EDGY ART
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01 “Inner Fears”
models Duch Dame
artists Alex Hansen and Rudy Zanzibar Campos.
(Photo: Que Jay Tee)
𝓔𝓭𝓰𝓲 𝓐𝓻𝓽 | 210 | 2 | Loading... |
02 Lower limb prostheses as a kind of work of art
𝓔𝓭𝓰𝓲 𝓐𝓻𝓽 | 282 | 3 | Loading... |
03 “The Garden of Death”
Simberg Hugo, 1896
𝓔𝓭𝓰𝓲 𝓐𝓻𝓽 | 494 | 6 | Loading... |
04 “Dead Mother and Child”
Edvard Munch, 1899
𝓔𝓭𝓰𝓲 𝓐𝓻𝓽 | 512 | 4 | Loading... |
05 “The Angel and the Mermaid”
Schwabe Carlos, 1908
𝓔𝓭𝓰𝓲 𝓐𝓻𝓽 | 555 | 6 | Loading... |
06 “The years are ticking by”
Laron G.S.
𝓔𝓭𝓰𝓲 𝓐𝓻𝓽 | 645 | 9 | Loading... |
07 “Three etudes to the figures at the foot of the crucifixion (second version)”
Francis Bacon, 1988.
In 1945, Francis Bacon silenced the world with “Three Etudes to the Figures at the Foot of the Crucifixion,” one of his most violently frightening and inexplicable works. Bacon himself considered it his first great success; he went to great lengths to collect and destroy everything he had written before it. Nearly half a century later, he returned to where he started - rewriting the Three Etudes in exquisite purple colors.
𝓔𝓭𝓰𝓲 𝓐𝓻𝓽 | 622 | 1 | Loading... |
08 “Dance (Rock and Roll)”
Salvador Dali, 1957.
𝓔𝓭𝓰𝓲 𝓐𝓻𝓽 | 604 | 9 | Loading... |
09 “Crucifixion. Hypercubic Body”
Salvador Dalí, 1954.
“The Crucifixion” is a stunning work that successfully combines elements of the “nuclear mysticism” that Dalí was into at the time with his appeal to his Catholic heritage. In this work, the artist depicts the crucifixion in the age of modern science, completing his theme begun in “Christ of St. John of the Cross.”
𝓔𝓭𝓰𝓲 𝓐𝓻𝓽 | 587 | 6 | Loading... |
10 Installations by Alejandro Almanza Pereda. Paintings and concrete
𝓔𝓭𝓰𝓲 𝓐𝓻𝓽 | 739 | 4 | Loading... |
11 Frightening installations from sculptor Matthew Levine
𝓔𝓭𝓰𝓲 𝓐𝓻𝓽 | 639 | 4 | Loading... |
12 "Satyr with his son"
Georg Jan, 1907
𝓔𝓭𝓰𝓲 𝓐𝓻𝓽 | 606 | 4 | Loading... |
13 Rocky Meng
𝓔𝓭𝓰𝓲 𝓐𝓻𝓽 | 600 | 4 | Loading... |
14 "Loneliness"
Queen Pauline, 2020
𝓔𝓭𝓰𝓲 𝓐𝓻𝓽 | 693 | 9 | Loading... |
15 "Sitting woman in a blue dress (Dora Maar)"
Pablo Picasso
𝓔𝓭𝓰𝓲 𝓐𝓻𝓽 | 678 | 9 | Loading... |
16 "Diego and Me"
Frida Kahlo, 1949.
After her marriage to the painter Diego Rivera, Kahlo experimented with a variety of influences, from Aztec mythology to medicine. At the height of her technical prowess, she utilizes the tradition of the pectoral self-portrait in Diego and Me, entering into a dialogue with Renaissance masters such as Albrecht Dürer.
𝓔𝓭𝓰𝓲 𝓐𝓻𝓽 | 831 | 7 | Loading... |
17 "The Ghost of a Wife"
Roux Georges, 1885
𝓔𝓭𝓰𝓲 𝓐𝓻𝓽 | 706 | 11 | Loading... |
18 "Future Husband Hunt"
Valentin Gubarev
𝓔𝓭𝓰𝓲 𝓐𝓻𝓽 | 778 | 7 | Loading... |
19 "The Point of the Case"
René Magritte, 1928.
The painting 'The Essence of the Case' proved to be deeply personal for René Magritte. His mother Regina suffered from depression and had made several suicide attempts. Her husband Leopold, fearing for her life, locked her in her bedroom. However, she managed to escape and her body was found in the Sambre River.
𝓔𝓭𝓰𝓲 𝓐𝓻𝓽 | 734 | 4 | Loading... |
20 "Ballerina in Death's Head"
Salvador Dalí, 1939.
"Ballerina in Death's Head" ("Ballerina in the Skull") is one of the most famous examples of the "paranoid-critical method" that the artist developed in the early 1930s. The aspect of paranoia that interested Dalí was the brain's ability to connect things that are rationally unrelated.
𝓔𝓭𝓰𝓲 𝓐𝓻𝓽 | 845 | 10 | Loading... |
21 "Red Model"
René Magritte, 1935.
𝓔𝓭𝓰𝓲 𝓐𝓻𝓽 | 823 | 8 | Loading... |
22 "Death of Casagemas"
Pablo Picasso, 1901.
The young Catalan artist Carlos Casagemas was Pablo Picasso's closest friend. It was he who became Picasso's companion on his first trip to Paris. But if for Picasso this trip was the first tiny step towards future fame, for Casagemas it was the beginning of the end.
In Paris, Carlos fell passionately in love with a young model named Germaine. These feelings were not reciprocated, Casagemas fell into a deep depression and began to talk frequently about suicide.
𝓔𝓭𝓰𝓲 𝓐𝓻𝓽 | 862 | 6 | Loading... |
23 "Weeping Woman"
Pablo Picasso, 1937
𝓔𝓭𝓰𝓲 𝓐𝓻𝓽 | 875 | 5 | Loading... |
24 "Love ponders death"
Gustave Doré
𝓔𝓭𝓰𝓲 𝓐𝓻𝓽 | 887 | 7 | Loading... |
25 "Relativity"
Mauritz Escher, 1953.
To the untrained viewer, this work may cause perplexity: at first glance at the picture, staircases that look quite ordinary catch the eye. However, if you look closely and see where they lead, it becomes clear that Maurits Escher gave the title Relativity to this work for a reason. His lithograph is a visual confirmation of the relativity of human perception and the laws of geometry and physics.
𝓔𝓭𝓰𝓲 𝓐𝓻𝓽 | 841 | 3 | Loading... |
Photo unavailableShow in Telegram
“The Garden of Death”
Simberg Hugo, 1896
𝓔𝓭𝓰𝓲 𝓐𝓻𝓽
👍 4🔥 2
Photo unavailableShow in Telegram
“Dead Mother and Child”
Edvard Munch, 1899
𝓔𝓭𝓰𝓲 𝓐𝓻𝓽
❤ 4😢 2👍 1👎 1
Photo unavailableShow in Telegram
“The Angel and the Mermaid”
Schwabe Carlos, 1908
𝓔𝓭𝓰𝓲 𝓐𝓻𝓽
❤ 5👍 3
Photo unavailableShow in Telegram
“The years are ticking by”
Laron G.S.
𝓔𝓭𝓰𝓲 𝓐𝓻𝓽
❤ 4👍 1
Photo unavailableShow in Telegram
“Three etudes to the figures at the foot of the crucifixion (second version)”
Francis Bacon, 1988.
In 1945, Francis Bacon silenced the world with “Three Etudes to the Figures at the Foot of the Crucifixion,” one of his most violently frightening and inexplicable works. Bacon himself considered it his first great success; he went to great lengths to collect and destroy everything he had written before it. Nearly half a century later, he returned to where he started - rewriting the Three Etudes in exquisite purple colors.
𝓔𝓭𝓰𝓲 𝓐𝓻𝓽
👍 2
Photo unavailableShow in Telegram
“Dance (Rock and Roll)”
Salvador Dali, 1957.
𝓔𝓭𝓰𝓲 𝓐𝓻𝓽
❤ 6👍 2
Photo unavailableShow in Telegram
“Crucifixion. Hypercubic Body”
Salvador Dalí, 1954.
“The Crucifixion” is a stunning work that successfully combines elements of the “nuclear mysticism” that Dalí was into at the time with his appeal to his Catholic heritage. In this work, the artist depicts the crucifixion in the age of modern science, completing his theme begun in “Christ of St. John of the Cross.”
𝓔𝓭𝓰𝓲 𝓐𝓻𝓽
❤ 6🔥 2👍 1