The post Add Some Glitz and Glam to Your Instagram Feed with Sara Shakeel appeared first on TettyBetty.
]]>“I don’t have an art background, no one in my family is an artist, in fact, they are engineers, doctors, pilots, and teachers,” she told Forbes. “I was told from a very young age, that there was no chance of me getting into an art school pursuing that line of work, thus I chose to be a dentist which I personally loved, equal to being an artist.”
“With no formal art training, this path of life, although very rewarding, it is extremely ruthless especially in today’s world where ideas are floating and every other person claims to be an artist,” she added.
“I try to tell everyone who comes up to me for advice, every human has their own gift which is unique and different from the billions out there, why waste time in copying others when that brain of yours can create a million new ideas if you only give it a chance! I mean I did, and it proved me right.”
Check out her hypnotic creations in the gallery below.
The post Add Some Glitz and Glam to Your Instagram Feed with Sara Shakeel appeared first on TettyBetty.
]]>The post These Collages Are the Meaning of Eye-Popping appeared first on TettyBetty.
]]>After studying at Boston University’s School of Fine Art and Parsons School of Design (NYC), where she graduated with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Illustration in 1992, she began working as a freelance Illustrator in New York. She has been doing this ever since.
“I grew up in a converted barn on Long Island,” she told AI-AP. “My parents weren’t artists by trade but they were definitely latent artists. They were pretty unconventional and had a reverence for art and artists—they both hung around with the Pop artists in the 60s and went to art openings all the time before I came along and ended that party. We had a lot of art around the house and I spent a whole lot of time drawing.”
“Once, in kindergarten, my friend asked me for my autograph on a drawing I made for her,” she shared. “Drunk on power and fame I decided I wanted to be an artist when I grew up. Since then it’s been all power and fame (or all drunk—I can’t remember).”
When talking about her creative process, Goodman said: “I really dig the process of not being able to plan ahead too much and not knowing what I’ll find to use next. It’s really intuitive and surprising and sometimes totally confounding which is a real treat.”
Take a look.
The post These Collages Are the Meaning of Eye-Popping appeared first on TettyBetty.
]]>The post Food Turns to Objects and Animals in these Clever Digital Collages appeared first on TettyBetty.
]]>This is how in Les Creatonautes’ works, a cake got crocodile jaws; eggplant became a piece of diving equipment while onion ring found a new purpose as a floating wheel.
“The world is in permanent change, it is in a transformation” – Olivier Grossmann of Les Creatonautes told Colossal. “This transformation, often invisible, sometimes unexpected, is inevitable. Living organisms, landscapes, technologies, societies: everything changes constantly, at different rates. From this observation, we decided to transform the world in our own way.”
Let’s check some of their amazing works below.
The post Food Turns to Objects and Animals in these Clever Digital Collages appeared first on TettyBetty.
]]>The post Add Some Glitz and Glam to Your Instagram Feed with Sara Shakeel appeared first on TettyBetty.
]]>“I don’t have an art background, no one in my family is an artist, in fact, they are engineers, doctors, pilots, and teachers,” she told Forbes. “I was told from a very young age, that there was no chance of me getting into an art school pursuing that line of work, thus I chose to be a dentist which I personally loved, equal to being an artist.”
“With no formal art training, this path of life, although very rewarding, it is extremely ruthless especially in today’s world where ideas are floating and every other person claims to be an artist,” she added.
“I try to tell everyone who comes up to me for advice, every human has their own gift which is unique and different from the billions out there, why waste time in copying others when that brain of yours can create a million new ideas if you only give it a chance! I mean I did, and it proved me right.”
Check out her hypnotic creations in the gallery below.
The post Add Some Glitz and Glam to Your Instagram Feed with Sara Shakeel appeared first on TettyBetty.
]]>The post These Collages Are the Meaning of Eye-Popping appeared first on TettyBetty.
]]>After studying at Boston University’s School of Fine Art and Parsons School of Design (NYC), where she graduated with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Illustration in 1992, she began working as a freelance Illustrator in New York. She has been doing this ever since.
“I grew up in a converted barn on Long Island,” she told AI-AP. “My parents weren’t artists by trade but they were definitely latent artists. They were pretty unconventional and had a reverence for art and artists—they both hung around with the Pop artists in the 60s and went to art openings all the time before I came along and ended that party. We had a lot of art around the house and I spent a whole lot of time drawing.”
“Once, in kindergarten, my friend asked me for my autograph on a drawing I made for her,” she shared. “Drunk on power and fame I decided I wanted to be an artist when I grew up. Since then it’s been all power and fame (or all drunk—I can’t remember).”
When talking about her creative process, Goodman said: “I really dig the process of not being able to plan ahead too much and not knowing what I’ll find to use next. It’s really intuitive and surprising and sometimes totally confounding which is a real treat.”
Take a look.
The post These Collages Are the Meaning of Eye-Popping appeared first on TettyBetty.
]]>The post Food Turns to Objects and Animals in these Clever Digital Collages appeared first on TettyBetty.
]]>This is how in Les Creatonautes’ works, a cake got crocodile jaws; eggplant became a piece of diving equipment while onion ring found a new purpose as a floating wheel.
“The world is in permanent change, it is in a transformation” – Olivier Grossmann of Les Creatonautes told Colossal. “This transformation, often invisible, sometimes unexpected, is inevitable. Living organisms, landscapes, technologies, societies: everything changes constantly, at different rates. From this observation, we decided to transform the world in our own way.”
Let’s check some of their amazing works below.
The post Food Turns to Objects and Animals in these Clever Digital Collages appeared first on TettyBetty.
]]>