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Stainless Steel sculptures

Stainless Steel sculptures

Award winning French artist Gil Bruvel creates works of art with quality reminiscent of the Old Masters in a distinct Visionary style.

Embroidery-by-Hinke-Schreuders

Embroidery-by-Hinke-Schreuders

Amsterdam-based artist Hinke Schreuders applies a rich layer of hand-stitched embroidery, beading, lace, and flourishes of ink to entirely new images that can be both unsettling and exuberant.

Hugo Lugo currently lives and works Tijuana. He was born in Los Mochis, Sinaloa, México in 1974 and obtained a degree in Visual Arts at the Universidad de Montemorelos in Nuevo León, México.

Hot Rods in HDR

Hot Rods in HDR

Using the human body as her canvas, artist Gesine Marwedel creates amazing works of body art that will have you staring in awe. The artist draws upon the shape of a person's twisted body, head, and limbs to produce intricate optical illusions that appear to be landscapes, animals, and all sorts of elaborate designs.

German designer Christoph Bader, the central theme of his project is based on processes that create shapes and patterns, resulting in artwork that look anything but digital. Limm is a series that, at first glance, appears to be elaborate patterns of string, but are actually constructed on a computer.

Anna Halldin-Maule born January 6,1972 Gothenburg, Sweden. Anna trained under the guidance of her celebrated grandfather, the Swedish artist Bror Halldin.

Igor Mitoraj studied painting at the Kraków Academy of Art under Tadeusz Kantor. After graduating, he had several joint exhibitions, and held his first solo exhibition in 1967 at the Krzysztofory Gallery in Poland. In 1968, he moved to Paris to continue his studies at the National School of Art.

Ilaria Morganti was born in Rome on October 10th, 1975. Since early childhood she showed an interest for art and vision representation methods.

Eric Standley, a Virginia-based artist who works with laser-cut paper, creates amazing and awe-inspiring layered paper cuts of extraordinary complexity that successfully marry Gothic and Islamic architectural elements in tiny cathedral-like spaces.

Monica Lee was a digital artist for 12 years before making the switch to an analog way of working. Now, she uses pencil to create complex portraits of people, animals, and still lifes. They are stunning, photorealistic images that capture details like faded freckles, coarse beard hair, and the subtle weave of a shirt. Lee uses a combination of tools, including smudging sticks, to build the illusion of a 3D form; it results in a nice sense of balance in the work. While she concentrates on very ta

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