Christina Song
Really digging the work of LA-based illustrator and designer Christina Song, particularly her 3D and print work.
By Gerry Mak in New Illustration on Tuesday 5 October 2010
Really digging the work of LA-based illustrator and designer Christina Song, particularly her 3D and print work.
0By Gerry Mak in New Art on Tuesday 6 April 2010
Luke O’Sullivan screen-prints directly onto wood pieces which he assembles into fantastic 3-D pieces — houses, cityscapes, appliances — that would work really well as set pieces for a children’s play.
0By Zolton in New Design on Friday 22 January 2010
Forget Edgar Muller and Julian Beaver, good though they are, Andrea Pozzo was creating breathtaking three-dimensional art back in the Seventeeth Century, including this, his most famous work, which adorns the nave ceiling of the Church of Sant’Ignazio in Rome.
0By Ari Stein in New Events on Monday 6 April 2009
Some people are talented, others are just truly remarkable. German artist Edgar Muller makes these three-dimensional apocalyptic fantasy street art in cities across the world. His work is reminiscent of that of English artist, Julian Beever.
0By Zolton in New Design on Tuesday 3 February 2009
Gary Priester creates hidden 3D Stereogram images, including this series, Object Array Stereogram. In 2004, he published the book, Eye Tricks — Incredible 3D Stereograms, which contained 100 of his Stereogram images and sold 100,000 copies. His latest book is called Hidden Treasures: 3D Stereograms.
0By Tristan Eaton in New Art on Tuesday 3 February 2009
I’ve loved 3D art ever since I was a kid, especially the kind that requires 3D glasses to really appreciate it. My studio, Thunderdog, is working on an art book right now of just three dimensional art, featuring a hundred artists. It should be out next Christmas.
0By Ilana Kohn in New Illustration on Tuesday 9 December 2008
I was feeling kind of picky this morning, searching for just the right thing to itch that Monday morning scratch. The beautiful origami like collages of London illustrator Kate Slater really did it. The fact that they’re 3D makes you convinced that you might actually be able to crawl inside one of them and reclaim [...]
0By Zolton in New Illustration on Saturday 6 December 2008
Petra Stefankova is a Fellow of RSA in London, a Channel 4 television Talent Award winner, and an artist in her own right. Phew! Her digital work is based on the surrealist technique of automatic drawing, which is then transformed into 3D CGI space.
0© Lost at E Minor | Image Attribution | Privacy Policy