Really like the pen and ink work of Carson Ellis... and actually the figure drawing too and the watercolors as well... Here is more (contact)info about Carson.
Here are some amazing paintings by Jeff Soto... and he loves succulents... which is a great thing onto itself...
Mark Ryden creates some of the more beautiful though sad worlds... Amazing.
Maki Kahori makes very fascinating pictures.
Rama's site makes me happy somehow. There are little stories under really nice pictures. And I like that a lot.
Scott Teplin is the master of the beyond crumb drawing style. He seems to break all records when it comes to quantity of drawing. And boy, the quality is very fine as well. What a man. Hope he is a nice guy, or I will really have to hate him for being so good. (Saw his work first at NADA in Miami Beach, at the Mixture Gallery Thank you for showing me the work, Adrienne.
Love the Illustrations by Brooklyn based Derek Stukuls. I mean really... just discovered the little site, really good, no?
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Stefanie Körner is in Hamburg, I guess. The site is a bare bone storage device for pretty excellent work in pencil, pixel and other media. I will need to visit again, and for good reasons. There is new material in the workary almost daily. Gratuliere!
Love Kozy and Dan. The work has this amazing sense of humor. Some of it dark, some of it with milk, some of it just whoah...
makers of fine art websites.
amazing little graphite miniatures. stunning, breathtaking, spooky. will need to return to the site often, hope there will be even more content soon.
Some really amazing illuistration work from this New York artist. Enjoy. They will make you smile.
Naho is from Japan, went to school in New York (Parsons?) and is now back in Tokyo. The illustration style is so happy and good. Some truly irresistible work that makes me smile every single time. Happy. Why in the art section? Have you seen Warhols angels and kittens? OK.
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Anna Blakney Sutton is a young “Illustrator” from Brooklyn. Her art is maybe called illustration by others and even by her, but for me much of her work looks more like really nicely executed, very sensitive (often figurative) painting. I would maybe call her a portraitist or an artist with a really subtle eye. Her work can also be seen on The Morning News. Excellent.
Parkett might be the best Art Magazine in the world. More like an ever growing museum of contemporary art.
Here we go. Big canvas, big names, big bucks. Mary Boone is not kidding. She managed to collect some real heavyweights of the Art world and she does the right things the right way to sell the work to the right collectors. Would you like something? Bring a big check book. Some of the work is quite stunning, of course. It just comes at a price. Home of Ross Bleckner, Greg Bogin, Will Cotton, Karin Davie, Leonardo Drew, Eric Fischl (yes, him), Timothy Greenfield-Sanders, Bill Jensen, Barbara Krueger, Tim Litzman, Damian Loeb (hey, superstar!), Peter Wegner and Kevin Zucker. I have seen others there too though. ; )
Boy, am I glad that this gallery is in New York. It is the home of Tom Friedman, the genius behind art from seemingly banal objects and Jerry Phillips, the master of the pencil. These two artists alone show that Hudson, Jimi Dams and Martin Bland are doing something right. The site is easy to navigate and offers some useful information. Worth a visit.
The database of Galleries and Museums, Dealers and Artists. Art in context is in the top 1% of google.com search results. And for a good reason; the site is about interconnecting and cross references. Look for an Artist you might not be able to find somewhere else and she or he might have a little area here.
It might be a bit odd to post a Gallery here because of one artist and actually just one painting. I just really like “Japanese Girl” by Jennifer Anderson (b.1975). It is a very calm painting i had the chance to see in person at AAF in New York. Thank you.
A wonderful little company doing some really interesting projects. Check out the Brunswick Project if you are there during November 2002. Hyperkit is run by a boy and a girl. And as always when I come across these constellations I am curious how these people manage to do. BF and GF? Or just good friends. In any case, here's a lovely and lively little hyperkit.
Metaphor contemporary art is the gallery of Madelon Galland, the healing, preserving, good energy artist from dumbo. They also show some other good work by Julian Jackson, Sheila Kramer, Jim Osman, Judith Page, Taney Roniger, Paul Shore, Bill Stahl and the wonderful sculptures of “important” people by Nina Levy.
Gallery of Artists like Kaouru Mansour, Mary Beth Thielhelm and Isabel Bigelow. Many of the works are not large in size, but quite beautiful. The site has a very intuitive navigation. Worth a visit.
Damian Loeb is the really young superstar of the scene. Cinematic blockbuster paintings paired with softer closeup/takeout snapshot paintings, still about 9 square feet in size. The recent work is quite stunning. The photographic stories on his site are fun. An honest looking site with some pretty brilliant pieces.
Scott Blake uses BarCodes to make quite incredible portraits and other pieces. Paintings and prints are available for sale on his website as well. Take out your scanner and visit his site. Wow.
David Crawford’s “Light of Speed” site is often the place of new flash performances. David just recently updated the site and it is worth a visit more than ever. A great, great guy.
Miltos Manetas has one of the greatest artist sites out there. He obviously knows what he is doing. And he is doing plenty. I personally might enjoy his paintings most at this time. They have an Alex Katz flatness to them, but are just really up to date and anchored in the reality of my generation. Video games as fetish, controllers as large beautiful objects. Somewhere on the site there is a list of all the paintings and where in the world they currently live. Quite enjoyable site definitely worth a visit. Oh, and once you visit the link section, you will never come back here. Miltos has maybe the best Links page I have seen so far.
William Wegman is more than the photographs of his dogs, of course. He became known to the artworld through his quite brilliant photographs and photo sequences. Wegman always displayed a great sense of humor in his work. He is also a cofounder of art in context a non profit database of artists.
The work of Alex Katz has incredible simplicity and is unbelievable complexity at the same time. It takes time to really appreciate some of the pieces. The site is very informative and contains a good catalogue of prints.