Lynn Palewicz

I discovered Lynn Palewicz’s skin drawings via Beautiful/Decay last week. A-maz-ing. You have to look twice.

I discovered Lynn Palewicz’s skin drawings via Beautiful/Decay last week. A-maz-ing. You have to look twice.

Wendy from Peter Pan
Lissy Laricchia’s Flickr set, Get Back in Your Book is “A collection of characters who strive to stay in the real world.” And it’s awesome. Like uber-awesome.

This new instant film from the Impossible Project is optimized for use in traditional Polaroid 600 cameras. The First Flush Film is an experimental material that produces startling differences due to light conditions and temperature. Silver shade is shown.

Annie Kim is a student at Otis College of Art and Design and she sent me a link to her Society6 profile, where she has lots of different works from illustration to this oddly appealing hair photograph.

Roz Hermant is a photo artist living and working in Toronto, and I’m loving her current series “Recognition.” Her artist statement below explains the meaning behind most of her work:
“Emotional memories are not always immediately recognizable as having a concrete birthplace. This concept was explored by photographing through an unfocused lens. Rather than dictating what is to be the perceived truth, blurred images create a doorway that allows the viewer to follow a personal narrative into each photograph.”
Fascinating!

German photographer Oliver Schwarzwald takes food, plants, and every day objects and creates what look like still life paintings or a bizarre collection of items frozen in time.
FeatBA is an image and sound agency connecting top professional artists from Argentina to the global marketplace. Their artists are “point B”, their clients are “point A” and they consider themselves to be “the line.” They harness distilled talent that has emerged out of the beautiful chaos unique to Buenos Aires.
Here are a sampling of some of their artists:


We’ve featured him before, but Jason Demarte’s newest Plastica series is simply incredible. Definitely worth a peek!

Anthony Hill recently photographed some pieces for a new book project from Claesson Koivisto Rune. The photographs are quite beautiful with a feeling of still life mixed with movement.

I don’t know what makes dog figurines art, but Gustav Gustafsson’s photography of plastic canines certainly pushes the envelope in an odd, odd fashion.