- Registrado
- 20 de Abr, 2021
There is a misconception that all abstract artworks lack meaning, effort and detail, and although that is true for basically the bullshit of the art world who demand their half assed work be treated with reverence. Abstraction can still be used as an input of creativity so long as you add realism, effort, detail and/or meaning into them.
One of the most famous examples of good abstract artwork is done by Ivan Seal for the album covers of The Caretaker, who is most famous for the album Everywhere At The End Of Time which is an album about Alzheimer's. Those artworks actually compliment the decaying nature of ballroom songs as a person's mind fails to comprehend. The last one depicting a board with tape is meant to represent the final stages of dementia where there is nothing left in a person's mind which is often regarded as "without description". Notice how you can easily explain what the objects are in the first stages but become more distorted and confusing in the later stages.
Sometimes I find some artists online with an interestingly bohemian form of expression. I notice there is some people who sometimes combines anime with a body either of basic interpretation or inanimate objects. This one for example literally takes the head of an anime girl and construct's it's body with what I presume to be umbrellas and probably even an egg. It's hard to explain but it will leave you questioning rather than discarding.
William Utermolhen is another really good example of an abstract artist with plenty of detail and realism. Unfortunately he was diagnosed with Alzheimer's in 1994 and lived 13 years suffering from this disease before he died of pneumonia.
One of the most famous examples of good abstract artwork is done by Ivan Seal for the album covers of The Caretaker, who is most famous for the album Everywhere At The End Of Time which is an album about Alzheimer's. Those artworks actually compliment the decaying nature of ballroom songs as a person's mind fails to comprehend. The last one depicting a board with tape is meant to represent the final stages of dementia where there is nothing left in a person's mind which is often regarded as "without description". Notice how you can easily explain what the objects are in the first stages but become more distorted and confusing in the later stages.
Sometimes I find some artists online with an interestingly bohemian form of expression. I notice there is some people who sometimes combines anime with a body either of basic interpretation or inanimate objects. This one for example literally takes the head of an anime girl and construct's it's body with what I presume to be umbrellas and probably even an egg. It's hard to explain but it will leave you questioning rather than discarding.
William Utermolhen is another really good example of an abstract artist with plenty of detail and realism. Unfortunately he was diagnosed with Alzheimer's in 1994 and lived 13 years suffering from this disease before he died of pneumonia.