In this first volume includes over 500 pictures of graffiti photographed by several provinces of Spain, over 10 years ..... soon be added the second volume, to complete the book of a thousand graffiti .. Greetings .... I hope you enjoy ... Michelangelo En este primer volumen se incluyen más de 500 imagenes de graffitis fotografiados por varias provincias de España, a lo largo de más de 10 años.....en breve se añadira el segundo volumen, hasta completar el libro de los mil graffitis......saludos y espero que disfruteis...Michelangelo http://vallet.bubok.com/ http://issuu.com/photohispalis
Por favor para enviar cualquier sugerencia contacta con nosotros en la dirección: photohispalis@hotmail.com PhotoHispalis Art Magazine Michelangelo Vallet (Diseño y Edición) Sergey Tyukanov (Portada) Musica: photographs (restless soul remix) - Jody Watley
PhotoHispalis Nuestro objetivo al publicar PhotoHispalis Art, es la de promocionar artístas nacionales, como internacionales en lo relacionado con el arte, Pintura, Fotografía, Dibujo, Escultura, Imagen en 3D, Animación, Dibujo Digital, Musica, Flamenco y tambien la Biografía de los artístas. Te animamos a que puedas exponer a traves de nuestra revista tus trabajos para el resto del mundo. Si quieres colaborar en PhotoHispalis, o quieres promocionar tus trabajos, por favor contacta con nosotros en esta dirección: photohispalis@hotmail.com
Edición La revista estara on-line cada dos meses en nuestra pagina web
www.photohispalis.com “Artista Internacional Invitado” en Noviembre – Diciembre de 2011 entre otros…….. Mark Arian, Lev Tchistovsky, Francine van Hove……….. Y mucho más.......... Portada de PhotoHispalis Art Magazine por..... Sergey Tyukanov
Becky Dennis It is all an ongoing Journey. Born on a lovely spring day in May,I have lived all over our wonderful Earth. I work to walk with Love and Reverance. Playing in the dirt and clay, as often as possible, makes my simple HeArt sing. If You are interested in a complete biography, which may bore You to tears, ;-) then, please go to my web site and click on the link called LIVING MY BLISS. I have lived on the Mississippi Gulf coast since 1980 and it feels like home.Since I have grown in years, I feel like I could learn to be peaceful living almost anywhere, as long as there is WATER! My Father was in the Air Force, so I spent most of my life moving from state to state and foreign countries. This helped me see the commonallities that we all share. Then, I went to college and we called the Mississippi Gulf Coast HOME, in 1980. My major in college was actually nursing and I worked as a registered nurse for over 15 years. I released it to pursue my passion of Clay Art in 1999 and have never looked back. To live the life of an ARTIST is challenging in many ways, but I am following my bliss and encourage others to connect with theirs. I am excited about integrating and expressing inSpirations from Nature's Beauty and many life experiences into my coil and slab built clay sculptures and wallhangings. My life experiences include over 13 amazing years working as a compassionate home health registered nurse. During that time in my life, playing in clay was a joyful and healthy hobby. But life is certainly filled with beginnings and endings and I was able to recognize when it was time to move forward. Although I released working as an R.N. in the traditional sense in 1999, I believe that life has been, and continues to be an amazing, healing Journey. It is certainly filled with mysteriously synchronistic events that continually reveal that ALL things are inter-connected.
www.beckydennis.com
Si quieres promocionar tus trabajos gratuitamente en nuestro magazine, envíanos tú biografía en archivo de texto y entre 8 ó 10 imágenes en buena resolución photohispalis@hotmail.com If you want to promote your work free in our magazine, please send your biography in text file and from 8 to 10 images in high resolution photohispalis@hotmail.com
Dan Bunea I love art, reading, architecture, philosphy, beauty in general. I listen to music and like strong drinks and wine. I love people and enjoy stimulating, original, tasteful discussions. I also have more earthly passions like football and sport cars :) http://www.danbunea.ro danbunea@yahoo.com dan.bunea@gmail.com
Sergey Tyukanov Sergey www.tyukanov.com, Artist, Saint-Petersburg, Russia. Interview Sergey Tyukanov by muzderauli 14 December 2010, Viña del mar, Chile You „re born in Russia in 1955, which preserved childhood memories as inspiration. -My childhood years passed on the island Sakhalin and the only window to the reality that I had were children‟s illustrated books. Illustrations became my fairy tale world which, although I have grown up, I do not want to depart with even today. Television was not available, the books had been difficult to get. I loved going to the library and view pictures in books. My child‟s inner world was shaped by the illustrations. Sound of the sea was also an impetus for further fantasy and brought a spirit of distant countries with amazing animals and plants. I felt that the tale was somewhere there, somewhere close by. I still keep this child‟s enthusiasm and expectations of a miracle inside of me. What aspect of your life triggers or promotes creativity. -The process of my art is based on the interest and surprise. What emotions would you experience if it landed on another planet? It is so interesting, how its people live, what they eat, how they move, what their architecture looks like, what kind of feelings they experience. Thus, creativity is like a journey into another world. Laws of art, composition, and skill are secondary. The world of my imagination is the driving force of creativity. I never force myself to work; maybe that‟s why I do not have a lot of works. Creativity starts from the inside, and I materialize my inner world with the help of pencils and paints. When I start working, I can only see the big picture, but I do not see specific objects and their parts. I feel an energy substance, first, as if someone far away is calling me, and I follow the voice. Gradually everything becomes sharper, and I start seeing the outlines, looming objects and final images are slowly but steadily are being shaped. I always wonder what the outcome of this process will be, and what final quality of the picture I will get. And the more I listen to myself, my inner consciousness, the more truthfully the job is done, and the happier I become. How did you start in the drawing, illustration, painting. -Up to 20 years, I had not held a pencil in my hands. The place I lived had no special clubs and studios for painting. We did not even have an art teacher at school. A desire to draw was great, but everyone said that it was necessary to start drawing in early childhood. After graduation and military service at age of 20 I enrolled to study at the Architectural Department, where I first began going to these drawing lessons. Even the simplest drawing tasks such as: cones, balls, and plaster casts captured me completely, and I knew it was mine; I want to do this all my life. But the program activities in the graphic department were short and not enough for me ,so all my free time I spent in libraries, studying the history of art, etchings, paintings, drawings. There I for the first time I saw books with reproductions of Picasso, Modigliani, Matisse, books of Russian modernism. When I start to draw something, I always try to imagine a living organism. I painted the factory and was imagining it as a large animal that breathes through chimneys and produces smoke. But many colleagues and viewers did not understand my imagery at the time. From that time on I have kept the need to look at the world through images. Death is this so hilarious in your work. How to solve this conflict internally.
-By nature I am an optimist and I try to relate all the things in my life and most of what I do with humor. Even serious things I try to pass in my mind through the prism of humor. Until about 30 years I was an atheist, like almost everyone in our country. I thought a lot about life and death, and read smart books (talking with like-minded people and arguing with opponents) and I have formed my attitude to the process of life and death. I believe in reincarnation, I believe that had been born before, otherwise I cannot explain the feeling of intuition, which I attribute to the experience of previous lives, as well as the phenomenon of deja vu. Death is in the culture of our civilization – it is an important and mysterious event. But our mentality is that we, people fear death, because we think that it‟s over, that we will lose everything material. But I realized that death happens only to our physical body and the soul continues its way, that life is infinite. Everything became much clearer to me, and the meaning of death has acquired a different concept. I got the joy of life itself, the desire for selfimprovement, and I began to fight with the biggest sin, selfishness. You are associated with Arcimboldo, Bosch. In what way your work is connected with that vision and how you separate yourself exploring your own style. -When I first saw the picture of Bosch, I had a feeling of being sucked into the funnel, which consumed me deeper and deeper. It seems to me that the time that Bosch lived at I understand and have a connection with it. I am very interested in the person of Bosch. I‟ve always wondered how he solves the problems of morality in his paintings, and about his notions of good and evil. There exist not so many artists who have written multifigured compositions. I am interested in his imagery, from where it came. It is interesting to me how he distributed the plane, how he applied color. His works are puzzles and stories for me. I like the stories in pictures. I also love telling stories myself. I‟m trying to get away from didacticism that is present in Bosch‟s works, and what helps me to deal with it is the sense of humor. And if Arcimboldo and his work have not been existent, then they would have to be invented. Because his method of the dual vision of the world is very close to mine. I try to imagine one object in the variety of forms. I follow the flight of imagination, and it allows me to extend the perception of an object. In your work, the characters have a mythic presence; archetypal, ontological embody good or evil. How to influence the dispute of that duality in your personal vision. -The concepts of good and evil are united. In every person, object, phenomenon exist good and evil, black and white, electrons and protons. Our world is arranged in such a way that things fight with each other and at the same time they co-exist and cannot be without each other. But nothing and no one will ever win the opposite, because then the balance will be upset. The moment of balance is always very short, and we mostly live swinging to the opposites. I am, therefore, interested in the topic of the internal conflict, and I try to express it in a concrete manner and imagery. Buddha talked about the middle way, I would also like to come to equilibrium in life, but I‟m not perfect. It is hard to be in this calm state, from which even the slightest breeze can knock out. Equilibrium also means freeze, stop, but for it is important to have energy of constant movement, impulsiveness in my artworks. Maybe that‟s why in my multi-figure compositions there is a lot of struggle between good and evil, life and death – the struggle of opposites. If you had to talk to a child for your work. How do you introduce the fantasy world? -All of us are children, just of different ages. We all want something surprising, we want wonder and magic. Fantasy world is a magical land where all dreams come true and we are both spectators and participants of this wonderful world. World where our wishes and miracles can come true. And this world is a good world, where one can fulfill their dreams. And when you materialize dreams into the world of music, or architecture, or literature or fine arts, this world becomes huge, and you can invite other people there. Tell us about the dream. -My dream is to live in a world where everybody is happy and sincere, where all are creative people, where dreams can be translated into reality, where the goodness comes out of dignity and not of weakness, where creativity breeds creativity. If a person is happy and positively charged, their dream will be bright and cheerful.
http://muzderauli.wordpress.com/2010/12/23/sergey-tyukanov-2/ http://www.tyukanov.com
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Tomas Demuth Thomas Demuth is a 3d artist from Germany. He uses 3d rendering software to create photo-abstract images based on polygon mesh structures. He calls his style “Polygonismus”, and the concept behind this style “The Economy of Polygons”. It is a dramatic and profound style that gives the artist‟s work psychological depth and photo-abstract intensity at the same time. In a world of a constantly increasing resolution, he is taking polygons back to their own beginning. This is the world where mathematics and algebra meet the sense of creativity. THE MANIFESTO OF POLYGONISM The polygon is the smallest visible part in the three-dimensional world of cybernetic art. Three points in space are enough to draw a polygon. Today, at the beginning of the 21st Century, we must recognize that the polygon will die out. It will not disappear by its lack of presence from view, but only by its wealth and ever-increasing number of points and surfaces. In the field of computer art the polygon will sink in nameless representable of nature. The polygon is set to the unnatural. Its hard, sharp edge is the bulwark against nature and wants to put all things in the right light of its physics.. But the abstract form of the polygon world obeys its own physics. It is the physics of our own inner eye that stands up to its battle against the all-seeing eye of the binary code. In the field of game design, we still are accustomed to the strange, seemingly able to admire edged, and abstract figures. But with increasing computer power polygons are now in the final state and will soon disappear. Until a few years ago, the polygon was a necessary evil for the game industry, specifically. It was rather an unavoidable, aesthetic artifact, since the processing capacity decided on what one might see to the degree of complexity. Lara Croft began over ten years ago with about 500 polygons to conquer. Today, surfaces have increased by more than tenfold. The so-called low-poly modeling is the art of constructing a virtual computer character. The economic handling of points and surfaces guarantees the future perfect embedding and playability of the character in its virtual environment. But why is the polygon and its associated possibilities of abstraction so important for art and for the viewing habits of the people? The polygon is still the last barrier between the abstract world of imagination and the world of the dictates of realism. This peculiar binary world is built on the polygon but denies this. But at the same time, it will not continue to bother with him. The mad race for the rounding, the immediacy and perfection of nature, includes also the unnaturalness of the edges and corners; the denial of his and of our own origin.
http://www.polygonismus.de http://www.blog.polygonismus.de http://www.gallery.polygonismus.de http://www.polygonshop.polygonismus.de