Fashionable paintings for the interior. What's trending now? The most famous contemporary artists

The world is full creative people and every day hundreds of new paintings appear, new songs are written. Of course, in the world of art, there are some missteps, but there are masterpieces by real masters that are simply breathtaking! We will show you their work today.

Pencil Augmented Reality


Photographer Ben Heine continues to work on his project, which is a mixture of pencil drawings and photography. First, he makes a freehand sketch with a pencil on paper. Then he photographs the drawing against the background of a real object and refines the resulting image in Photoshop, adding contrast and saturation. The result is magic!

Illustrations by Alisa Makarova




Alisa Makarova is a talented artist from St. Petersburg. In an age when most images are created using a computer, our compatriot’s interest in traditional forms of painting evokes respect. One of her latest projects is the triptych “Vulpes Vulpes”, in which you can see charming fiery red foxes. Beauty, and that's all!

Fine engraving


Wood artists Paul Rodin and Valeria Lu have announced the creation of a new engraving called “The Moth”. The painstaking work and exquisite craftsmanship of the authors do not leave even the most stubborn skeptics indifferent. The print will be featured at an upcoming exhibition in Brooklyn on November 7th.

Ballpoint pen drawings


Probably everyone, at least once during lectures, instead of writing down the teacher’s words, drew various figures in a notebook. It is unknown whether the artist Sarah Esteje was one of these students. But the fact that her ballpoint pen drawings are impressive is an indisputable fact! Sarah simply proved that you don't need any special materials to create something truly interesting.

Surreal worlds of Artem Chebokha




Russian artist Artem Chebokha creates incredible worlds where only sea, sky and endless harmony exist. For his new works, the artist chose very poetic images - a wanderer traveling through unknown places and whales circling in cloud-waves - the flight of imagination of this master is simply limitless.

Spot portraits



Some people think about brush stroke technique, others think about the contrast of light and shadow, but the artist Pablo Jurado Ruiz paints with dots! The artist developed the ideas of the pointillism genre, inherent in the authors of the era of neo-impressionism, and created his own own style, where details decide absolutely everything. Thousands of touches to paper result in realistic portraits, which you just want to look at.

Paintings from floppy disks



In an era when many things and technologies become obsolete at the speed of a passing express train, it is quite common to get rid of unnecessary junk. However, as it turned out, not everything is so sad, and from old objects you can even make very modern work art. English artist Nick Gentry collected square floppy disks from friends, took a jar of paint, and painted stunning portraits on them. It turned out very beautiful!

On the verge of realism and surrealism




Berlin artist Harding Meyer loves to paint portraits, but in order not to become another hyperrealist, he decided to experiment and created a series of portraits on the verge of reality and surrealism. These works allow us to look at human face as something more than just a “dry portrait”, highlighting its basis - the image. As a result of such searches, Harding’s work was noticed by the Gallery contemporary art in Munich, which will exhibit the artist’s works on November 7th.

Finger painting on iPad

Many contemporary artists are experimenting with materials to create paintings, but the Japanese Seikou Yamaoka outdid them all by using his iPad as a canvas. He simply installed the ArtStudio application and began not only to draw, but to reproduce the most famous masterpieces art. Moreover, he does this not with some special brushes, but with his finger, which arouses admiration even among people far from the world of art.

"Wood" painting




Using everything from ink to tea, wood artist Mandy Tsung has created truly mesmerizing paintings filled with passion and energy. As the main theme, she chose the mysterious image of a woman and her position in the modern world.

Hyperrealist



Every time you find the work of hyperrealist artists, you involuntarily ask yourself the question: “Why are they doing all this?” Each of them has their own answer to this and sometimes quite contradictory philosophy. But artist Dino Tomic says it bluntly: “I just love my family very much.” He painted day and night and tried not to miss a single detail from the portrait of his relatives. One such drawing took him at least 70 hours of work. To say that the parents were delighted is to say nothing.

Portraits of soldiers


On October 18, an exhibition of works by Joe Black entitled “Ways of Seeing” opened at the Opera Gallery in London. To create his paintings, the artist used not only paints, but also the most unusual materials - bolts, breast badges and much more. However, the main material was....toy soldiers! The most interesting exhibits of the exhibition are portraits of Barack Obama, Margaret Thatcher and Mao Zedong.

Sensual oil portraits


Korean artist Lee Rim was not so famous a couple of days ago, but her new paintings “Girls in Paint” caused a wide response and resonance in the art world. Lee says: " The main topic My work is human emotions and psychological state. Even though we live in different environments, at a certain point in time we feel the same when we look at an object." Perhaps this is why, looking at her work, I want to understand this girl and get into her thoughts.

The art of modern painting is works created currently or in the recent past. A certain number of years will pass, and these paintings will become part of history. Works of painting created from the 60s of the last century to the present day reflect several trends in modern art that can be classified as postmodernism. During Art Nouveau times, the work of painters was more widely represented, and in the 70s of the twentieth century there was a change in the social orientation of the art of painting.

Contemporary art

Artists of modern painting primarily represent new trends in fine art. In cultural terminology, there is the concept of “contemporary art”, which in some way correlates with the concept of “contemporary painting”. By contemporary art, artists most often mean innovation, when the painter turns to cutting-edge themes, regardless of their focus. The picture can be painted in and depict any industrial enterprise. Or on the canvas there is a landscape landscape with a wheat field, meadow, forest, but at the same time a combine harvester will certainly be drawn in the distance. The style of modern painting assumes a social orientation of the picture. At the same time, landscapes by contemporary artists without social overtones are valued much more highly.

Choosing a direction

Since the late 90s, artists of modern painting have abandoned industrial themes and transferred their creativity into the mainstream of pure fine art. Masters of fine art appear portrait painting, landscape scenes, still lifes in the style of Flemish drawing. And gradually in modern painting it began to appear true art, in no way inferior to the paintings created outstanding artists 18th and 19th centuries, and in some ways even surpassing them. Today's brush masters are helped by a developed technical base and an abundance of new tools that allow them to fully reflect their plans on canvas. Thus, artists of modern painting can create to the best of their abilities. Of course, the quality of paints or brushes is important in the process of painting, but the main thing is talent.

Abstract expressionism

Modern artists adhere to painting methods that allow the use of non-geometric strokes applied in large numbers on a large canvas. Large brushes are used, sometimes paint brushes. Such painting can hardly be called art in classical meaning this word, however, abstraction is a continuation of surrealism, which appeared back in 1920 thanks to the ideas of Andre Breton and immediately found a lot of followers, such as Salvator Dali, Hans Hofmann, Adolf Gottlieb. At the same time, artists of modern painting understand expressionism in their own way. Today, this genre differs from its predecessor in the size of the canvases, which can reach three meters in length.

Pop art

A counterbalance to abstractionism was the conceptual new avant-gardeism, which promoted aesthetic values. Modern artists began to include images in their paintings famous personalities, such as Mao Zedong or Marilyn Monroe. This art is called "pop art" - a popular, generally recognized direction in painting. Popular culture replaced abstract art and gave rise to a special type of aesthetics, which in a colorful, spectacular manner presented to the public what was on everyone’s lips, some recent events or images widely famous people in different life situations.

The founders and followers of pop art were Andy Warhol, Tom Wesselmann, Peter Blake, Roy Lichtenstein.

Photorealism

Contemporary art is multifaceted; often a new direction arises in it, combining two or more types of visual creativity. Photorealism became such a form of artist’s self-expression. This style of painting appeared in the USA in 1968. It was invented by avant-garde artist Louis Meisel, and the genre was introduced two years later, at the Whitney Museum during the exhibition “Twenty-Two Realists.”

Painting in the style of photorealism is associated with photography; the movement of the object is frozen in time. A photorealist artist collects his image, which will be captured in the picture, using photographs. From a negative or slide, the image is transferred to the canvas by projection or using a scale grid. Then a full-fledged picture is created using painting technologies.

The heyday of photorealism occurred in the mid-70s, then there was a decline in popularity, and in the early 90s the genre was revived again. Established artists worked mainly in the USA, among them there were many sculptors who also created their works using image projection. The most famous masters of painting based on photorealism are Richard Estes, Charles Bellet, Thomas Blackwell, Robert Demekis, Donald Eddy, Duane Hanson.

Photorealist artists younger generation- Raffaella Spence, Roberto Bernardi, Chiara Albertoni, Tony Brunelli, Olivier Romano, Bertrand Meniel, Clive Head.

Contemporary artists of Russia

  • Serge Fedulov (born 1958), a native of Nevinnomyssk, Stavropol Territory. Participant of several exhibitions in Latin America and Europe. His paintings are distinguished by their realism and contrasting color combinations.
  • Mikhail Golubev (born 1981), graduated art class Omsk school of painting. Currently lives in St. Petersburg. He is distinguished by an unusual style of creativity; all his works are paintings-reflections with deep philosophical overtones.
  • Dmitry Annenkov (born 1965) in Moscow. Graduated from the Stroganov Art Institute. Popular abroad, but gives preference to Russian exhibitions. Annenkov's art is realistic; the artist is a recognized master of still life.

Russian impressionists

  • Alexey Chernigin, Russian impressionist artist (born 1975), is the son of the famous artist Alexander Chernigin. Studied painting and graphic design at art school Nizhny Novgorod. Graduated from the Nizhny Novgorod Architectural Institute with a degree in Industrial Design. Member of the Union of Artists of Russia since 1998. Since 2001, he has been a teacher at NGASU at the Department of Interior Design.
  • Konstantin Lupanov, Krasnodar artist (born 1977). Graduated from the Industrial Academy at the State University of Culture and Arts with a degree in " Monumental painting". Participant of many art exhibitions in and St. Petersburg. He is distinguished by a rare style of oil painting with swirling strokes. Lupanov's paintings are completely devoid of contrasting color combinations; the images seem to flow into one another. The artist himself calls his works “cheerful, irresponsible daub,” but there is some coquetry in this statement: the paintings are actually painted quite professionally.

Russian artists painting in nude style

  • Sergei Marshennikov (born 1971), one of the most famous Russian artists of our time. Graduated from the Ufa College of Arts. His paintings are an example of blatant realism. The works give the impression of an artistic photograph, the composition is so precise and every stroke is verified. The artist’s wife, Natalya, most often plays the role of model, and this helps him create a sensual picture.
  • Vera Vasilievna Donskaya-Khilko (born 1964), granddaughter of the famous opera singer Lavrenty Dmitrievich Donskoy. The brightest representative of modern Russian painting. He draws in the style of a plot nude. In the artist’s creative palette one can find beauties from an oriental harem and naked village girls on the river bank on the night of Ivan Kupala, a Russian bathhouse with hot women going out into the snow and swimming in an ice hole. The artist draws a lot and talentedly.

Contemporary Russian artists and their work are of increasing interest to connoisseurs fine arts all over the world.

Contemporary painting as world art

Currently fine arts took forms different from those demanded in the 18th and 19th centuries. Contemporary artists of the world turned to the avant-garde in a narrower interpretation, the canvases acquired sophistication and became more meaningful. Society today needs updated art; the need extends to all types of creativity, including painting. Paintings by contemporary artists, if they are done well enough high level, are sold out, become the subject of bargaining or exchange. Some paintings are included in special lists valuable works art. Paintings from the past, painted by great painters, are still in demand, but contemporary artists are becoming increasingly popular. Oil, tempera, watercolor, and other paints help them in creativity and the successful implementation of their plans. Painters, as a rule, adhere to one style. It could be a landscape, a portrait, battle scenes or another genre. Accordingly, the artist chooses a certain type of paint for his work.

Contemporary artists of the world

The most famous contemporary artists differ in their painting style, their brush is recognizable, sometimes you don’t even need to look at the signature at the bottom of the canvas. Famous masters of modern painting are Philip Pearlstein, Alexander Isachev, Francis Bacon, Stanislav Plutenko, Peter Blake, Freud Lucien, Michael Parkes, Guy Johnson, Eric Fischl, Nikolai Blokhin, Vasily Shulzhenko.

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European artists began to use oil paint in the 15th century, and since then it was with its help that the most famous paintings of all times. But in these high-tech days, oil still retains its charm and mystery, and artists continue to invent new techniques, tearing the mold to shreds and pushing the boundaries of modern art.

website chose works that delighted us and made us remember that beauty can be born in any era.

The owner of incredible skill, Polish artist Justyna Kopania, in her expressive, sweeping works, was able to preserve the transparency of the fog, the lightness of the sail, and the smooth rocking of the ship on the waves.
Her paintings amaze with their depth, volume, richness, and the texture is such that it is impossible to take your eyes off them.

Primitivist artist from Minsk Valentin Gubarev doesn't chase fame and just does what he loves. His work is incredibly popular abroad, but almost unknown to his compatriots. In the mid-90s, the French fell in love with his everyday sketches and signed a contract with the artist for 16 years. The paintings, which, it would seem, should only be understandable to us, bearers of the “modest charm of undeveloped socialism,” appealed to the European public, and exhibitions began in Switzerland, Germany, Great Britain and other countries.

Sergei Marshennikov is 41 years old. He lives in St. Petersburg and works in the best traditions of the classical Russian school of realistic portraiture. The heroines of his canvases are women who are tender and defenseless in their half-nakedness. Many of the most famous paintings depict the artist's muse and wife, Natalya.

IN modern era pictures high resolution and the rise of hyperrealism creativity Philip Barlow(Philip Barlow) immediately attracts attention. However, a certain effort is required from the viewer in order to force himself to look at the blurry silhouettes and bright spots on the author’s canvases. This is probably how people suffering from myopia see the world without glasses and contact lenses.

Painting by Laurent Parcelier is amazing world, in which there is neither sadness nor despondency. You won’t find gloomy and rainy pictures from him. There is a lot of light, air and bright colors, which the artist applies with characteristic, recognizable strokes. This creates the feeling that the paintings are woven from a thousand sunbeams.

Oil on wood panels American artist Jeremy Mann paints dynamic portraits of the modern metropolis. “Abstract shapes, lines, the contrast of light and dark spots - all create a picture that evokes the feeling that a person experiences in the crowd and bustle of the city, but can also express the calm that is found when contemplating quiet beauty,” says the artist.

In the paintings of British artist Neil Simone, nothing is as it seems at first glance. “For me, the world around me is a series of fragile and constantly changing shapes, shadows and boundaries,” says Simon. And in his paintings everything is truly illusory and interconnected. Boundaries are blurred, and stories flow into each other.

Italian-born contemporary American artist Joseph Lorasso (

Is modern technology in demand now? Russian art? Auctioneers say no. According to Daria Chernenko, a specialist in Russian art auction house Bonhams, no more than two or three works by young Russian artists are sold at its auction per year:

“Such works are purchased mainly for interior decoration, and much less often for private collections.”

The manager of the Moscow office of one of the international auction companies assures that “The market is not developing in this direction, there are no purchases, except for one-time gallery purchases.”

Gallery owners counter: interest in contemporary art has not disappeared. "According to the art environment lately there is a running joke that there is no market. Of course, it exists,” insists Sergei Gridchin, owner of the Gridchinhall contemporary art center. “It’s just that 2015 is a year of uncertainty for many markets, and the art market is one of them.”

According to the founder of the Pop/off/art gallery, Sergei Popov, if a few years ago it was possible not to follow young artists, now “The weather is set by those who are 25 years old”, and there are already collectors buying their works.

Time and again the market will tell who is right. In the meantime, Forbes represents the most promising young artists who are little known to the general public, but are already of interest to Russian and foreign museums, exhibitions and collectors.

  • The selection of authors took place in two stages.

At first based on responses from exhibition and art award curators, gallerists, museum directors and famous artists a list of names was compiled (we only set an age limit - born in 1982 and younger). At this stage, we found out how many galleries work with the named young artists on an ongoing basis, whether they participated in exhibitions in Russia and abroad, and whether they received prizes and awards. As a result, a long list was formed, which included 35 people.

At the second stage We selected the 15 most successful of them. They were assessed according to the following criteria: personal exhibitions in Russia and abroad, participation in large group Russian and international exhibitions and biennale, presence of works in collections famous museums and galleries and in private collections, the presence of Russian and international awards.

The finalists included the artists with the maximum amount of points awarded. Each of them works in several genres, combining, for example, installations and painting, video and so-called objects ( art forms outside of specific styles).

  • It is noteworthy that only two finalists have an art education in the traditional sense.

Year of birth: 1987

Where I'm from: Tashkent

Education:“Free Workshops” at MMSI, Institute of Contemporary Art

Genres: painting

Number of works: about 200

Of these in the collections: about 50

Collections: collection of the director of the Austrian Cultural Forum Simon Mraz, PERMM Museum of Contemporary Art, Klaipeda Center for Cultural Communications (Lithuania), Victoria Foundation, Stella Art Foundation, Vladimir Smirnov and Konstantin Sorokin Foundation, Bela Horvath Collection (Budapest)

Venice Biennale (2014), Jewish Museum Vienna (2015)

Cost of work: from €100

“Actually, I want my work to be seen by schoolchildren and children, so that a generation of new people will grow up, together with whom we will build a world with a different type of relationship, where there will be no everyday exploitation and humiliation.”


photo by Evgeny Petrushansky for Forbes

Year of birth: 1984

Where I'm from: Voronezh

Education: Voronezh State University (Faculty of Philosophy and Psychology)

Genres: installation, video, graphics

Number of works: 70

Of these in the collections: 40

Collections: Voronezh regional literary museum, private Russian and foreign collections

Azoikum (Büro für kulturelle Übersetzungen, Leipzig, Germany, 2014)

Cost of work: €800–2000

“I have a long production cycle: I collect plants, make herbarium specimens, identify them, draw. The process lasts for months, and I get along with them like friends. And it can be hard to part with friends. On the other hand, I'm glad someone else has them."

Dmitry Morozov (::vtol::)


photo by Evgeny Petrushansky for Forbes

Year of birth: 1986

Where I'm from: Moscow

Education: Russian State University for the Humanities (Faculty of Art History)

Genres: hybrid art

Number of works: 70

Of these in the collections: 6

Collections: National Center for Contemporary Art, Polytechnic Museum, St. Petersburg Museum of Sound, Russian and foreign private collections

Group foreign exhibitions: Ars Electronica (Linz, 2015), CTM festival (Berlin, 2015); The Emperor's New Aesthetic, Emmanuel Gallery (Denver, 2014); Cyberfest (Berlin, 2013); Rhythm Assignment, Bonnefanten museum (Maastricht, 2013); Bent festival, Tank Theater (New York, 2010)

Cost of work:€10 000–30 000

“Sale is secondary for me. For many years I worked without attention from the market, and it did not upset me. The artistic elite and critics are very conservative in terms of accepting new styles and forms."


photo by Evgeny Petrushansky for Forbes

Year of birth: 1983

Where I'm from: Kemerovo

Education: St. Petersburg State Academy of Arts and Industry named after. A. L. Stieglitz (faculty of monumental art, department of artistic textiles)

Genres: installation, object, video, graphics

Number of works: about 150

Of these in the collections: about 70

Collections: Espoo Museum of Modern Art, Pori Art Museum, Kiasma Museum (Finland), Moscow Museum of Modern Art, private Russian and foreign collections

Personal foreign exhibitions:“Incubator”, Galerie Forsblom (Helsinki, 2011); “My Room”, Galerie Forsblom (Helsinki, 2012); "Hello World!", Mimmo Scognamiglio Artecontemporanea (Milan, 2013)

Cost of work:€1000–10 000

“The day before my first personal exhibition at Winzavod, we came into the hall and found that all the tangles in the installation were tangled, and there was dead rat. It turned out that the local cat was chasing a rat and decided to play with balls at the same time. We put the work in order, and the cat appeared again - after the opening of the exhibition.”


photo by Evgeny Petrushansky for Forbes

Year of birth: 1985

Where I'm from: Moscow

Education: Higher School of Economics (Bachelor of Sociology, Master of Philosophical Anthropology)

Genres: procession (endless projects), objects, sculpture, painting, graphics, photography

Number of works: 15 projects, about 1000 artifacts

Of these in the collections: about 70 artifacts

Collections: Moscow Museum of Modern Art, Gazprombank collection, Victoria Foundation collection, private Russian collections

Group foreign exhibitions:“Highway of Enthusiasts”, parallel program of the XIII Architectural Biennale (Venice, 2012), Kiev Biennale of Contemporary Art (2015)

Cost of work:€1000–5000 (artifacts)

“Artists are actually infringed on the rights to their own work. You're dependent on one-off sales, and it's hard to make complex, weird work that will be interesting twenty years from now. More in-demand works give me the opportunity to create experimental ones. This is very important."


photo by Evgeny Petrushansky for Forbes

Year of birth: 1986

Where I'm from: Moscow

Education: State Academic University of Humanities (Faculty of Political Science), Moscow School of Photography and Multimedia named after. Rodchenko

Genres: photography, video, sculpture

Number of works: 10 art projects

Of these in the collections: prints of 5 art projects

Collections: Multimedia Art Museum, galleries HilgerNEXT, Anzenberger, OstLicht, private collections in Russia, Austria, Germany, France, Japan

Foreign exhibitions: Kunst Im Tunnel (Dusseldorf, 2012), HilgerNext gallery (Vienna, 2014)

Cost of work: from €200

“My projects touch on the theme of conflict, both personal, social and political. Politics is business big people, she is beyond romance and morality. I explore how it affects life common man. One way or another, you find yourself drawn into some process against your will.”


photo by Evgeny Petrushansky for Forbes

Year of birth: 1984

Where I'm from: Moscow

Education: art school at the Moscow State Academy of Arts and Industry named after. S. G. Stroganova

Genres: performance, sculpture

Number of works: about 100

Of these in the collections: about 10

Collections: Moscow Museum of Modern Art, private collections

Personal foreign exhibitions: PSIONICS, Federica Chizzoni gallery (Milan, 2014)

Cost of work:€1000–15 000

“One of the happiest moments in my life was watching the installers lift my nine-meter sculpture to the ceiling. This is an incomparable delight, from which you become dependent, a delight from the realization of a dream, from a scale, from a beauty that you did not even expect.”

We present to you some of the most interesting artists of the 21st century. Of course, in addition to these authors, there are others contemporary artists world, worthy of your attention, but these five, in any case, should not leave you indifferent.

Megan Howland

Megan Howland is an American artist who produces contemporary oil paintings. She has a pragmatic approach to creative process and believes that painting allows her to express herself in a way that words cannot.

While painting, she thinks about human spirituality and nature, exploring the relationships between humanity and other living beings and organisms. Painting for Megan is about taking in information and creating a visual response to it. The main goal of her work is to create a complex of emotional portraits of the states in which we humans can find ourselves.

Lately, Megan has been painting human figures, intricately weaving a variety of birds and flowers into them. Her painting is an example of what she calls “an enlightening and terrifying struggle for balance,” that is, for the harmony of coexistence between people and nature.

The artist's inspiration comes from listening to all kinds of podcasts, reading poetry and scientific journals.

Joe Francis Dowden

Joe Francis Dowden - professional British artist doing his work in watercolors. He specializes in creating landscapes (both forest and sea). Dowden's works are in private collections in the USA, Australia and the Far East.

When he turned twenty-three, he quit his job designing websites and took a part-time job as a window cleaner. IN free time he paints pictures. And his work as a washer allows him to find previously unknown species for future landscapes.

Dowden's work is filled with detail and is striking in its realistic rendering of texture and volume. The artist considers light to be the key element of watercolor painting. And therefore he advises everyone who wants to learn watercolor painting to pay attention to light, because it is what brings any landscape to life.

Dowden not only loves to paint, but is also ready to willingly share his knowledge with everyone - videos of the artist’s master classes can be found on YouTube.

Philip Barlow

Recently, modern paintings by the artist Philip Barlow have spread all over the Internet, who managed to interest even the most sophisticated viewers with his unconventional view of painting. And the uniqueness of these paintings lies in the fact that he paints them as a myopic person would see the world around him.

Myopic people recognize themselves in these watercolors, and the lucky ones with good eyesight admire the original beauty and sunny atmosphere paintings

Wide spots of light, imitation of the bokeh effect, blurry shapes and boundaries, flowing into one another with bright colors - these watercolors look like failed photographs, as if the photographer forgot to adjust the sharpness before shooting.

But it is precisely this approach that gives the artist’s works an extraordinary charm and allows you to look at the world around you from a completely different angle. After all, even when we do not see details, but only general forms and silhouettes, the meaning still does not escape us.

Ai Xuan

Ai Xuan is a talented contemporary artist from Beijing who writes modern paintings in the style of realism. He was born in 1947, in the city of Chinghua. Xuan's nickname in China is "Master Ai". The main theme of the author's works are Tibetan subjects, for which he is best known - mainly the mountain snowy landscapes of Tibet and local children.

Ai Xuan often visited Tibet, which greatly influenced his work - the boundless gloom and loneliness of this land forced the artist to reconsider his opinion about it.

In 1987, the artist studied for a year in the USA, at the University of Oklahoma. Ai Xuan also met others there contemporary artists, who helped him hold an exhibition of personal works.

Art critics highlight a distinctive feature of Ai Xuan's approach to his works: to emphasize the emotions of the picture, he always designs the background accordingly, mixing strict emotions with mysterious beauty. The concept of his paintings is moderate, but expressive. Viewers are attracted to Xuan's paintings by the isolation and pride of the characters' faces, despite the harshness of the environment. natural environment and the hardships of life of the Tibetan people.

Alexander Vinogradov and Vladimir Dubossarsky

Is it possible to paint one picture together? Quite! An example is Dubossarsky and Vinogradov - famous contemporary artists of Russia, whose creative tandem was formed in the early 1990s, and has now earned worldwide popularity.

Comments

Sergey

2019-03-26 16:51:33

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