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Showing posts with label 3D to 2D Inspiration Artists. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 3D to 2D Inspiration Artists. Show all posts

Sunday, September 21, 2025

Lo Siento Design Firm






We are a graphic design studio located in Barcelona, Spain, founded in 2007. Our philosophy is based on creativity, innovation and constant experimentation through handmade processes. Our multidisciplinary approach allows us to explore different fields of design, such as branding, typography, illustration, packaging or art direction, among others.

Our studio has an artisanal approach, where the designer's hand plays a vital role in the creation and production of the work. Each project is treated in a unique way, with special attention to detail and originality as well as an emphasis on manual processes. The result is designs that are intended to excite the consumer / viewer and that aim to stand out for their aesthetic and conceptual quality. 

Much more to see on website. Link below. 

https://losiento.studio/info

Tuesday, May 3, 2016

Sam Kaplan, Photographer, American

The artist uses sticks of gum. Students can be inspired by these designs when building with paper or wood. 









If you ask photographer Sam Kaplan for a stick of gum, you might not get what you expect. In his new photo series Unwrapped, the New-York based photographer experiments with the sticky substance in entirely new ways. His hyper-stylized images feature unwrapped sticks of gum used as building blocks to create unique and elaborate structures.
At first glance, you might not notice that the stacked structures are made from gum at all. But upon closer inspection, you can spot the sticks with their distinctive markings in a variety of colors—or flavors, rather—whether spearmint green, cinnamon red, or icy cool blue.
The colors and textures are enticing in their own right, but the particular arrangement of the pieces is what is most appealing. Whether it’s a monochromatic cube, an interlaced pattern, or a carefully constructed tower, Kaplan’s work combines the precariousness of a house of cards and the playfulness of a fresh pack. - Katy French visualnews.com


Jasper de Beijer, Artist, 1973, The Netherlands









You could easily assume these stark images where pen and ink drawings
or even etchings, but there’s far more going on here. You’re actually looking at photographs.

Amsterdam-based artist Jasper de Beijer builds intricate 3D models, then photographs them to create images which do look strikingly like illustrations. His series is called “Mr. Knight’s World Band Receiver,” a title derived from Christopher Thomas Knight, a man known as the “North Pond Hermit” who lived for 27 years in the Maine woods with no human contact except his radio.
De Beijer’s works explore how Knight might have imagined world events with only his limited connection to anything outside the woods he called home. Creating depictions of events like the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, the siege on Waco, Hurricane Katrina or the Unabomber, De Beijer avoided all visual input, using only text-based reports to create each scene. Each image is cryptically titled with only the date as a clue to its subject. - Benjamin Starr visualnews.com

Monday, April 25, 2016

Wednesday, October 28, 2015

Studio Fludd

Our campaign for Teatro Fondamenta Nuove.
We imagined and put together a mutant-combo-geek molecule to represent the multiform nature of this space for contemporary arts in Venice. Our 2012-13 season here.












Sarah Illenberger, Artist, Berlin
























Sarah Illenberger is a multi-disciplinary artist based in Berlin working at the intersection of art, graphic design, and photography. With a focus on analog craftwork using everyday items, Sarah is renowned for creating vivid, witty images that open up new perspectives on seemingly familiar subjects. Her ability to transform ordinary materials into complex and unexpected visual experiences has been utilized to develop concepts for clients from the fields of culture and business in several countries. In her aim to explore the fertile overlap between art and design, she’s collaborated with numerous photographers and artists, and filled exhibition spaces with self-initiated projects in Paris, Tokyo, and Berlin. 


Thursday, October 30, 2014

Charlotte Estelle Littlehales, Artist











  • MINISTRY OF SOUND 'SATURDAY SESSIONS'
  • Here is my entry for the Ministry of Sound D&AD Student Awards brief. A set of three, A2 typographic posters designed to promote Ministry of Sounds iconic London event 'Saturday Sessions' over a three month period. The posters represent the energy and sound waves that are present within the club atmosphere.

    The collection has been designed so that ultra violet can be used to make parts of the poster such as the lines structures and the DJ line-up more vibrant. This could be situated around the club venue and lit up at night, around the time of the Saturday Sessions event.

    Images and text from Charlotte's Behance page. Link here.

Saturday, September 6, 2014

No Source





Please contact lmongiovi@flagler.edu if you have a source for the artworks above. 

Saturday, May 24, 2014

Lucia Koch, Artist









Transforming ordinary materials into an ambitious series of photographs, Brasilian artist Lucia Koch re-imagines the inside of paper bags and cardboard boxes as larger-than-life prints blown up to architectural scale. At first glance, her photographs appears to be sun-filled minimalist spaces, but a closer look reveals that they are in fact the interiors of boxes and paper bags simply cut to create skylights and windows connecting the outside with the inside. - source link here.

Luke Evans, Artist


A series of miniature landscapes on his kitchen table using common household materials such as flour, salt, water and rocks.









For his latest project titled "Forge", British artist Luke Evans (previously) created a series of miniature landscapes on his kitchen table using common household materials such as flour, salt, water and rocks. The idea for the series came about after Evans accidentally knocked some flour onto a table while baking some bread in the kitchen. He was struck by how much it resembled a strange martian landscape, and quickly took photos of the scene on his mobile phone. "For me, Forge was an exercise in frugality. As a broke student, I limited myself to materials I could find around the house" Evans told Creative Review, "Mainly, the project uses forced perspective and tilt-shift; in that sense, I see Forge as primarily a sculpture project that's documented in a way to bring them to life.

Thursday, May 8, 2014