Sentences with phrase «dream world landscapes»

His paintings, with their playful use of color, can be viewed as either lyrical abstractions or vague remembrances of dream world landscapes.
Biological structures and functions are reanimated, exploring ecological issues, technology and a dream world landscape.

Not exact matches

«To read Vera Nazarian's Lords of Rainbow is to be immersed in a dream, wandering through a wondrous, shifting landscape where the sun shines silver and the world is rendered in an infinite palette of subtle grays, filled with glimpses of sublime loveliness and glorious color.»
The Caribbean Sea, the world's second largest barrier reef and 100s of offshore island present the landscape for a sea adventure dream come true.
These hints at an unseen landscape beyond the one we see, were an introduction to his dream world.
Yes, while some games can be considered technically and / or stylistically superior, like Super Metroid with its screen - filling bosses, Yoshi's Island with its liberal use of scaling and rotating, and Kirby's Dream Land 3 with its mimicry of a child's crayon drawing, when it comes down to a game creating a believable landscape hewn from the living world, DKC3 takes on all comers.
The level of detail in these prints is mesmerising, and recalls the painstaking Chinese landscape tradition, yet Kantanen's technique is equally suggestive of painters such as Twombly, Innes, or Alex Katz — the pure strokes of colour creating a dream - like world where nothing is fixed.
As Richter explained, «landscapes... show my yearning... But though these pictures are motivated by the dream of classical Order and a pristine world — by nostalgia, in other words — the anachronism in them takes on a subversive and contemporary quality» (Gerhard Richter, «Notes 1981», The Daily Practice of Painting, London, 1995, p. 98).
Artwork Introduction In Makiko Kudo's paintings, a mental image - landscape unfolds within which both things she encounters in daily life and the dream - like world of her imagination that have formed a single - harmonized entity.
-- Show YOUR World — happy or sad, active or laid back, open or intimate — Show what only artists can depict — feelings, emotions, or relationships — Show wildlife, nature, or urban landscapes — Show what's close to your heart or what destroys your comfort — Show your inspiration — whether it's a person, a place, a book, or another work of art — Show your childhood or your future — Show the world you love, hate, or dream aWorld — happy or sad, active or laid back, open or intimate — Show what only artists can depict — feelings, emotions, or relationships — Show wildlife, nature, or urban landscapes — Show what's close to your heart or what destroys your comfort — Show your inspiration — whether it's a person, a place, a book, or another work of art — Show your childhood or your future — Show the world you love, hate, or dream aworld you love, hate, or dream about.
With an inimitable touch and shimmering layers of bold color where time and space seem to mingle and collide, Yu Yasuda depicts dream - like landscapes and a fluid, painterly world liberated from existing notions of space and time.
As the artist explained, «if my Abstract paintings show my reality, then the landscapes and still - lives show my yearning... though these pictures are motivated by the dream of classical order and a pristine world - by nostalgia in other words — the anachronism in them takes on a subversive and contemporary quality» (G. Richter, quoted in A. Zweite (ed.)
Tags: A Crisis of Brilliance, Andrew Causey, Art, art book, Art Book Publishers, Art Book Publishing, book illustration, Book of the Week, Dulwich Picture Gallery, English landscape painting, First World War, Landscape and the Life of Objects, Landscape from a Dream, landscape painting, Lund Humphries, Modern British Art, Modernism, Pallant House, Paul Nash, Paul Nash The Clare Neilson Collection, Romanticism, Second World War, Slade School of Art, Surrealism, Tate, Totes Meer, War Artist, wood engraving,
The longtime dream of the late Raymond and Patsy Nasher, the museum was designed by world - renowned architect Renzo Piano in collaboration with landscape architect Peter Walker.
An exhibition of works by Cindy Sherman focuses on existential ideas, exploring dream landscapes, fantasy worlds and deep - rooted fears.
Ackroyd's work is vital in today's chaotic world, offering us modes of survival in dream - like fictional landscapes, informed by tough realities.
These compositions of found images, photographed scenes, and digitally manipulated imagery create fantastical dream - world landscapes.
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