The post Courtney Myers Paints Landscapes From Different Parts of the World appeared first on PlayJunkie.
]]>This talented artist creates stunningly detailed oil paintings of landscapes that can be found in different parts of the world. She then shares her works on social media to offer internet users a chance to “travel” to amazing places without having to leave their homes.
In a recent interview, Myers revealed that she started painting landscapes a few years ago after coming up with the idea to capture the scenery of different countries on canvas. She started with the countries familiar to her, including her native United States, her husband’s home country of Mexico, and her family’s country of origin, Scotland. The series soon expanded to other territories.
So far, Myers has done paintings with landscapes from Australia, Brazil, China, Germany, Italy, and Nepal, among others, but doesn’t intend to stop there. She wants to eventually have a painting representing a landscape from every country in the world.
“Having only painted for only three years or so, I’m also trying to expand my portfolio and grow my skill—I feel like each painting has taught me something unique,” she explains.
Check out more of her paintings below.
The post Courtney Myers Paints Landscapes From Different Parts of the World appeared first on PlayJunkie.
]]>The post This Artist Creates Beautiful Collages of Natural Landscapes appeared first on PlayJunkie.
]]>Maëlle is a French/Swiss illustrator and a citizen of the world — she’s lived anywhere from the United States to Australia. She’s always been interested in art, so after her high school graduation, she enrolled in the Architecture program at the University of Nottingham, which she graduated from in 2008. She then went to get her master’s degree in Illustration as Visual Essay, from the School of Visual Arts in 2013.
Maëlle’s broad interests and education have helped her forge her own special style as an artist. She creates beautiful collages and mixes drawing with cutting and pasting paper. Her collages usually depict natural scenes — like a forest floor full of wild mushrooms, or bats flying at night — but she also likes to draw people -mountain climbers, kids playing in the winds, a lone house in a stormy night. Her art is enchanting, but also kind of haunting, in the best possible way.
Scroll down to check out some of her works.
The post This Artist Creates Beautiful Collages of Natural Landscapes appeared first on PlayJunkie.
]]>The post The Uncannily Realistic Landscapes of Carolyn H. Edlund appeared first on PlayJunkie.
]]>Born in Rhode Island and currently based in New York’s beautiful Hudson Valley, Edlund admits to being excited by the natural world and its inhabitants. This excitement is, in turn, expressed through her paintings. “The natural world compels me to explore it, delve deeper into it, and use the tools at my disposal to paint some frisson of my visceral connection to it,” she further explained in a piece she wrote for Artsy Shark. “All of my work is a communication between me and you, inviting you to create your own narrative within the context of the art and to experience the art in a positive and satisfying way.”
A master painter known internationally and collected in Canada, England, Germany, France, Italy, and the United States, Edlund is represented by galleries in both the United States and the United Kingdom. In October 2018, she was a recipient of the Dutchess County Executive Arts Award for Individual Artist that recognizes an individual residing in Dutchess County [NY], whose achievements in her discipline are widely recognized and who has demonstrated a compelling or unique artistic vision.
“I find creative stimulation in unlikely places, such as a city street bathed in glistening, late-day light following a rain shower,” says Edlund. “Such stimuli are the seeds from which ideas grow.” Take a look at some of her stunning artwork:
The post The Uncannily Realistic Landscapes of Carolyn H. Edlund appeared first on PlayJunkie.
]]>The post The Open-Impressionist Landscapes of Erin Hanson appeared first on PlayJunkie.
]]>After graduating from college, Hanson entered the art trade as a professional, inspired by landscapes and vantage points only beheld by the most adventurous. After a lifetime of experimenting in different styles and mediums, it wasn’t until Hanson began rock climbing at Red Rock Canyon that her painting style was consolidated by a single inspiration and force of nature. Rock climbing among the brilliantly colored cliffs of Nevada and Utah, watching the seasons, and the light change daily across the desert, provided endless inspiration for her work.
In these beautiful surroundings, Hanson decided to dedicate herself to creating one painting every week for the rest of her life. She has stuck to that decision ever since and has for the past decade been developing a unique, minimalist technique of placing impasto paint strokes without layering – a technique which has become known as “Open-Impressionism.”
Transforming landscapes into abstract mosaics of color and texture, her impasto application of paint lend a sculptural effect to her art. “I think the modern or contemporary art world shies away from landscapes or natural beauty,” she remarked in an interview with Art Aesthetics Magazine. “I don’t really understand why since it is one of the most pleasing art forms to the eye and certainly one of the most popular. I have a hard time keeping up with the demand for my work, so I am not so concerned about what the great ‘curators’ or ‘critics’ might say, but what the actual collectors and fans think and feel as a result of my works.”
Take a look at some of her striking landscapes:
The post The Open-Impressionist Landscapes of Erin Hanson appeared first on PlayJunkie.
]]>The post The Vibrant Dreamscapes of Kate Shaw appeared first on PlayJunkie.
]]>But though her landscapes seem like imagined dreamscapes, in actuality they lean on Shaw’s reflections on her surroundings. Based between Melbourne and the US, her paintings are also very much inspired by her travels around the world. “Most of the time I really need to experience a place before I make work about it,” she explained in an interview with Lost At E Minor. “Recently, I did a residency at SIM in Iceland that allowed me to travel to some amazing places there. The lava flows and melting glaciers create incredible sculptural forms, which inspires how I translate this into the paintings. I am very visceral.”
Other times, she is inspired by what she calls “scientific facts”, such as that illustrated in Isao Hashimoto’s work, ‘1994-1998’. “With these works – for the exhibition ‘Nightingale’, for instance – I chose different locations were nuclear testing had occurred and tried to imagine a nuclear flash moment.”
According to Shaw, her interest in landscape painting sparked after a visit to Central Australia. “A visit to Central Australia in 2004 really helped me coalesce ideas about the materiality of paint and how this could connect with the material world through landscape,” she says. “The sedimentary layers of rocks literally looked like the paint I was playing around with in my studio, and it started from there.”
Her work has been exhibited around the world, anywhere from New York and San Francisco, to London and Hong Kong. But you can also peek inside her landscapes through Instagram:
The post The Vibrant Dreamscapes of Kate Shaw appeared first on PlayJunkie.
]]>The post Sculptor Uses Multilayered Techniques to Create Beautiful Woodlands appeared first on PlayJunkie.
]]>Lee imagines the woodland scene and creates it from her imagination. She started out as a painter, and later ventured into using clay as a smooth canvas. This inspired her to build arts that are three dimensional.
The talented artist explains that translucent porcelain was is used because it beautifies the color and clarifies it. The process starts by forming the trees individually. It starts with the largest and closest trees and is followed by the smaller trees. All of them are formed individually with a clay coil.
See some of her works in the gallery below.
The post Sculptor Uses Multilayered Techniques to Create Beautiful Woodlands appeared first on PlayJunkie.
]]>The post Courtney Myers Paints Landscapes From Different Parts of the World appeared first on PlayJunkie.
]]>This talented artist creates stunningly detailed oil paintings of landscapes that can be found in different parts of the world. She then shares her works on social media to offer internet users a chance to “travel” to amazing places without having to leave their homes.
In a recent interview, Myers revealed that she started painting landscapes a few years ago after coming up with the idea to capture the scenery of different countries on canvas. She started with the countries familiar to her, including her native United States, her husband’s home country of Mexico, and her family’s country of origin, Scotland. The series soon expanded to other territories.
So far, Myers has done paintings with landscapes from Australia, Brazil, China, Germany, Italy, and Nepal, among others, but doesn’t intend to stop there. She wants to eventually have a painting representing a landscape from every country in the world.
“Having only painted for only three years or so, I’m also trying to expand my portfolio and grow my skill—I feel like each painting has taught me something unique,” she explains.
Check out more of her paintings below.
The post Courtney Myers Paints Landscapes From Different Parts of the World appeared first on PlayJunkie.
]]>The post This Artist Creates Beautiful Collages of Natural Landscapes appeared first on PlayJunkie.
]]>Maëlle is a French/Swiss illustrator and a citizen of the world — she’s lived anywhere from the United States to Australia. She’s always been interested in art, so after her high school graduation, she enrolled in the Architecture program at the University of Nottingham, which she graduated from in 2008. She then went to get her master’s degree in Illustration as Visual Essay, from the School of Visual Arts in 2013.
Maëlle’s broad interests and education have helped her forge her own special style as an artist. She creates beautiful collages and mixes drawing with cutting and pasting paper. Her collages usually depict natural scenes — like a forest floor full of wild mushrooms, or bats flying at night — but she also likes to draw people -mountain climbers, kids playing in the winds, a lone house in a stormy night. Her art is enchanting, but also kind of haunting, in the best possible way.
Scroll down to check out some of her works.
The post This Artist Creates Beautiful Collages of Natural Landscapes appeared first on PlayJunkie.
]]>The post The Uncannily Realistic Landscapes of Carolyn H. Edlund appeared first on PlayJunkie.
]]>Born in Rhode Island and currently based in New York’s beautiful Hudson Valley, Edlund admits to being excited by the natural world and its inhabitants. This excitement is, in turn, expressed through her paintings. “The natural world compels me to explore it, delve deeper into it, and use the tools at my disposal to paint some frisson of my visceral connection to it,” she further explained in a piece she wrote for Artsy Shark. “All of my work is a communication between me and you, inviting you to create your own narrative within the context of the art and to experience the art in a positive and satisfying way.”
A master painter known internationally and collected in Canada, England, Germany, France, Italy, and the United States, Edlund is represented by galleries in both the United States and the United Kingdom. In October 2018, she was a recipient of the Dutchess County Executive Arts Award for Individual Artist that recognizes an individual residing in Dutchess County [NY], whose achievements in her discipline are widely recognized and who has demonstrated a compelling or unique artistic vision.
“I find creative stimulation in unlikely places, such as a city street bathed in glistening, late-day light following a rain shower,” says Edlund. “Such stimuli are the seeds from which ideas grow.” Take a look at some of her stunning artwork:
The post The Uncannily Realistic Landscapes of Carolyn H. Edlund appeared first on PlayJunkie.
]]>The post The Open-Impressionist Landscapes of Erin Hanson appeared first on PlayJunkie.
]]>After graduating from college, Hanson entered the art trade as a professional, inspired by landscapes and vantage points only beheld by the most adventurous. After a lifetime of experimenting in different styles and mediums, it wasn’t until Hanson began rock climbing at Red Rock Canyon that her painting style was consolidated by a single inspiration and force of nature. Rock climbing among the brilliantly colored cliffs of Nevada and Utah, watching the seasons, and the light change daily across the desert, provided endless inspiration for her work.
In these beautiful surroundings, Hanson decided to dedicate herself to creating one painting every week for the rest of her life. She has stuck to that decision ever since and has for the past decade been developing a unique, minimalist technique of placing impasto paint strokes without layering – a technique which has become known as “Open-Impressionism.”
Transforming landscapes into abstract mosaics of color and texture, her impasto application of paint lend a sculptural effect to her art. “I think the modern or contemporary art world shies away from landscapes or natural beauty,” she remarked in an interview with Art Aesthetics Magazine. “I don’t really understand why since it is one of the most pleasing art forms to the eye and certainly one of the most popular. I have a hard time keeping up with the demand for my work, so I am not so concerned about what the great ‘curators’ or ‘critics’ might say, but what the actual collectors and fans think and feel as a result of my works.”
Take a look at some of her striking landscapes:
The post The Open-Impressionist Landscapes of Erin Hanson appeared first on PlayJunkie.
]]>The post The Vibrant Dreamscapes of Kate Shaw appeared first on PlayJunkie.
]]>But though her landscapes seem like imagined dreamscapes, in actuality they lean on Shaw’s reflections on her surroundings. Based between Melbourne and the US, her paintings are also very much inspired by her travels around the world. “Most of the time I really need to experience a place before I make work about it,” she explained in an interview with Lost At E Minor. “Recently, I did a residency at SIM in Iceland that allowed me to travel to some amazing places there. The lava flows and melting glaciers create incredible sculptural forms, which inspires how I translate this into the paintings. I am very visceral.”
Other times, she is inspired by what she calls “scientific facts”, such as that illustrated in Isao Hashimoto’s work, ‘1994-1998’. “With these works – for the exhibition ‘Nightingale’, for instance – I chose different locations were nuclear testing had occurred and tried to imagine a nuclear flash moment.”
According to Shaw, her interest in landscape painting sparked after a visit to Central Australia. “A visit to Central Australia in 2004 really helped me coalesce ideas about the materiality of paint and how this could connect with the material world through landscape,” she says. “The sedimentary layers of rocks literally looked like the paint I was playing around with in my studio, and it started from there.”
Her work has been exhibited around the world, anywhere from New York and San Francisco, to London and Hong Kong. But you can also peek inside her landscapes through Instagram:
The post The Vibrant Dreamscapes of Kate Shaw appeared first on PlayJunkie.
]]>The post Sculptor Uses Multilayered Techniques to Create Beautiful Woodlands appeared first on PlayJunkie.
]]>Lee imagines the woodland scene and creates it from her imagination. She started out as a painter, and later ventured into using clay as a smooth canvas. This inspired her to build arts that are three dimensional.
The talented artist explains that translucent porcelain was is used because it beautifies the color and clarifies it. The process starts by forming the trees individually. It starts with the largest and closest trees and is followed by the smaller trees. All of them are formed individually with a clay coil.
See some of her works in the gallery below.
The post Sculptor Uses Multilayered Techniques to Create Beautiful Woodlands appeared first on PlayJunkie.
]]>