The post Laura Blythman’s Art is Pink and Popping appeared first on TettyBetty.
]]>As such, her aesthetic has garnered her a legion of fans and a super happy portfolio of work with clients ranging from start-up businesses to high profile Australian and International brands. She’s also created quite a buzz online, with more than 65k followers on Instagram to date.
Her creative process involves some collage techniques – mainly cutting, layering and pasting. “When I was young I always loved to cut, paste and layer paper and as a teen I would spend days drawing detailed illustrations of my teen idols,” Blythman’s shared in an interview with Kids Gifts and Toys. “So I guess in some form or another I’ve always been doing exactly what I still do now. Drawing, cutting + pasting, creating, making things.”
“I’m drawn to color because it just makes me so happy, it never fails to lift my mood,” she explained. “When I’m creating new work I decide on a color palette first. Always. At present, I can’t get away from neon pink and peach.”
Step right in!
The post Laura Blythman’s Art is Pink and Popping appeared first on TettyBetty.
]]>The post Alberto Pazzi Sees the World Through Rose-Tinted Glasses appeared first on TettyBetty.
]]>“Graphic design gave me the tools to make money and showed me a way to do certain things, but it wasn’t for me,” he remarked in an interview with Elephant. “My favorite vehicle of expression is painting—it’s the most satisfying process. I know a lot of artists who are very talented but they can’t let go on a piece; but for me, if it’s not working I just throw it away and start again.”
His work, easily recognizable for his choice of color and cartoonish style, tends to center around common themes that include women, clowns, and ghosts – themes that Pazzi treats as universal. “The things I paint are very universal,” he stresses, adding that we’ve all felt like a clown or a ghost at one time or another.
“In my recent work I’ve used them almost like self-portraits,” he adds, “but the image of a clown, or a ghost drinking on its own in a bar… these are universal feelings that strike you even if you don’t speak the same language or whether or not you’ve had the same experiences—everyone can relate to them in a way.”
Relatable or not, his artwork is worth your attention:
The post Alberto Pazzi Sees the World Through Rose-Tinted Glasses appeared first on TettyBetty.
]]>The post Laura Blythman’s Art is Pink and Popping appeared first on TettyBetty.
]]>As such, her aesthetic has garnered her a legion of fans and a super happy portfolio of work with clients ranging from start-up businesses to high profile Australian and International brands. She’s also created quite a buzz online, with more than 65k followers on Instagram to date.
Her creative process involves some collage techniques – mainly cutting, layering and pasting. “When I was young I always loved to cut, paste and layer paper and as a teen I would spend days drawing detailed illustrations of my teen idols,” Blythman’s shared in an interview with Kids Gifts and Toys. “So I guess in some form or another I’ve always been doing exactly what I still do now. Drawing, cutting + pasting, creating, making things.”
“I’m drawn to color because it just makes me so happy, it never fails to lift my mood,” she explained. “When I’m creating new work I decide on a color palette first. Always. At present, I can’t get away from neon pink and peach.”
Step right in!
The post Laura Blythman’s Art is Pink and Popping appeared first on TettyBetty.
]]>The post Alberto Pazzi Sees the World Through Rose-Tinted Glasses appeared first on TettyBetty.
]]>“Graphic design gave me the tools to make money and showed me a way to do certain things, but it wasn’t for me,” he remarked in an interview with Elephant. “My favorite vehicle of expression is painting—it’s the most satisfying process. I know a lot of artists who are very talented but they can’t let go on a piece; but for me, if it’s not working I just throw it away and start again.”
His work, easily recognizable for his choice of color and cartoonish style, tends to center around common themes that include women, clowns, and ghosts – themes that Pazzi treats as universal. “The things I paint are very universal,” he stresses, adding that we’ve all felt like a clown or a ghost at one time or another.
“In my recent work I’ve used them almost like self-portraits,” he adds, “but the image of a clown, or a ghost drinking on its own in a bar… these are universal feelings that strike you even if you don’t speak the same language or whether or not you’ve had the same experiences—everyone can relate to them in a way.”
Relatable or not, his artwork is worth your attention:
The post Alberto Pazzi Sees the World Through Rose-Tinted Glasses appeared first on TettyBetty.
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