrealistic, it differs because the images are deliberately planned and result from conscious thought. Ideas are largely generated by the external world and involve recognizable human activities, using carefully planned illusionist devices. Gonsalves injects a sense of magic into realistic scenes. As a result, the term “Magic Realism” describes his work accurately. His work is an attempt to represent human beings’ desire to believe the impossible, to be open to possibility.”

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Spellbinding Visuals: Magical Book Artwork Tells Surrealist Stories

05 Sep

[ By WebUrbanist in Art & Drawing & Digital. ]

book cover art

A series of book-centric illustrations (now collected into one big ‘book of books’) by Seoul artist Jungho Lee explores realms of impossibility through the deconstruction and re-imagining of bound volumes. Each surrealistic piece pushes the limits of plausibility in different ways, challenging the viewer to read complex stories into deceptively simple-looking drawings.

book architecture

book bending warped

book fishing

Winner of the World Illustration Awards for 2016, Lee is a Korean artist whose dreamlike work is often featured both on the covers of and within books for children or adults. The illustrations shown here are some of the 21 submitted for the competition and also included in the book Promenade, a collection published by Sang Publishing early this year.

book door

book image

book memory

Lee’s mixed-media approach includes “charcoal, water colour, gouache, hot-pressed papers and computer” graphics. He cites surrealist René Magritte and German artist Quint Buchholz as sources of inspiration for composition, messaging, lighting and angle of observation choices.

book plane wing

book pie

book surrealism

Lee starts with a basic image or rough sketch on large-format paper, usually using graphite or charcoal. Then he scans in the work and begins digital manipulations. Sometimes he goes back and forth, printing to paper to add more layers manually.

book lighthouse

book hike

book deconstructed

While his pictures span a variety of types, styles and subjects, much of his recent work specifically revolves around the manipulation of book-related imagery, expressing the contents of volumes without any use of text. If the series continues, he may create a followup volume to Promenade featuring further works of bookish art.

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Surrealist Disaster-Proof Structures for Dangerous Locations

20 Mar

[ By Steph in Architecture & Houses & Residential. ]

Surrealist Disaster Proof Architecture 1

Some spots are such beautiful potential locations for a home, yet repeated natural disasters make them inhospitable for all but the strongest and most durable of dwellings. Architect Dionisio Gonzales imagines just how creative we could get in building disaster-proof structures with ‘Architecture for Resistance,’ a series of surrealist fantasies that often take their cues from natural shapes like shells.

Surrealist Disaster Proof Architecture 2

Individual collections envision architecture for a particular location. ‘Dauphin Island’ is a series of hurricane-resistant designs for the island of the same name, located just south of Mobile, Alabama. The island has been hit by one hurricane after another. Gonzales believes that sustainable architecture could stop nature’s cycle of destruction with a dramatic change in the way our houses look.

Surrealist Disaster Proof Architecture 3

Surrealist Disaster Proof Architecture 4

The Dauphin Island creations are “real futuristic forts made of iron and concrete,” with shapes that call to mind sea shells, crustaceans and other marine organisms. It’s easy to imagine these structures closing up like forts to guard against high winds and flooding.

Surrealist Disaster Proof Architecture 5

Gonzales also designed bizarro-world versions of Brazil’s favelas and the shabby settlements in the hills of Busan, South Korea, making a commentary on the coexistence of the wealthy and the very poor. The designs bring visually disjointed, futuristic structures into neighborhoods that are already chaotic in an attempt to legitimize the architectural vernacular of each location.

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Teen photographer puts surrealist spin on summer photo project

13 Jul

iankomac3.jpeg

With summer finals out of the way, 17-year-old photographer Ian Komac has devoted his newfound free time to a photo project. Called 60 Days of Summer, the Belgian teen’s manipulated photos give landscapes and everyday objects a whimsical twist. Click to see more of his photos and gain a little inspiration for your own summer photo project.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Don’t Trip: 4 Dizzying Rooms by 1 Surrealist Spatial Artist

22 Dec

[ By WebUrbanist in Art & Installation & Sound. ]

Like some kind of strange spatial magician, Kyung Woo Han turns conventional furniture, fixtures, doors and windows into otherworldly scenes that call into question just how familiar we really are with such everyday objects.

Consider White Window, a deformed frame that pulls in from the edges, but when viewed through a fish-eye surveillance camera (also part of the installation) is corrected to look like the only straight-lined design in the space.

In Green House, a room is half-filled with faux water while suspended shapes of partial furniture float at eye level, appearing to be reflected at the point where surface meets air.

Other projects like Found House and Checkered Floor take normal objects, textures and materials out of context and distort them, making simple black-and-white patterns and portals between inside and outside seem strange aand surreal.


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101 Dizzying Spiral Staircases & Twisted Architectural Art Photos

These 101 dizzy spirals may make you smile or they may induce vertigo, but here are the most impressive, most dizzying, spiraling staircases in the world.

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