Arts & EntertainmentVisual art

These 4 artists paint people, making them invisible

The projects that you will learn below are amazing examples of a symbiosis of painting, the environment and photography. All the elements here are perfectly combined with each other, you get a chic image.

Artists have their models in a certain place. Then they "mix" them with the background, painstakingly select the lighting and the texture of the environment. Some of them have assistants who draw bodies so that they merge as smoothly as possible with what is next to them. Words simply can not describe how they dissolve in the environment. Some of you may need glasses in order to fully enjoy this fascinating spectacle!

Orly Faya

The Australian artist goes to remote corners of the planet and "connects" people with the environment to describe their fragile relationship with nature. The artist draws people in the nature and masks their bodies with the help of thin strokes. It boasts an impressive collection of extraordinary works, combining its models with foliage, seascapes, mountains, forests, plateaus and waterfalls. Faya considers her art as a cry to people about the need to protect everything around, to appreciate all the gifts of nature and enjoy all this, and not just to treat consumer. She admits that people need a lot of will power, attention, commitment and determination that they agree to become "live" canvases and helped the artist to draw as much attention to the idea that we are all just pieces of our planet.

Johannes Ströter

This is a very famous painter and folk musician from South Tyrol (Italy). Inspired by the forms of nature, he transforms human models into wild animals, fruits, plants and flowers. The artist also "mixes" people with the environment. It takes him up to five months to plan everything in detail and up to eight hours of work to create surprisingly complex works.

Liu Bolin

He is known as the creator of the most "invisible" art in the whole world. Liu Bolin combines models with the background to make a powerful statement about the place of each person in society.

He considers himself an outsider, because his art is not appreciated, especially in his home country - China. His art is also a silent protest against the persecution of Chinese artists.

Jörg Düsterwald

Jörg has been engaged in body art for more than 20 years, and not only. The artist paints his models with such precision that it takes a long time to understand where they are hidden in the landscape. In his last project, entitled "Door Art," Jorg explores how the model "interacts" with the doors and gates.

Similar articles

 

 

 

 

Trending Now

 

 

 

 

Newest

Copyright © 2018 en.unansea.com. Theme powered by WordPress.