Not exact matches
The Bilbao Fine Arts Museum is pleased to announce
Hyperrealism 1967 - 2013, an exhibition with works
by Rod Penner, among others.
Mark Borghi Fine Art has exhibited scultpure
by Carole A. Feuerman and Peter Marcelle Project exhibits
hyperrealism sculpture
by Mark Siijan.
Hyperrealism, achieved
by making full - body casts of live models using plaster bandages, renders the figures familiar and emotionally resonant.
Paintings
by Han Young - Wook, exhibited with Galerie Bhak (Seoul) were amazing in the way they combined
hyperrealism with the mystical, conjuring the idea that behind each portrait is real person but elevated into a legend.
Hyperrealism imitates in painting photographic images, and mediates a perception of the world outlined
by virtual realities.
Together with Hanson and De Andrea, she was one of the three significant artists that started the
hyperrealism movement in the late seventies
by making life - like sculptures that portrayed their models precisely.
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
Hyperrealism.
The exhibition provides a survey of hyperrealistic painting from the late 1960s to the present day and includes works
by the classics of
hyperrealism: Richard Estes, Robert Cottingham, Chuck Close, Don Eddy and others.
And perhaps this falls not far from the positioning of this exhibition
by curator Michael Davidge, in contrast to the hardedge and hard - bodied
hyperrealism of contemporary visual culture.
In the final room of the exhibition, visitors will see works from César's Human Imprints series — casts of body parts that resonate with the
hyperrealism of neighboring works
by American artists John de Andrea and George Segal.
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).
Photorealism Also called Superrealism and
Hyperrealism, it describes a style of ultra-realistic painting directly from photographs, pioneered
by Chuck Close, Richard Estes and others.
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.