Showing posts with label July 15. Show all posts
Showing posts with label July 15. Show all posts

Saturday, July 14, 2018

An Artist Creates Lifelike Animals Felted Sculptures That Fit on Your Hand

Mikaela Bartlett has a skill with needle felt. Creating lifelike animals, largely foxes and dogs, the Yorkshire artist sculpts the creatures out of natural/dyed sheep and alpaca wool, forcing their shapes around a wire armature of the creature.

The quality is indeed amazing, and her resulting sculptures could almost be mistaken for taxidermy quality. Fitting into the palm of a hand, each sculpture is eight inches long or four inches broad, making a fascinating addition to your house.

Via her Etsy shop, you can send her photos of your very own beloved pets, and she’ll make a sculptured mini version of these, down to the very last detail. However, you’ll have to be patient. Her waiting list is so long, and she is booked for two years ahead.

H/T creativeboom

The post An Artist Creates Lifelike Animals Felted Sculptures That Fit on Your Hand appeared first on FREEYORK.

Paintings of Children with Animals In Decaying Urban Landscapes by Kevin Peterson

Kevin Peterson continues to paint in-depth illustrations of young children and animals juxtaposed against dystopian urban environments. Kids, accompanied solely by polar bears, lions, and raccoons, are at the center of each painting surrounded by deserted, decaying buildings. Whereas his earlier paintings revealed the children are striding forward and researching, more lately his young subjects have been paused, seeming to be in moments of reflection or defiance.

Peterson studied fine art alongside psychology in school, and his diverse career included a graduate level in social work and a job as a corrections officer before he returned to his art practice in 2005. The artist’s interest in psychology and social dynamics helps inform the intention behind his works, which Peterson describes as dealing” with isolation, loneliness, and longing teamed with a level of optimistic hope. Problems of race and the division of wealth have arisen in my recent work. This work deals with the idea of rigid boundaries, the optimistic breakdown of these constraints, as well as questions regarding the forces that orchestrate our behavior.”

He shares his works in progress and completed paintings on Instagram.

H/T thisiscolossal

The post Paintings of Children with Animals In Decaying Urban Landscapes by Kevin Peterson appeared first on FREEYORK.