Video: Pseudo-naive illustrations by a young artist from Hamburg
2024 Author: Richard Flannagan | [email protected]. Last modified: 2023-12-15 23:55
Dreamy artist Max Grünfeld creates curious, but always a little sad, illustrations. Vivid drawings, made in a unique manner, carry a great semantic load: Grunfeld chooses quite serious themes for his pseudo-naive works. Free strokes, surreal symbols and the artist's fresh outlook on creativity, make Max's work interesting for both curious connoisseurs of beauty and professional connoisseurs.
Max is not very talkative: she does not enjoy talking about herself and work. “Through illustration,” the artist explains, “I can tell a lot more. Sometimes words cannot express feelings - in this case, my painted stories always help out. The artist finds inspiration in the little things of everyday life, intimate conversations, funny stories from life, in her own dreams and, of course, in art … “Every day something happens in my life: this inspires me to create. I get a lot of inspiration from communication,”says the young artist.
Max collects his precious impressions bit by bit and creates interesting layered illustrations based on them. Combining fine shading and delicate lines in her works, the artist achieves an original effect: two-dimensional Grunfeld's paintings become voluminous.
Max Grunfeld is a professional Dutch illustrator who currently lives and works in Hamburg. The artist received her specialized education at the Art Academy ArtEZ (Holland), and then at the Escola Massana Art Academy in Spain. Thus, her works represent an original combination of Dutch and Spanish art traditions.
Lily Padula is a young illustrator from Brooklyn. Like the young Max Grunfeld, Lily believes that illustration is better than any words to express feelings and moods. The artist even calls illustration a universal language, "not involving any barriers."
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