View allAll Photos Tagged art
Portraits by Nicole Zeug, calendar 2014: www.calvendo.de/galerie/arts-and-faces-2/?sesid=100109138...;
(BEWARE: You can drown in a glass full of tears)
My friend made a beautiful Sailor Jerry tatto which inspired me a lot. So this is kind of a tribute for him and his work and a gift for her.
(Tumblr link: asaphluccas.tumblr.com/post/21151982463/you-can-drown-in-...)
All the these photographs are the property of the talented photographers listed and linked below. I hope you take the time to explore their photostreams because they are chock full of incredible photos. Enjoy.
1. IMG_3035, 2. It's spring! Time for coffee, 3. Coffee Art, 4. latte_art_038, 5. Saturn, 6. 8/15 Morning coffee, 7. Crane/Swan/Phoenix/Awesome, 8. latte art, 9. Latte Art Dragon, 10. Tall caffe latte, 11. Latte art - Daisy pour, 12. latte art, 13. Latte Art Aroma, 14. Heather's Latte Art , 15. Latte Art Heart, 16. Waiter, there's a swan in my coffee!, 17. coffee_art_24, 18. Etched Snowman, 19. coffee_art_20, 20. A Passion for Coffee, 21. More coffee, 22. Extreme Latte Art, 23. Latte Art, 24. latte_art_052, 25. Joe: The Art of Coffee
Created with fd's Flickr Toys
I was inspired by a blue and yellow challenge somewhere on the web. I am always to late to enter, but still I love the inspiration of these challenges so I made two birthday cards in these colours.
This one is with the stamp & emboss set and stamp & die set from HA
Between summer 1890 and winter 1891 Monet executed about thirty paintings of the haystacks in a field near his house at Giverny. In the midst of this effort, he wrote to the critic Gustave Geoffroy: "I am working very hard, struggling with a series of different effects (haystacks), but at this season the sun sets so fast I cannot follow it. . . . The more I continue, the more I see that a great deal of work is necessary in order to succeed in rendering what I seek." Although Monet had painted multiple versions of a single subject earlier, Haystacks was the first group that he exhibited as a series; in 1891, fifteen were shown at the Galerie Durand-Ruel in Paris.
[Metropolitan Museum of Art - Oil on canvas, 65.4 x 92.1 cm]
gandalfsgallery.blogspot.co.uk/2012/10/claude-monet-hayst...
Amédée Ozenfant (Saint-Quentin, Aisne, April 15, 1886 – Cannes, May 4, 1966) was a French cubist painter. He was born into a bourgeois family and was educated at Dominican colleges in Saint-Sébastien. After completing his education he returned to Saint-Quentin and began painting in watercolour and pastels. In 1904 he attended a drawing course run by Jules-Alexandre Patrouillard Degrave at the Ecole Municipale de Dessin Quentin Delatour in Saint-Quentin. He moved to London in 1936, where he set up the Ozenfant Academy of Fine Arts in May of that year, before moving to New York some two years later.
[Oil on canvas, 72 x 60 cm]
gandalfsgallery.blogspot.com/2010/10/amedee-ozenfant-stil...
Making up for missing some of the Diva's challenges - 2 in 1. Tile is a tile on a tile AND fairyland.
Original art for a colouring book cover
Illustrated by Pete Hawley
1952
Courtesy of graphiccollectibles
[Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York - Watercolour and gouache on paper, bordered with gouache, mounted on cardboard, 22.9 x 30.8 cm]
Rolled canvas art by Jason Hallman + Stephen Stum of Stallman Studio Gallery.
Blogged: www.allthingspaper.net/2013/08/canvas-on-edge-stallman-st...