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paint strokes

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Revisiting the memorable, dimensional painting work from artist and designer Pawel Nolbert.

His trademark aesthetic has some much movement and vibrancy, that we never tire of revisiting it.

See more of his work on his website, showing that he’s worked with many big brands, creating exciting, colorful moments.

Images © Copyright Pawel Nolbert.

Pawel Nolbert’s dimensional paint strokes are now his trademark, yet they still seem so fresh and new.

Instead of entire paintings, how about exploring a singular stroke of paint? Iranian artist Golsa Golchini has a fascinating take on an age-old medium. Placing miniature figures into 3D paint strokes, we see snorkelers, divers, and skiers in a whole different way. Really cool use of something as simple as a paint stroke.  Via Colossal:

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Using a thick daub, paint stroke style, self-taught artist Joseph Lee has carved out a unique look all his own. After leaving his sushi restaurant job, Lee decided to pursue a career in painting. The style he adapted explores the ‘parallel between external reality and internal process’.

We love the way his faces are obscured, yet retain a physicality and depth. The colors also add to the way the faces showcase a range of emotions, no matter how veiled by abstraction they are. Fascinating work, via Bored Panda:

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Joseph Lee is a self-taught artist who studies faces and the emotions that inhabit them.  Lee focuses on the parallel between external reality and internal process by manipulating everyday faces and objects through segmented brush strokes, color choice, and volume, converging them into a complete and balanced whole.

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Artist and designer Pawel Nolbert has become known for his striking and memorable paint stroke motif, bringing a depth and physicality to what is normally a two dimensional art medium. He’s done work for major brands all over the world, bringing paint strokes alive.

We love the vibrancy of the paint contrasted with silhouetted hands. Really striking work, via Behance:

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This brilliant yet somber series by David Ambarzumjan shows various landscapes that are radically altered by large paint strokes, in which we see both the past and the present revealed. It’s a clever concept, executed really solidly, giving us a window to a different time. In the first, we see a virgin green landscape, radically altered in the paint stroke, revealing Manhattan. The series is called Landscapes in Time. Via My Modern Met:

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