Dino Valls is a master at diving into the human psyche, as he has created a series of portraits that show naked women somewhere between pain and beauty. At times, his hyperreal artworks are painful to look at, as they evoke the deepest feelings.
If you've ever wondered how people with very poor vision see the world around them when they take off their glasses or lenses, you'll get a closer look at that view in these oil paintings.
Creatives have once again proven that art knows no boundaries, as it hides in all forms and manifests itself in different ways. The astonishing but at the same time bizarre move by the scientists definitely bore fruit.
Instagram trends change at the speed of light. Just when we learn to recreate a certain trend, a new one appears. This year we've seen a number of stunning and quirky trends where makeup artists have taken makeup to the next level, but this 'face painted post' is so endearing in its weirdness that it pushed the boundaries of creativity.
We've seen the merging of traditional and modern before, but these photomontages, combining people from classic art paintings and modern spaces, will make you smile, because they're like cast.
What would Michelangelo say to that? Well, it's not that important, he had his time, we have ours. And in our time, canvases for pictures are not necessarily cotton. It is also not necessary that the pictures hanging on the walls of homes are painted with brushes and pastel colors. We now live in a digital age and this age offers different solutions.
Horror movies have been using interesting approaches to scare people since their inception. Of course, it all starts with picture and sound, but the techniques change depending on the directors and the time in which the film was made.
The design studio Fuseproject, led by renowned industrial designer Yves Béhar, has turned Samsung's QLED TV into an art painting with a frame that disappears the moment the TV is turned on.
Iraqi painter Othman Toma paints with melted ice cream. And so well that many wonder if the artist is even telling the truth.
Just why would someone bother to create realistic oil portraits? That he can then destroy them, of course! Colombian artist Cesar Biojo is doing just that. He "destroys" realistic oil portraits with a few strokes of the brush to create paintings characterized by a unique style and intimacy.
With the help of miniature clay figurines and fragments of archival footage, the director returns to the time of his childhood in the surprising documentary The Image That Doesn't Exist and conjures up an unforgettable image of the unimaginable: life and death during Pol Pot's Khmer Rouge regime.