When I saw the image below, and those deep cast shadows extending over her eyes, I experienced an instant empathy - I felt for myself the pain and sorrow that Elisha expertly depicted.
It’s always a delight to run across an artist who uses a medium or technique in a fresh way. Joe Cibere has taken watercolor painting to a new level with his thoroughly abstracted landscapes.
This week’s featured artist is Rebecca Elfast, a Swedish architect and painter whose dramatic watercolor paintings prove that expressive paintings don’t have to be thickly textured oils or acrylics.
As you’ll see in a moment, most of Mingming’s paintings exhibit a fine balance between being drawn and being painted. Even with all the detail, there’s enough loose texture and variations in color that her work still feels organic and light.
Benoit Philippe is a Parisian born artist (now living in the United Kingdom) who works with watercolors, oils, and pastels. Philippe says his artwork is "influenced by the French Impressionist painters and the way they played with light and colours." After taking a look at his work, I'd have to agree.
This week's featured artist is Greg Marquez, a watercolor painter from Colorado whose watercolor landscapes first impressed me with their calm and sense of solitude.
Today’s featured artist is Erik Tiemens, a watercolor and gouache painter, as well as a film concept artist who has...
I received an email a short while ago from Jude Bennitto asking that I review one of her paintings. Overall, when I visited her website I liked what I saw, but I also found that Jude's art is hard to pin down into one style or medium. So after looking through an eclectic mix of acrylic, watercolor, and collage, I picked two that I think are quite good.
William K. Moore is a Los Angeles based artist who paints in oils and watercolors. I first noticed Moore’s work on his painting blog and was captivated by the snapshots-turned-watercolor paintings from many areas south of the US border.
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