Cozy bedroom designed by @stephents3d
Get Inspired, visit www.myhouseidea.com

if i look back, i am lost
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he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
AnasAbdin
Today's Document
hello vonnie

roma★
Misplaced Lens Cap

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$LAYYYTER
Sade Olutola

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Three Goblin Art
ojovivo
KIROKAZE
Sweet Seals For You, Always
Stranger Things

Discoholic 🪩

Andulka
art blog(derogatory)
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@jwnx
Cozy bedroom designed by @stephents3d
Get Inspired, visit www.myhouseidea.com
This might just be one of the best pair of loaded milky tits I've seen so far this year ..but it is only February 😍🥛🥛
[53] “8AM Surround Sound” — Freycinet brush, Drawing group (Procreate app).
The flowers are a visual metaphor — “Cinderella and Her Stepsisters” should be the subtitle of this drawing. Art can be like poetry. It can contain allusions, metaphors, symbols and rhymes — presented visually, rather than verbally. It can have rhythm not unlike that of poetry, but that rhythm, instead of being created by syllables (accented, unaccented), is created by the repetition of lines and shapes (and colors and larger forms).
The fundamental difference between poetry and art is that a poem, like a song, is unveiled over time, while an artwork is unveiled at once. To understand poetry, we have to put the whole together from parts (which are presented in a sequence); to understand art, we have to separate the whole into parts.
[52] “Megaman Chasing a Crook” — Gloaming brush, Drawing group (Procreate app). Originally, this was going to be just a figure drawing, but one fun aspect of creating art digitally is that you can go back to play with your drawings — add to them, change them, etc. The digital drawing is like a playground that you can continue to return over and over, long after you thought you were done with it.
I decided to add background, actually, in this case, foreground, to the figure to gain more experience. The buildings are generic blocks, my goal was not to make beautifully detailed, realistic architecture, but to compose the buildings in a way that they fit with the figure.
Emma Kunz (1892-1963) — Work No. 333 [pencil and oil crayon on millimetre graph paper, no date]
Pavel Nešleha (1937-2003) — Romulus and Remus [mixed media on paperboard, 1970]