• Photorealism (1960s, 1970s) A style of painting or sculpture (also known
as Hyperrealism or Superrealism) executed in photographic detail.
Not exact matches
The
hyperrealism of computer animation begs another question: If your goal is to make things look
as realistic
as possible, why bother with animation at all?
It will start with the great American artists of the first generation such
as Richard Estes, John Baeder, Robert Bechtle, Tom Blackwell, Chuck Close and Robert Cottingham, then move on to
Hyperrealism in Europe and to artists of subsequent generations.
American painter Denis Peterson, whose pioneering works are universally viewed
as an offshoot of Photorealism, first used [4] «
Hyperrealism» to apply to the new movement and its splinter group of artists.
The 21st Century saw an emergence of different art movements;
as technological development brought new opportunities, new movements have emerged, and many of them could be described
as abstract art: digital art, computer and internet art, hard - edge painting, geometric abstraction, appropriation,
hyperrealism, photorealism — to mention a few.
CAROLE A. FEUERMAN is recognized
as a sculptor who started the
Hyperrealism movement in the late seventies with Hanson and De Andrea.
The photorealist works exhibited synergise the visual aesthetics of painting and photography providing windows into clichéd Americana which seep into the realms of
hyperrealism and focus on a sporadic variety of banalities
as subject matter.
As a leading European gallery specialising in
hyperrealism, the first...
As well as testifying to the by no means provincial nature of local collecting, the group show also raises issues questioning the very nature of art through works representative of various contemporary styles and movements: Conceptualism, Appropriation Art, Neo-Pop, Superkitsch, Arte Povera, Transavanguardia, Neo-Expressionism, various forms of Realism, YBA (Young British Artists), Düsseldorf School, Figuration, Abstractism and Hyperrealis
As well
as testifying to the by no means provincial nature of local collecting, the group show also raises issues questioning the very nature of art through works representative of various contemporary styles and movements: Conceptualism, Appropriation Art, Neo-Pop, Superkitsch, Arte Povera, Transavanguardia, Neo-Expressionism, various forms of Realism, YBA (Young British Artists), Düsseldorf School, Figuration, Abstractism and Hyperrealis
as testifying to the by no means provincial nature of local collecting, the group show also raises issues questioning the very nature of art through works representative of various contemporary styles and movements: Conceptualism, Appropriation Art, Neo-Pop, Superkitsch, Arte Povera, Transavanguardia, Neo-Expressionism, various forms of Realism, YBA (Young British Artists), Düsseldorf School, Figuration, Abstractism and
Hyperrealism.
The paintings, from the Orange (Cyprus 08) series, reiterate the artist's Cypriot roots
as well
as pertaining to the
hyperrealism of advertising and the representation of an unattainable beauty.
Andy Warhol's silk screens, Gerhard Richter's blurred images, Vija Celmins»
hyperrealism: some of the most influential developments in the history of contemporary art hinge on the use of photographs
as source material.
As the gallery notes, «The juxtaposition of abstraction and
hyperrealism in Armor fosters tension between the familiar and the fantastical.
As a movement, photorealism, sometimes also referred to as Superrealism or Hyperrealism, came to prominence in the United States during the late 1960s and early 1970s, largely as a result of paintings by Chuck Close (b. 1940) and Richard Estes (b. 1936), and the extraordinarily life - like sculpture of John De Andrea (b. 1941), Duane Hanson (1925 - 96) and Carole Feuerman (b. 1945
As a movement, photorealism, sometimes also referred to
as Superrealism or Hyperrealism, came to prominence in the United States during the late 1960s and early 1970s, largely as a result of paintings by Chuck Close (b. 1940) and Richard Estes (b. 1936), and the extraordinarily life - like sculpture of John De Andrea (b. 1941), Duane Hanson (1925 - 96) and Carole Feuerman (b. 1945
as Superrealism or
Hyperrealism, came to prominence in the United States during the late 1960s and early 1970s, largely
as a result of paintings by Chuck Close (b. 1940) and Richard Estes (b. 1936), and the extraordinarily life - like sculpture of John De Andrea (b. 1941), Duane Hanson (1925 - 96) and Carole Feuerman (b. 1945
as a result of paintings by Chuck Close (b. 1940) and Richard Estes (b. 1936), and the extraordinarily life - like sculpture of John De Andrea (b. 1941), Duane Hanson (1925 - 96) and Carole Feuerman (b. 1945).
Also associated with the Verism School of Art, Hanson - along with his younger contemporaries John De Andrea (b. 1941) and Carole Feuerman (b. 1945)- is regarded
as the greatest of all 20th century sculptors working in the style of photorealism or
hyperrealism.
Inspired by artists such
as Dali, Caravaggio and HR Giger, Mike Dargas studied various techniques and since his youth developed a passion for realism, which he narrowed down to
hyperrealism over the years.
Using the technique of oil painting
as his favorite, he presents large - scale works made with an incredible
hyperrealism.
As Christoph Grunenberg has written, Brown's paintings «live on the productive tension between extreme glamour and abject misery, confronting the viewer with a set of mysterious paradoxes» (C. Grunenberg, «Capability Brown: Spectacles of
Hyperrealism, the Panorama and Abject Horror in the Painting of Glenn Brown,» Glenn Brown, exh.
Hyperrealism has always been Luigi's dream and goal
as an artist.