The post Let There Be Light (and Darkness): Scott Tulay’s Dynamic Drawings appeared first on 5dwallpaper.com.
]]>Which makes sense judging by Tulay’s extensive background in architecture. Having first received training in drawing at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, Tulay would later graduate from M.I.T. with a Master’s of Architecture degree.
But his interest in art brought him back to the drawing table. By referencing architecture and nature, Tulay engages the viewer by layering dimensional space. The drawings made of ink, charcoal, and watercolor tend to stick to a black, white, and gray palette, which serves to highlight his clever play with shadows and light.
“Whether inspired by built form or natural context, my art is constructed by an armature of light,” he writes on his website. “Light, or what looks like atmosphere or fog, is engaged in either defining space or dematerializing the landscape or architectural elements depicted.”
According to Tulay, this treatment of light, combined with an unclear relationship of the viewer’s place in relation to the ground plane, creates a spatial disconnect with an ambiguity of depth and motion. “In other words,” he explains, “in some drawings the viewer appears to be floating and is looking both up and down at the same time.”
It may be a disorienting feeling, but certainly one you’d want to explore!
The post Let There Be Light (and Darkness): Scott Tulay’s Dynamic Drawings appeared first on 5dwallpaper.com.
]]>The post Architect Re-Imagines Animals As Architectural House Plans appeared first on 5dwallpaper.com.
]]>He follows his imagination within a space to give it a surreal shape. Through his conceptual planivolumetric zoo, Babina explores the connection between architecture and nature.
Babina has a unique architecture-inspired style and subtle sense of humor that helps tell the story behind each illustration. The artist admits that he tries to rediscover the world through the eyes of a child as they “are able to have a vision of things totally uninhibited and without the conditioning of the experience”.
He uses his creativity to merge architecture with unplanned everyday life encounters. He has previously imagined mental illnesses as chillingly abstract house designs and illustrated houses for famous directors based on their distinctive style, among other fascinating projects.
Check out some of his awesome work.
The post Architect Re-Imagines Animals As Architectural House Plans appeared first on 5dwallpaper.com.
]]>The post Architect Sketches the World Around Him from His Point of View appeared first on 5dwallpaper.com.
]]>Morales paints things that inspire him at the moment, and that’s everything from streets and buildings to people and animals. He shows great talent in drawing all types of scenes with a unique, effortless vibe.
Follow him on Instagram to see more of his work. Below are some of our favorite works by David Morales.
The post Architect Sketches the World Around Him from His Point of View appeared first on 5dwallpaper.com.
]]>The post Let There Be Light (and Darkness): Scott Tulay’s Dynamic Drawings appeared first on 5dwallpaper.com.
]]>Which makes sense judging by Tulay’s extensive background in architecture. Having first received training in drawing at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, Tulay would later graduate from M.I.T. with a Master’s of Architecture degree.
But his interest in art brought him back to the drawing table. By referencing architecture and nature, Tulay engages the viewer by layering dimensional space. The drawings made of ink, charcoal, and watercolor tend to stick to a black, white, and gray palette, which serves to highlight his clever play with shadows and light.
“Whether inspired by built form or natural context, my art is constructed by an armature of light,” he writes on his website. “Light, or what looks like atmosphere or fog, is engaged in either defining space or dematerializing the landscape or architectural elements depicted.”
According to Tulay, this treatment of light, combined with an unclear relationship of the viewer’s place in relation to the ground plane, creates a spatial disconnect with an ambiguity of depth and motion. “In other words,” he explains, “in some drawings the viewer appears to be floating and is looking both up and down at the same time.”
It may be a disorienting feeling, but certainly one you’d want to explore!
The post Let There Be Light (and Darkness): Scott Tulay’s Dynamic Drawings appeared first on 5dwallpaper.com.
]]>The post Architect Re-Imagines Animals As Architectural House Plans appeared first on 5dwallpaper.com.
]]>He follows his imagination within a space to give it a surreal shape. Through his conceptual planivolumetric zoo, Babina explores the connection between architecture and nature.
Babina has a unique architecture-inspired style and subtle sense of humor that helps tell the story behind each illustration. The artist admits that he tries to rediscover the world through the eyes of a child as they “are able to have a vision of things totally uninhibited and without the conditioning of the experience”.
He uses his creativity to merge architecture with unplanned everyday life encounters. He has previously imagined mental illnesses as chillingly abstract house designs and illustrated houses for famous directors based on their distinctive style, among other fascinating projects.
Check out some of his awesome work.
The post Architect Re-Imagines Animals As Architectural House Plans appeared first on 5dwallpaper.com.
]]>The post Architect Sketches the World Around Him from His Point of View appeared first on 5dwallpaper.com.
]]>Morales paints things that inspire him at the moment, and that’s everything from streets and buildings to people and animals. He shows great talent in drawing all types of scenes with a unique, effortless vibe.
Follow him on Instagram to see more of his work. Below are some of our favorite works by David Morales.
The post Architect Sketches the World Around Him from His Point of View appeared first on 5dwallpaper.com.
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