Wednesday, 18 March 2015

Digital Art

I think this has been created using Illustrator. Most like a drawing that has been scanned or a image taken and traced on paper and then scanned into the computer. Alternatively, the image could have been put in Illustrartor and image trace used.
The tools used is that the drawing was formatted with lines as paths and then the objects in these line were used to colour the art in.
This digital art is abstract because you need to look at it for some time in order to identify what it is.
I do like this artwork because it has some Art Deco look about it. Below is an example.

top artwork done by Melissa Casey/Portsmouth.
I think this has been created using Photoshop because it comprises of mainly images in a mixed arrangement.
The tools used in this artwork are a lot but i can identify brightness/contrast, hue/saturation, colour overlays, liquify, that and so much more besides.
This digital art is a photomontage because you can see loads of images but you can read them easily because you can see a mini, a London Bus, a British phone box, RAF symbol and the man in a striped suit and bowler hat.
I like this artwork because there lots of colours and images on it that can live up to whatever purpose this was designed for.

artwork done by Tim Marrs.

The first artwork is used to make a Art Deco form of a existing building, whereas the second is used to promote a product of some sort. The second has all that is British and because of that, it has a montage of things that are typically associated with British culture.

I do like the Abstract artworks because they are more imaginative than the Photomontages.
Below are artworks that are considered Abstract.
Bruce Gray
And below this is some artworks that would be considered Photomontages

Andy Warhole
Andy Warhole
David Hockney

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