Vermin Beard by Casey Weldon
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Vermin Beard by Casey Weldon
Poe Portrait by Damien Worm
via arcaneimages
White Trash Zombie by Dan Dos Santos
Artist website / deviantart
Armando Reverón (via Wikipedia)
Armando Julio Reverón (May 10, 1889– September 18, 1954) was a modernist painter of the late 19th and early 20th century in Venezuela.
His early talent helped him gain a recommendation by his professors to obtain in 1911 a scholarship to study in Europe. The same year, he travelled to Barcelona where he joined his friend, the Venezuelan painter, Rafael Monasterios at the Escuela de Artes y Oficios y Bellas Artes to study under Vicente Borrás Avella.

In his final years an acute depression crisis forced him to be taken to San Jorge hospital. When Reverón came back to the Castillete, he took refuge in a magical universe, surrounded by objects of his creation such as dolls and animals which gave origin to the last and semi-delirious expressionist stage of his work.
He would dress up the dolls and use them as models for his paintings all of whom he named, dressed, made nonfunctional objects for (a telephone, a bottle, crowns) and cared for on an individual basis, possibly a symptom of his schizophrenia and loneliness. This figurative stage was characterized by the use of chalks (creyones) and by the creation of theater plays with his dolls that perhaps helped him recover his emotional balance.

The last of his mental crises took place in 1953, the same year he was conferred the Premio Nacional de Pintura for his Gran Desnudo Acostado, and had to be hospitalized again. In spite of the situation he devoted all of his efforts in preparation for a retrospective exhibition that had been announced for the Museum of Fine Arts in Caracas. However, he died suddenly in the “San Jorge” Hospital in Caracas on September 18, 1954.

(via bluedogeyes)
by Daniela Uhlig.
Batman Charity by Hillary White
“Based on Peter Paul Rubens’ Roman Charity”
Artist website / society6 / deviantart
Van Gogh Pop by Dave MacDowell
Artist website / blog / flickr / deviantart
Rapunzel by Otto Schmidt
Anatomical Neon, 2010 Jessica Lloyd-JonesBlown glass human organs encapsulate inert gases displaying different colours under the influence of an electric current. The human anatomy is a complex, biological system in which energy plays a vital role. Brain Wave conveys neurological processing activity as a kinetic and sensory, physical phenomena through its display of moving electric plasma. Optic Nerve shows a similar effect, more akin to the blood vessels of the eye and with a front ‘lens’ magnifiying the movement and the intensity of light. Heart is a representation of the human heart illuminated by still red neon gas. Electric Lungs is a more technically intricate structure with xenon gas spreading through its passage ways, communicating our human unawareness of the trace gases we inhale in our breathable atmosphere.
via arpeggia
Art meats technology by Mads Peitersen
“Smartphones today are soo advanced and good they almost behave alive. And becomes an extension of your body.
No Phones was harmed during painting”
Artist website / deviantart / facebook