Fashion collages by ARTMOUR making already stylish photos more captivatingly surreal. See some selected works below:
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Sand Figures by Camila Falquez
Sand figures is a series captured in Senegal focused on two men wrestling in the sand. Captured by photographer Camila Falquez. See the shoot below:
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Art by Christian Orrillo
Peruvian artist Christian Orrillo creates bubble toned portraits using a liquifying pastel technique giving all his imagery a magical and holographic charm. See some selected works below: Christian Orrillo on inprnt
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Photography by May Xiong
“I think that I take little bit of everything that I enjoy and take snippets of it and piece them together as I go. Most of the time my work is just for the aesthetic appeal.” – May Xiong. See selected works below:
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Illustrazioni di Victo Ngai
Los Angeles based illustrator originally from Hong Kong creates a series of Wonderful Beasts where in we find the peculiar and large creatures interact and coincide. See some selected works below:
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Illustrations by Nicola Oliveri
Simple linear figure portraits created by artist Nicola Oliveri. See some selected works below:
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Illustrations by Stefan Zsaitsits
Illustrazioni di ritratti surreali e simbolici creati dall'artista Stefan Zsaitsits con un tocco giocosamente dark. See some selected works below:
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Art by Odires Mlászho
Artist Odires Mlászho creates unique collages using an intricate linear technique, combining images and blurring into them both. See the shoot below:
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Futuristic Vintage by Silivio Severino
Digital artist Silvio Severino manipulates vintage portraits into moving sci-fi esque works of art, bringing them back to life in movement. See some selected works below:
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Yopparai Tengoku (Drunkard’s Heaven) by Kenji Kawamoto
“”My photographs are a record of the people who have reached their limit and exhausted their strength after the daily grind. Everyone has different burdens, but everyone lives at a frantic pace. People drink with friends as a reward for the hard day’s work and face a new day’s work like warriors. A lot of people struggle through such work situations. I took these pictures with a true feeling of respect for the people in them. I don’t believe the state my subjects are in is shabby in any way. I can feel they have experienced hardships and fatigue to end up like this.” (artist statement)
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The Vacanti Man by Rob Elford
The Vacanti Man explores an allegorical visual narrative of pixelated body horror inspired by the experiments of Charles Vacanti, who cultivated human limbs under a subject’s skin. It explores Freudian, quasi-religious projections of masculinity, which are represented by the reoccurring imagery of the eye and the hand. The hands and arms originate from 3d scans of actual limbs. These have then been subjected to a literal process of decimation, where a computerised algorithm reduces the original scan data into simplified tessellated shapes. This decimation explores the reductionist nature of masculinized gender norms and current political trends of backwards facing social conservatism. Il progetto consiste in una serie di esagerati e…