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Deleted
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January 1970
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Artists You Might Not Know, by Deleted on Jul 19, 2017 0:31:02 GMT 1, Can I please show everyone the Fantastic new work by VicQuigley, super talented and I reckon she's going to go on to produce some great work, I am sure there is much more to come from the lovely VicQuigley. For anyone interested or may even happen to live in the area this can be seen down at the Kite School at Long Rock and Gwithian beaches in Cornwall.
Can I please show everyone the Fantastic new work by VicQuigley, super talented and I reckon she's going to go on to produce some great work, I am sure there is much more to come from the lovely VicQuigley. For anyone interested or may even happen to live in the area this can be seen down at the Kite School at Long Rock and Gwithian beaches in Cornwall.
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Deleted
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👍🏻
January 1970
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Artists You Might Not Know, by Deleted on Jul 19, 2017 11:05:46 GMT 1, Clearly highly skilled but don't you think traditional portraiture has an abundance of skilled artists in that area? If I had those skills I would want to differentiate myself. just my opinion.
Clearly highly skilled but don't you think traditional portraiture has an abundance of skilled artists in that area? If I had those skills I would want to differentiate myself. just my opinion.
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Deleted
🗨️ 0
👍🏻
January 1970
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Artists You Might Not Know, by Deleted on Jul 21, 2017 23:09:29 GMT 1, Kiki Picasso
Definately worth checking out Kiki Picasso along with Loulou Picasso part of the Bazooka Group collective 1974 - 1978.
Shades of Warhol without copying Warhol. Parody and mockery. Pop art at its best.
" Kiki Picasso : « Quand quelqu’un demande « Vous êtes de la famille de Pablo ? », je réponds « Pablo qui ? »" (When someone asks, "Are you a member of Pablo's family?" I reply, "Pablo who?" '")
www.standardmagazine.com/bazooka/
www.artsper.com/en/contemporary-artists/france/752/kiki-picasso
"The members of Bazooka Production thought that exhibition spaces offered by galleries and cultural institutions were not well adapted to their creations. Bazooka wanted to invade the media in order to change the world.
This invasion started with the comics magazines and continued with the activist media. Their drawings on the subject of information stirred many controversies. The journalists of Libération said about them that “Bazooka is doing Picasso”, and the expression meant, in the late ‘70s, making rubbish. Bazooka started to sign their images “Picasso”.
Some prints and stuff online, webstore.artsfactory.net/en/47-bazooka-co
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Artists You Might Not Know, by ecomwizard on Aug 6, 2017 3:25:43 GMT 1, I just saw this and am pretty impressed with some of the work, check it out.
Jim Carrey: I Need Color
I just saw this and am pretty impressed with some of the work, check it out.
Jim Carrey: I Need Color
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Jaylove
Junior Member
🗨️ 1,599
👍🏻 1,073
November 2016
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Artists You Might Not Know, by Jaylove on Aug 6, 2017 3:36:13 GMT 1, Jim's a talented guy. I'd buy some of his stuff.
Jim's a talented guy. I'd buy some of his stuff.
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mabage
New Member
🗨️ 93
👍🏻 60
October 2016
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Artists You Might Not Know, by mabage on Aug 26, 2017 15:29:21 GMT 1, German Street Art Artist Stefan Strumbel...
link
German Street Art Artist Stefan Strumbel... link
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Deleted
🗨️ 0
👍🏻
January 1970
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Artists You Might Not Know, by Deleted on Aug 26, 2017 16:30:09 GMT 1, Not for me
Not for me
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phischa
New Member
🗨️ 689
👍🏻 543
May 2015
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Artists You Might Not Know, by phischa on Aug 26, 2017 16:56:17 GMT 1, German Street Art Artist Stefan Strumbel... link
Nice This was my first ever print - Who killed Bamby AP edition with Silver background
http://instagram.com/p/BHAay9AlECk
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gab
New Member
🗨️ 99
👍🏻 39
October 2013
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Artists You Might Not Know, by gab on Aug 27, 2017 20:55:02 GMT 1, Tried to add image of some of Taylor White's art with imgbb but couldn't do it.. sorry. ...
Tried to add image of some of Taylor White's art with imgbb but couldn't do it.. sorry. ...
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nobokov
Junior Member
🗨️ 4,948
👍🏻 6,901
February 2016
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Artists You Might Not Know, by nobokov on Aug 27, 2017 20:59:57 GMT 1, Tried to add image with imgbb but couldn't do it.. sorry. ... May I ask, whom the artist was?
Tried to add image with imgbb but couldn't do it.. sorry. ... May I ask, whom the artist was?
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gab
New Member
🗨️ 99
👍🏻 39
October 2013
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Artists You Might Not Know, by gab on Aug 27, 2017 21:07:02 GMT 1, Tried to add image with imgbb but couldn't do it.. sorry. ... May I ask, whom the artist was?
Taylor White. Just edited the post😂
Tried to add image with imgbb but couldn't do it.. sorry. ... May I ask, whom the artist was? Taylor White. Just edited the post😂
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brujo420
New Member
🗨️ 30
👍🏻 13
May 2015
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Artists You Might Not Know, by brujo420 on Aug 27, 2017 22:03:03 GMT 1, Sono io!!! Ancora una volta caricati Img
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Deleted
🗨️ 0
👍🏻
January 1970
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Artists You Might Not Know, by Deleted on Aug 29, 2017 2:31:56 GMT 1, Nicola Wiltshire tipped by the Guardian this year as an Artist to watch
Originals from £225 but what seems like a real bargain are the two available limited edition prints at £12!!!!
nicolawiltshireartist.tictail.com/
Nicola Wiltshire tipped by the Guardian this year as an Artist to watch Originals from £225 but what seems like a real bargain are the two available limited edition prints at £12!!!! nicolawiltshireartist.tictail.com/
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wrigs
New Member
🗨️ 497
👍🏻 417
July 2017
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Artists You Might Not Know, by wrigs on Aug 30, 2017 18:00:52 GMT 1, Looking for a little inspiration. Enjoying reading the forum and hearing others opinions on particular artists. Have started to buy a few pieces but looking for some new artists to watch for. Some of the established guys are already out of budget. Tend to lean towards those in the contemporary space I.e. Mr Jago.
Would welcome any suggestions.
Looking for a little inspiration. Enjoying reading the forum and hearing others opinions on particular artists. Have started to buy a few pieces but looking for some new artists to watch for. Some of the established guys are already out of budget. Tend to lean towards those in the contemporary space I.e. Mr Jago.
Would welcome any suggestions.
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Inknart
Junior Member
🗨️ 3,490
👍🏻 3,288
April 2015
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Artists You Might Not Know, by Inknart on Aug 30, 2017 18:23:25 GMT 1, Looking for a little inspiration. Enjoying reading the forum and hearing others opinions on particular artists. Have started to buy a few pieces but looking for some new artists to watch for. Some of the established guys are already out of budget. Tend to lean towards those in the contemporary space I.e. Mr Jago. Would welcome any suggestions. That is super abstract, have you thought about trying some of that yourself?
Lots of amateur artists with this style. Maybe just try something like Etsy for Original affordable abstract pieces.
Looking for a little inspiration. Enjoying reading the forum and hearing others opinions on particular artists. Have started to buy a few pieces but looking for some new artists to watch for. Some of the established guys are already out of budget. Tend to lean towards those in the contemporary space I.e. Mr Jago. Would welcome any suggestions. That is super abstract, have you thought about trying some of that yourself? Lots of amateur artists with this style. Maybe just try something like Etsy for Original affordable abstract pieces.
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wrigs
New Member
🗨️ 497
👍🏻 417
July 2017
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Artists You Might Not Know, by wrigs on Aug 30, 2017 18:55:02 GMT 1, Looking for a little inspiration. Enjoying reading the forum and hearing others opinions on particular artists. Have started to buy a few pieces but looking for some new artists to watch for. Some of the established guys are already out of budget. Tend to lean towards those in the contemporary space I.e. Mr Jago. Would welcome any suggestions. That is super abstract, have you thought about trying some of that yourself? Lots of amateur artists with this style. Maybe just try something like Etsy for Original affordable abstract pieces.
Cheers, not sure giving it a bash myself would yield the right results 😁 but might give it a try at some point. Don't get me wrong doesn't have to be all that abstract, have got a few bits from Eelus, John Doe etc and looking out for a Beejoir Imodium
Looking for a little inspiration. Enjoying reading the forum and hearing others opinions on particular artists. Have started to buy a few pieces but looking for some new artists to watch for. Some of the established guys are already out of budget. Tend to lean towards those in the contemporary space I.e. Mr Jago. Would welcome any suggestions. That is super abstract, have you thought about trying some of that yourself? Lots of amateur artists with this style. Maybe just try something like Etsy for Original affordable abstract pieces. Cheers, not sure giving it a bash myself would yield the right results 😁 but might give it a try at some point. Don't get me wrong doesn't have to be all that abstract, have got a few bits from Eelus, John Doe etc and looking out for a Beejoir Imodium
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Inknart
Junior Member
🗨️ 3,490
👍🏻 3,288
April 2015
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Artists You Might Not Know, by Inknart on Aug 30, 2017 19:17:46 GMT 1, That is super abstract, have you thought about trying some of that yourself? Lots of amateur artists with this style. Maybe just try something like Etsy for Original affordable abstract pieces. Cheers, not sure giving it a bash myself would yield the right results 😁 but might give it a try at some point. Don't get me wrong doesn't have to be all that abstract, have got a few bits from Eelus, John Doe etc and looking out for a Beejoir Imodium Maybe try some artists like Hense the Name, Saber, Jason Woodside, Maser Art.
That is super abstract, have you thought about trying some of that yourself? Lots of amateur artists with this style. Maybe just try something like Etsy for Original affordable abstract pieces. Cheers, not sure giving it a bash myself would yield the right results 😁 but might give it a try at some point. Don't get me wrong doesn't have to be all that abstract, have got a few bits from Eelus, John Doe etc and looking out for a Beejoir Imodium Maybe try some artists like Hense the Name, Saber, Jason Woodside, Maser Art.
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mose
New Member
🗨️ 410
👍🏻 424
May 2017
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Artists You Might Not Know, by mose on Aug 30, 2017 19:27:44 GMT 1, A tremendous, younger artist that has never been mentioned here is Cameron Rowland. I am a HUGE fan of his work and have owned one piece for the last three years. His last show at Artist Space in NYC is one of the best shows I've seen and he's recently been shown at the Whitney Museum(part of the biennial) and the Museum of Modern Art(as part of their permanent collection). Interesting twist, most of his work lately is not for sale. You sign a rental agreement and make monthly payments for three years or so. The agreement itself is a slightly modified Rent-a-Center agreement.
Here is my piece:
Cameron Rowland Constituent, 2014 Outlet Dimensions variable Edition of 3 plus I AP
Outlets allow the flow of current through cable. When electrical cable is sold as scrap, the outlet is often still connected, but cannot be used and has no value. An electrician cuts the power supply to one outlet, removes the faceplate and reveals the copper core of two electrical wires.
and here are some more examples:
Cameron Rowland Loot, 2014 Cut copper tube, cardboard box, crate 11 x 18.5 x 13 inches (27.94 x 46.99 x 33.02 cm) Rental
At some point basic utilities like electricity and water were services controlled by the state, because they relied so heavily on public infrastructure. More and more these flows are valved by private corporations. When abandoned buildings are broken into and stripped of their copper piping, it is sold to scrap yards, where it is cut down. This cut copper was bought from a scrap yard. Copper has a function, its base material has an inherent value.
Cameron Rowland Disgorgement, 2016 Reparations Purpose Trust, Aetna Shares
Aetna, amongst other insurance companies, issued slave insurance policies, which combined property and life insurance. These policies were taken out by slave masters on the lives of slaves, and provided partial payments for damage to the slave and full payment for the death of the slave. Death or damage inflicted by the master could not be claimed. The profits incurred by these policies are still intact within Aetna.
In 1989 Congressman John Conyers of Michigan first introduced Congressional Bill H.R. 40, which would "Establish the Commission to Study Reparation Proposals for African Americans to examine slavery and discrimination in the colonies and the United States from 1619 to the present and recommend appropriate remedies." The bill would convene a research commission, that would, among other responsibilities, make a recommendation as to whether a formal apology for slavery is owed, whether reparations are owed, what form reparations would then take and who would receive them. Conyers has reintroduced the bill to every session of congress since then. This bill acquired 48 cosponsors in 1999-2000. Currently it has no cosponsors.
In 2000 the state of California passed the bill SB 2199, which required all insurance companies conducting business in the state of California to publish documentation of slave insurance policies that they or their parent companies had issued previously. In 2002 a lawyer named Deadria Farmer-Paellmann filed the first corporate reparations class-action lawsuit seeking disgorgement from 17 contemporary financial institutions including Aetna, Inc., which had profited from slavery. Farmer-Paellmann pursued property law claims on the basis that these institutions had been enriched unjustly by slaves who were neither compensated nor agreed to be uncompensated. Farmer-Paellman called for these profits and gains to be disgorged from these institutions to descendants of slaves.
The Reparations Purpose Trust forms a conditionality between the time of deferral and continued corporate growth. The general purpose of this trust is “to acquire and administer shares in Aetna, Inc. and to hold such shares until the effective date of any official action by any branch of the United States government to make financial reparations for slavery, including but not limited to the enactment and subsequent adoption of any recommendations pursuant to H.R. 40 – Commission to Study Reparation Proposals for African-Americans Act.” As a purpose trust registered in the state of Delaware this trust can last indefinitely and has no named beneficiaries.
The initial holdings of Reparations Purpose Trust consists of 90 Aetna shares. In the event that federal financial reparations are paid, the trust will terminate and its shares will be liquidated and granted to the federal agency charged with distributions as a corporate addendum to these payments. The grantor of the Reparations Purpose Trust is Artists Space, its trustee is Michael M. Gordon, and its enforcer is Cameron Rowland. The Reparations Purpose Trust gains tax-exemption from its grantor’s nonprofit status.
Cameron Rowland Pass-Thru, 2014 Acrylic, hardware, 24-hour rotator disc 23 x 20 x 21 inches (58.42 x 50.80 x 53.34 cm) Rental
In some places, businesses use a pass-thru, to pass cash or goods back and forth; this could be at a bank or a liquor store. The highest standard of pass-thru use bullet proof glass, although this material is far too expensive to be used as a protective measure by those businesses where it might be most effective. Therein plastic is used in place of bullet proof glass. They are either made by a manufacturer or by the shop owner. This Pass-Thru was made by Rowland.
Cameron Rowland Pass-Thru, 2014 Acrylic, hardware, 24-hour rotator disc, cardboard 23 x 20 x 21 inches (58.42 x 50.80 x 53.34 cm)
In some places, businesses use a pass-thru, to pass cash or goods back and forth; this could be at a bank or a liquor store. The highest standard of pass-thru use bullet proof glass, although this material is far too expensive to be used as a protective measure by those business where it might be most effective. Therein plastic is used in place of bullet proof glass. They are either made by a manufacturer or by the shop owner. A pass-thru is also an open window, when it is cold it may be covered. This Pass-Thru was made by Rowland.
Cameron Rowland
Insurance, 2016
Container lashing bars, Lloyd's Register certificates
102 x 96 x 11.5 or 149 x 18 x 4.5 inches
Lloyd's of London monopolized the marine insurance of the slave trade by the early 18th Century. Lloyd's Register was established in 1760 as the first classification society in order to provide insurance underwriters information on the quality of vessels. The classification of the ship allows for a more accurate assessment of its risk. Lloyd's Register and other classification societies continue to survey and certify shipping vessels and their equipment. Lashing equipment physically secures goods to the deck of the ship, while its certification is established to insure the value of the goods regardless of their potential loss.
Cameron Rowland
New York State Unified Court System, 2016
Oak wood, distributed by Corcraft
165 x 57.5 x 36 inches
Rental at cost
Courtrooms throughout New York State use benches built by prisoners in Green Haven Correctional Facility. The court reproduces itself materially through the labor of those it sentences.
A tremendous, younger artist that has never been mentioned here is Cameron Rowland. I am a HUGE fan of his work and have owned one piece for the last three years. His last show at Artist Space in NYC is one of the best shows I've seen and he's recently been shown at the Whitney Museum(part of the biennial) and the Museum of Modern Art(as part of their permanent collection). Interesting twist, most of his work lately is not for sale. You sign a rental agreement and make monthly payments for three years or so. The agreement itself is a slightly modified Rent-a-Center agreement. Here is my piece: Cameron Rowland Constituent, 2014 Outlet Dimensions variable Edition of 3 plus I AP Outlets allow the flow of current through cable. When electrical cable is sold as scrap, the outlet is often still connected, but cannot be used and has no value. An electrician cuts the power supply to one outlet, removes the faceplate and reveals the copper core of two electrical wires. and here are some more examples: Cameron Rowland Loot, 2014 Cut copper tube, cardboard box, crate 11 x 18.5 x 13 inches (27.94 x 46.99 x 33.02 cm) Rental At some point basic utilities like electricity and water were services controlled by the state, because they relied so heavily on public infrastructure. More and more these flows are valved by private corporations. When abandoned buildings are broken into and stripped of their copper piping, it is sold to scrap yards, where it is cut down. This cut copper was bought from a scrap yard. Copper has a function, its base material has an inherent value. Cameron Rowland Disgorgement, 2016 Reparations Purpose Trust, Aetna Shares Aetna, amongst other insurance companies, issued slave insurance policies, which combined property and life insurance. These policies were taken out by slave masters on the lives of slaves, and provided partial payments for damage to the slave and full payment for the death of the slave. Death or damage inflicted by the master could not be claimed. The profits incurred by these policies are still intact within Aetna. In 1989 Congressman John Conyers of Michigan first introduced Congressional Bill H.R. 40, which would "Establish the Commission to Study Reparation Proposals for African Americans to examine slavery and discrimination in the colonies and the United States from 1619 to the present and recommend appropriate remedies." The bill would convene a research commission, that would, among other responsibilities, make a recommendation as to whether a formal apology for slavery is owed, whether reparations are owed, what form reparations would then take and who would receive them. Conyers has reintroduced the bill to every session of congress since then. This bill acquired 48 cosponsors in 1999-2000. Currently it has no cosponsors. In 2000 the state of California passed the bill SB 2199, which required all insurance companies conducting business in the state of California to publish documentation of slave insurance policies that they or their parent companies had issued previously. In 2002 a lawyer named Deadria Farmer-Paellmann filed the first corporate reparations class-action lawsuit seeking disgorgement from 17 contemporary financial institutions including Aetna, Inc., which had profited from slavery. Farmer-Paellmann pursued property law claims on the basis that these institutions had been enriched unjustly by slaves who were neither compensated nor agreed to be uncompensated. Farmer-Paellman called for these profits and gains to be disgorged from these institutions to descendants of slaves. The Reparations Purpose Trust forms a conditionality between the time of deferral and continued corporate growth. The general purpose of this trust is “to acquire and administer shares in Aetna, Inc. and to hold such shares until the effective date of any official action by any branch of the United States government to make financial reparations for slavery, including but not limited to the enactment and subsequent adoption of any recommendations pursuant to H.R. 40 – Commission to Study Reparation Proposals for African-Americans Act.” As a purpose trust registered in the state of Delaware this trust can last indefinitely and has no named beneficiaries. The initial holdings of Reparations Purpose Trust consists of 90 Aetna shares. In the event that federal financial reparations are paid, the trust will terminate and its shares will be liquidated and granted to the federal agency charged with distributions as a corporate addendum to these payments. The grantor of the Reparations Purpose Trust is Artists Space, its trustee is Michael M. Gordon, and its enforcer is Cameron Rowland. The Reparations Purpose Trust gains tax-exemption from its grantor’s nonprofit status. Cameron Rowland Pass-Thru, 2014 Acrylic, hardware, 24-hour rotator disc 23 x 20 x 21 inches (58.42 x 50.80 x 53.34 cm) Rental In some places, businesses use a pass-thru, to pass cash or goods back and forth; this could be at a bank or a liquor store. The highest standard of pass-thru use bullet proof glass, although this material is far too expensive to be used as a protective measure by those businesses where it might be most effective. Therein plastic is used in place of bullet proof glass. They are either made by a manufacturer or by the shop owner. This Pass-Thru was made by Rowland. Cameron Rowland Pass-Thru, 2014 Acrylic, hardware, 24-hour rotator disc, cardboard 23 x 20 x 21 inches (58.42 x 50.80 x 53.34 cm) In some places, businesses use a pass-thru, to pass cash or goods back and forth; this could be at a bank or a liquor store. The highest standard of pass-thru use bullet proof glass, although this material is far too expensive to be used as a protective measure by those business where it might be most effective. Therein plastic is used in place of bullet proof glass. They are either made by a manufacturer or by the shop owner. A pass-thru is also an open window, when it is cold it may be covered. This Pass-Thru was made by Rowland. Cameron Rowland Insurance, 2016 Container lashing bars, Lloyd's Register certificates 102 x 96 x 11.5 or 149 x 18 x 4.5 inches Lloyd's of London monopolized the marine insurance of the slave trade by the early 18th Century. Lloyd's Register was established in 1760 as the first classification society in order to provide insurance underwriters information on the quality of vessels. The classification of the ship allows for a more accurate assessment of its risk. Lloyd's Register and other classification societies continue to survey and certify shipping vessels and their equipment. Lashing equipment physically secures goods to the deck of the ship, while its certification is established to insure the value of the goods regardless of their potential loss. Cameron Rowland New York State Unified Court System, 2016 Oak wood, distributed by Corcraft 165 x 57.5 x 36 inches Rental at cost Courtrooms throughout New York State use benches built by prisoners in Green Haven Correctional Facility. The court reproduces itself materially through the labor of those it sentences.
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wrigs
New Member
🗨️ 497
👍🏻 417
July 2017
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Artists You Might Not Know, by wrigs on Aug 30, 2017 19:33:14 GMT 1, Cheers, not sure giving it a bash myself would yield the right results 😁 but might give it a try at some point. Don't get me wrong doesn't have to be all that abstract, have got a few bits from Eelus, John Doe etc and looking out for a Beejoir Imodium Maybe try some artists like Hense the Name, Saber, Jason Woodside, Maser Art.
Appreciated, will check them out
Cheers, not sure giving it a bash myself would yield the right results 😁 but might give it a try at some point. Don't get me wrong doesn't have to be all that abstract, have got a few bits from Eelus, John Doe etc and looking out for a Beejoir Imodium Maybe try some artists like Hense the Name, Saber, Jason Woodside, Maser Art. Appreciated, will check them out
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Deleted
🗨️ 0
👍🏻
January 1970
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br0k3n
New Member
🗨️ 279
👍🏻 172
July 2016
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Artists You Might Not Know, by br0k3n on Sept 9, 2017 10:40:31 GMT 1, YULIA LOBANOV Born in Moscow, Russia in 1986. Currently based in Barcelona, Spain.
In early age studied with a teacher of Russian old-school academic technique.
Yulia has degree in architecture and design. She is a yacht designer and partner in LOBANOV yacht design.
When moved to Barcelona she started to frequent a life drawing studio. This has revived and rekindled her passion for painting. So she’s started developing her career in this direction.
Yulia’s portraits speak about beauty of imperfection and incompleteness of constantly changing inner self. Unfinished phrases are her language. Yulia’s representational technic is leaving her personages with enigmas and questions, unveiling complex emotions, showing internal fight and growth.
www.instagram.com/yulia_lobanov/ www.yulialobanov.com/
http://instagr.am/p/BYAyD-kgwJx
YULIA LOBANOV Born in Moscow, Russia in 1986. Currently based in Barcelona, Spain. In early age studied with a teacher of Russian old-school academic technique. Yulia has degree in architecture and design. She is a yacht designer and partner in LOBANOV yacht design. When moved to Barcelona she started to frequent a life drawing studio. This has revived and rekindled her passion for painting. So she’s started developing her career in this direction. Yulia’s portraits speak about beauty of imperfection and incompleteness of constantly changing inner self. Unfinished phrases are her language. Yulia’s representational technic is leaving her personages with enigmas and questions, unveiling complex emotions, showing internal fight and growth. www.instagram.com/yulia_lobanov/www.yulialobanov.com/http://instagr.am/p/BYAyD-kgwJx
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wrigs
New Member
🗨️ 497
👍🏻 417
July 2017
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Artists You Might Not Know, by wrigs on Sept 9, 2017 10:50:04 GMT 1, YULIA LOBANOV Born in Moscow, Russia in 1986. Currently based in Barcelona, Spain. In early age studied with a teacher of Russian old-school academic technique. Yulia has degree in architecture and design. She is a yacht designer and partner in LOBANOV yacht design. When moved to Barcelona she started to frequent a life drawing studio. This has revived and rekindled her passion for painting. So she’s started developing her career in this direction. Yulia’s portraits speak about beauty of imperfection and incompleteness of constantly changing inner self. Unfinished phrases are her language. Yulia’s representational technic is leaving her personages with enigmas and questions, unveiling complex emotions, showing internal fight and growth. www.instagram.com/yulia_lobanov/www.yulialobanov.com/http://instagr.am/p/BYAyD-kgwJx
Nice work, you can see the Henrik influence. Affordable as well
YULIA LOBANOV Born in Moscow, Russia in 1986. Currently based in Barcelona, Spain. In early age studied with a teacher of Russian old-school academic technique. Yulia has degree in architecture and design. She is a yacht designer and partner in LOBANOV yacht design. When moved to Barcelona she started to frequent a life drawing studio. This has revived and rekindled her passion for painting. So she’s started developing her career in this direction. Yulia’s portraits speak about beauty of imperfection and incompleteness of constantly changing inner self. Unfinished phrases are her language. Yulia’s representational technic is leaving her personages with enigmas and questions, unveiling complex emotions, showing internal fight and growth. www.instagram.com/yulia_lobanov/www.yulialobanov.com/http://instagr.am/p/BYAyD-kgwJx Nice work, you can see the Henrik influence. Affordable as well
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Winks
Junior Member
🗨️ 2,802
👍🏻 3,603
April 2016
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Artists You Might Not Know, by Winks on Sept 12, 2017 20:01:33 GMT 1, Interested in this fellas work. Wonderful skills
http://instagram.com/p/BXvd7bDFqlE
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cmc
New Member
🗨️ 380
👍🏻 279
July 2013
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Artists You Might Not Know, by cmc on Oct 14, 2017 3:44:57 GMT 1, Aaron Noble
Inspired by comic book imagery, Aaron Noble's paintings incorporate superhero body parts morphed, stretched, and free floating in a "negative space" landscape. He is known in San Francisco for his earlier WPA-styled outdoor murals depicting the city's labor history. Now his interests involve contemporary popular street culture, Western comic art, Japanese anime and manga, video games, and technology.
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