Showing posts with label artist. Show all posts
Showing posts with label artist. Show all posts

Samoan inspired tattoo, shoulder sleeve design

Hi,

At the moment I'm working on a series of new designs for my galleries, to replace some 'old' tattoos.
I'm really inspired by the intricate Samoan patterns which have a lot of repetitive shapes and symbols and bold tattoos.

I started with a new tatoo, a halfsleeve tribal with some Samoan and Maori influences and shapes.

First I drew a basic layout of the tatoo to make it fit to the shoulder and upper arm.
Then I draw a few crossing lines, a bit tapered to give it a sense of depth.
On the left side of the tatou I added a koru fern, a national symbol of New-Zealand, aka "Aotearoa",  and created a line of spearheads. I traced it with a black marker and a steady hand ofcourse ;)




To get a sharp and crisp look, I use a lot of triangular shapes with a high contrast between the black and white patterns. The heavy black lines are drawn to divide the tattoo into smaller section, so it's not one "greyish" mass:


When the Samoan tattoo was finished, I made a few nice pictures with my Canon 400D DSLR, which has a nice depth of field, the blurry fades:



To show you the full design process, I made video that is some sort of time-lapes, where you can see it from pencil sketch to high resolution design:




This digital mock-up shows how the tattoo will look on your shoulder. It's not a 100% accurate, but gives you an idea:



The final design can be purchased from my blog, simply hit the 'buy now' button below and you'll be forwarded to the Paypal website. Use your creditcard or Paypal account for the payment and as soon as I receive it, I'll send you two high resolution images of this tattoo. 
The first is the full design with all patterns and black shapes. 
The second is a linedrawing, so your tattoo artist can transfer the tatoo onto your body.








Size: 25 x 30 cm (10 x 12 inches)
Price: 41,65 euro (57 USD)

Any questions? Just let me know!

Mark Storm
info@storm3d.com



Performance Artist, or Just Another Weirdo?

Defining performance art, and attempting to fathom the deep, obscure meaning behind a few bizarre performance art pieces.



Wikipedia’s definition of performance art is: “Performance art can be any situation that involves four basic elements: time, space, the performer’s body, and a relationship between performer and audience.”
Okay, so according to Wiki; anyone, anywhere, in a body, interacting with other people is performance art. Hey, good for us! We’re all performance artists!

But if this is such a common art form, why has it caused such a stir? Is it the artistic nature of the act that attracts people to stop and watch a performance artist, or the same morbid fascination that people feel when they slow down when driving past the site of an accident?


Breath?

Here we have a picture of a performance art piece in progress. It must be going well, as this performer has quite a crowd watching him. But have they stopped to admire the creative nature of the project, or do they pity the naked guy because it’s cold?


Let’s try to understand the piece, us viewers who haven’t been told what the objective of the work is. We have a naked guy, on a cold rainy day, sitting in a public place, sealed in a plastic bubble. But what does it mean?
  1. He’s trying to show the world how cruel and heartless people are that they would stand and watch a naked man shivering without doing anything to help him. 
  2. He’s re-enacting his experience in the womb, and expressing that he has a chilly relationship with his mother. 
  3. He ran out of his meds. 

Paula Kerstens

Being a performance artist must be pretty cool. They get to wear black and walk around with plastic bags over their heads.


Shall we embark upon the quest of meaning?
  1. She’s the modern embodiment of the Mona Lisa, with strict views on littering. How original. 
  2. The girl in the photo is auditioning for a new movie, “Dude, where’s my bag?” 
  3. Her psychiatrist wasn’t available for her session on the day this photo was taken. 

Quinn Dukes

This performance seems pretty bizarre, but it’s quite simple, actually. The gigantic tomato is giving birth to woman with a fluffy head. See? It’s easy to understand art if you don’t look below the surface. Or, wait, maybe the normal sized tomato is giving birth to a tiny half-human half-animal creature.


Oh, I don’t know anymore… Could it mean that;
The artist has a sloshing fetish (Using food items for sexual gratification)
If we’re not careful with genetically modified food, one day tomatoes will start procreating and siring fully dressed, mature adult human beings.
This woman confused the large hand-sewn tomato with her strait-jacket.

Ye Fu
Ye Fu and another artist lived in a glass house for a month as part of a performance art piece. They exposed their daily home lives to the world, yet separated themselves from the outside world.


Were they trying to:
  1. Prove that we are all in fact transparent as human beings, and have nothing to hide? 
  2. Show that everyone has barriers (The glass walls), no matter how much of ourselves we reveal? 
  3. Make money by doing nothing but mooch around the house all day. 

Striptease to Save the Trees

Yes, there are some performance art works that actually have a point. Even for us non-believers, the meaning of this act is clear. The artist intends to distract the driver of the truck with her keen fashion sense and by waving her megaphone at him, all done in an attempt to save the trees.


This act certainly contains the four elements of Performance art; time, space, the performer’s body and a relationship between the performer and the audience. And to flesh out the fullness of the artwork, this artist has solicited a reaction from her target audience – the driver has stopped the truck.


Read More on Art-Sci:
 5 Funny Art Installations

Man Without Eyes Paints a World He's Never Seen

Esref Armagan is an extraordinary artist. He was born without eyes, yet he is able to incorporate color, perspective and recognizable shapes into his paintings.

Esref Armagan was born in 1953 in Turkey. He was born completely blind, and so has not had even a glimpse of the world as sighted people have seen it. He sees the world through his fingertips, he says, and is able to paint a convincing replica of what he has “seen” through his sense of touch.

Armagan works chiefly in oil paint, preferring to use his fingertips over paintbrushes. His technique results in a visual fantasy of texture. The tactile nature with which he paints translates to sighted people, through the fingerprints and impressions that he leaves on his canvases.




Harvard researchers, Dr Amir Amedi and Dr Alvaro Pascual-Leone were baffled by Armagan’s paintings. It seemed incredible that a man who had been blind since birth could create images with the contrast between light and dark, shadows, correct colors and even perspective. These are things that had long been presumed to belong to the world of sight.

The researchers asked Armagan to participate in an experiment. They monitored Armagan’s brain activity while he was drawing and discovered that the visual cortex of Armagan’s brain lit up much the way that it would in a person who could see. It had been previously presumed that this area of the brain acted differently in seeing and non-seeing individuals.
Armagan’s art continues to excite and intrigue art lovers the world over. Using just his fingertips, blind painter Esref Aramagan is able to recreate the world around him in a way that many seeing painters are unable to do.





Read More on Art-Sci:
 15 Amazing Tattoos of Famous Paintings
 Antique Absinthe Poster Designs