The post Architect Paints Beautiful Cityscapes Using Watercolors appeared first on MobiSpirit.
]]>Growing up in a family of architects, Wrońska was always fascinated with buildings, monuments, and urban settings. This passion prompted her to pursue a degree in architecture at Warsaw University of Technology but also greatly influenced her work as an artist. She adopted cityscapes as the dominating theme in her works while choosing watercolor as a medium in order to establish her own distinct style.
This combination made Wrońska’s works quite captivating. Even when she’s painting familiar settings like the Chicago skyline, towers of Rome, and New York’s Times Square, the scenes look new and exciting due to the effect of watercolors.
One of the things that also set her works apart is an unusual color pallet. Her goal isn’t to match the reality but to devise a color scheme that fits the particular city the best, in her opinion. This might relate to the history of the city, its climate, the artist’s mood at the moment, and much more.
Continue scrolling to check out more of Wrońska’s beautiful architectural drawings below.
The post Architect Paints Beautiful Cityscapes Using Watercolors appeared first on MobiSpirit.
]]>The post Emmanuelle Moureaux Understands Space Through Colors appeared first on MobiSpirit.
]]>“It was the flow of staggering colors pervading the street that built a complex depth and density, creating three-dimensional layers in the city of Tokyo,” she writes on her website. “I felt a lot of emotions seeing all these colors, and in that very moment, I decided to move to this city.”
Now based n Tokyo, she handles color as a medium to compose space rather than a finishing touch applied on surfaces. She named this concept “shikiri” – a made-up word that literally means “to divide space using colors.” Her wish? To evoke emotion through colors, with her creations ranging from art and design to architecture.
“I want to give emotion through colors,” she writes, “whether it is architecture or an art piece. Through my creation, I want people to see colors, touch colors, and feel colors with their senses. The overflowing effects of colors in space will show that colors can give more than a space, but a space with additional layers of human emotion.”
Her exploration of color also ranges in scale, from a small art piece to dramatic architecture. Follow her colorful journey in the gallery below.
The post Emmanuelle Moureaux Understands Space Through Colors appeared first on MobiSpirit.
]]>The post Architect Paints Beautiful Cityscapes Using Watercolors appeared first on MobiSpirit.
]]>Growing up in a family of architects, Wrońska was always fascinated with buildings, monuments, and urban settings. This passion prompted her to pursue a degree in architecture at Warsaw University of Technology but also greatly influenced her work as an artist. She adopted cityscapes as the dominating theme in her works while choosing watercolor as a medium in order to establish her own distinct style.
This combination made Wrońska’s works quite captivating. Even when she’s painting familiar settings like the Chicago skyline, towers of Rome, and New York’s Times Square, the scenes look new and exciting due to the effect of watercolors.
One of the things that also set her works apart is an unusual color pallet. Her goal isn’t to match the reality but to devise a color scheme that fits the particular city the best, in her opinion. This might relate to the history of the city, its climate, the artist’s mood at the moment, and much more.
Continue scrolling to check out more of Wrońska’s beautiful architectural drawings below.
The post Architect Paints Beautiful Cityscapes Using Watercolors appeared first on MobiSpirit.
]]>The post Emmanuelle Moureaux Understands Space Through Colors appeared first on MobiSpirit.
]]>“It was the flow of staggering colors pervading the street that built a complex depth and density, creating three-dimensional layers in the city of Tokyo,” she writes on her website. “I felt a lot of emotions seeing all these colors, and in that very moment, I decided to move to this city.”
Now based n Tokyo, she handles color as a medium to compose space rather than a finishing touch applied on surfaces. She named this concept “shikiri” – a made-up word that literally means “to divide space using colors.” Her wish? To evoke emotion through colors, with her creations ranging from art and design to architecture.
“I want to give emotion through colors,” she writes, “whether it is architecture or an art piece. Through my creation, I want people to see colors, touch colors, and feel colors with their senses. The overflowing effects of colors in space will show that colors can give more than a space, but a space with additional layers of human emotion.”
Her exploration of color also ranges in scale, from a small art piece to dramatic architecture. Follow her colorful journey in the gallery below.
The post Emmanuelle Moureaux Understands Space Through Colors appeared first on MobiSpirit.
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