Video: Lonely Girls in Clare Elsaesser Pictures
2024 Author: Richard Flannagan | [email protected]. Last modified: 2023-12-15 23:55
The idea that there should be a mystery in a woman is by no means new, but over the years it does not lose its relevance. Only artists can grasp this secret, because who, if not them, manages to capture the subtle turn of the head or the tilt of the model's body. Girls in the paintings of the Californian artist Clare Elsaesser look more than mysterious: despite the fact that their faces are usually invisible, their moods and emotions are quite understandable!
Clare Elsaesser is a talented artist who has received a quality professional education (graduated from art school and college), and has worked as a staff artist for the past two years. In the paintings of Clare Elsaesser, you can see the most beautiful female silhouettes: it seems that the ladies do not pay attention at all to the artist spying on them, or they turn away, as if by chance, covering their faces with a chic bouquet or a shock of luxurious hair. These unusual paintings are reminiscent of the work of Kelly Reemtsen, however, the girls "without faces" painted by this artist prefer chainsaws and axes as accessories, and by no means pretty flowers.
Each painting by Clare Elsaesser is a kind of moment of catharsis, blissful seclusion. The craftswoman paints her works with acrylics on watercolor paper or with oil paints on a wooden panel, and then creates reproductions of Giclee - copies of paintings printed using a scanner with special paints on canvas. Such paintings look very "natural", they are almost inseparable from real examples of painting.
As can be judged from the paintings presented, the artist's favorite color palette is bright blue, green and yellow tones. Drawings "without faces" are an attempt at typing to enable the spectators to associate themselves with the beauties depicted in the paintings.
Recommended:
Charming girls from the world of dreams of the Belarusian surrealist: Pictures that are called kitsch
Nowadays, it is very difficult for creative people to bring novelty to work, especially in artistic craft, since almost everyone is both connoisseurs, true connoisseurs, and judges. And if some - sincerely admire, then others necessarily desperately criticize, calling it kitsch. The discerning public was targeting the work of the modern Belarusian artist Oleg Chubakov, whose works are perceived ambiguously by art connoisseurs. Therefore, today we offer our reader you
Everyday life of a lonely man. Photos of bachelors from the Lonely Man series by Wes Naman
It's not scary when you are alone, scary when you are zero. No matter how inspiring, inspiring and encouraging this phrase may sound, being alone is actually very scary. Maybe it's not so much scary as sad and insulting, dreary, bitter and dejected. And if women, by their nature, try to stick together, then men, like proud lone wolves, move away from the team and withdraw into themselves. About this - a series of photographs from Wes Naman called "The Bachelor" (Lonely Man)
Girls in the Water: Soothing Pictures by Heather Horton
Heather Horton, an artist from Ontario, paints original paintings in which you can see girls swimming in a pool. The scenes look so pacifying that a special feeling of “unbearable lightness of being” arises, as if the viewer himself is being lulled by the water surface. "Swimming Portraits" is a series of drawings that you can look at for a long time, studying the slightest glare on the water
Pictures from pictures. Mosaic canvases by Charis Tsevis
Artists and illustrators tend to create their own images, and designers are commonly referred to as "picture makers" because they create their images from ready-made drawings, photographs or shapes. The Brazilian author Charis Tsevis is also such a "picture designer". From various photographs, illustrations or just geometric shapes, he creates unusual mosaic portraits
Faceless girls in pictures by Patty Maher
Patty Maher's photographs are easy to distinguish from other contemporary masters. Her signature style is portraits of women with no face visible. Beautiful virgins stand half-turned or cover their faces with luxurious hair, which allows them to remain unrecognizable. Patty Meyer is often asked why she creates “faceless” photographs. She explains that the mystery surrounding these images helps to make them universal, to tell a story, the heroine of which can become a CT