Webmaster Tips

Main Menu  
Articles
Domains
Resources
Shop
Tutorials
Web Hosts
Web Page Editors

Wiki

This site is hosted by

click here for more info
Host 5 domains plus a free one

Article Archives
Image Software
Podcasting
Promotion Tips
Search Engines
Traffic Analysis
Web Design
Web Hosting
Website Domains
Writing & Blogging

Bluehost Webhosting Review - you get Unlimited gigabyte hosting space, 2,500 POP email accounts, Unlimited GIGS of transfer with ssl, ftp, stats, cgi, php, MySQL, 2000/2002/2003 front page extensions free domain included, and  toll free support.

 

Web Tools Menu
Anti-Spyware
Image Software

Free Webmaster Articles
Feel free to use these articles, but remember to keep the author's information and links. Please give a link back to this site as well.

Adobe Photo
Back To Article Summaries

On Photorealism
Author: Nashville
American photorealist Audrey Flack has once said and I quote, “There is an instinct for realism, a powerful drive to reproduce oneself. The fascination of photorealistic paintings lies partly in their apparent replication of life, but these are not merely replications. These paintings are often out of life scale, varying from over life-size to under life-size, from brilliant, heightened color to pale, undertone hues."

Flack’s thoughts sum up what Photorealism is all about. Known as a painting movement of the mid-20th century which began in the late 1960s, scenes are painted in a style closely resembling photographs in Photorealism. Artists painted from photographs or depicted objects and people as close to real life as possible, including every minute detail. However, the true subject of a photorealist’s work is the way we unconsciously interpret photographs and paintings in order to create a mental image of the object represented.

The movement’s center is located in the United States. Among the most highly-regarded American photorealist painters are Flack, Richard Estes, Chuck Close, Charles Bell, and Ralph Goings. Estes and Close are the leading members of the Photorealist movement. Estes specializes in street scenes with elaborate reflections in window-glass while Close does enormous portraits of neutral faces. The Photorealism movement was also strong in Europe from the late 1960s into the 1970s, where his type of illusionism is known principally as Superrealism. The style is tight and precisionistic. Some of the renowned Russian photorealists include Andrew Abramov, Soryn Codytsa, Jack Demeraux, and Arlette Steenmans.

With the existence of Photorealism up to these days, renowned artist Bert Monroy introduces “Photorealism with Bert Monroy, volume 2” which will once again take you inside his creative mind and show you how to create ultra-realistic images using Adobe Photoshop. It showcases Monroy's personal methods for creating realistic details to enhance a digital image. From this book, you’ll learn to make fireworks, rusty text, a glazed donut, an antique photo, a speeding bullet, and a lot more. You'll also learn to master the pen tool, layers, alpha channels, and masking by watching and following along with one of the great digital artists of today.

Photorealists typically specialize in a particular subject matter. Very ordinary, as you might think but then, Photorealism will always be a part of our lives. After all, ordinary things and events around us are what make photorealism artists so great and impressive.

About the Author

This article was created for the sole purpose of propagating information that may be related to catalog printing and other industries to which it may be of interest.

For questions and comments about the Artcile you may contact the Author at info@catalogprintingexperts.com or visit http://www.catalogprintingexperts.com

...

Discuss this article on the message board

 

Latest Webmaster Posts

  [an error occurred while processing this directive]

Webmaster News

[an error occurred while processing this directive]

 

Google
 
Web webmastertips.us