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I See More And More That My Work Goes Infinitely Better When I Am Properly Fed, And The Paints Are There, And The Studio And All That. But Have I Set My Heart On My Work Being A Success? A Thousand Times No. I Wish I Could Manage To Make You Really Unders
For you information - If you own a website that related to exhibit and sell art you are welcome to participate in our website. Contact us to be participate in the project and join our partner list: Art Wiki, Art Online Portal, Art Register Central, etc.
exhibit and sell art
Website about Selling Artwork - online portal of Art gallery worldwide. Other useful information: A blog about drawing, painting, illustration, comics, webcomics, cartoons, concept art and other visual arts." / Artist Account - If you are an artist (or its agent) who wants to exhibit and/or sell your artwork. You will be able to exhibit and sell artwork of only one artist. You'll have your own home page presenting you, your artwork and more
Gallery Account - If you are a gallery with exhibitions and many artists. You will have full size website under your own name, including your own logo, news, articles, exhibitions, artists, online catalog and more
Sell art online - In order to sell art online a gallery needs to have a high ranked websites. The traffic is critical issue and could be handle only by professionals.
Sell my art online - In case 'to sell my art online by myself' gallery or artist must consider both the development and support of its own website. Traffic, security, new technology.
Lines And Colors :: A Blog About Drawing, Painting, Illustration, Comics, Concept Art And Other Visual Arts - lines and colors :: a blog about drawing, painting, illustration, comics, concept art and other visual arts @import url( http://www.linesandcolors.com/wp-content/themes/Aesthetic/style.css ); For years Fred Gmbino’s refined, confidently rendered and highly accomplished paintings have been gracing the covers of science fiction and fantasy books, as well as serving the needs of clients like National Geographic, Scientific American, Der Speigel , Lego, Mattel and The US Postal Service. Over that time his approach has changed, from oil to acrylic to airbrush, and then, in the late 90’s, Gambino started to work with GCI imagery and combine it with his more traditional methods, leading to a fusion of the two that gave him more freedom to experiment and allowed a more dramatic approach to perspective and composition. In 2001 he began working with DNA Productions as a concept artist and matte painter on the Oscar nominated Jimmy Neutron Boy Genius , followed up by work on the visual development of the TV series Project X ; and from 2003 to 2006, he created production art and matte paintings for the feature film The Ant Bully (image above). Since then he has worked on The Star Beast and Life in a Pickle and is currently Art Director on Escape from Planet Earth from Rainmaker Entertainment; and he continues to find time to create illustrations. A collection of his work was published as Ground Zero from Paper Tiger. His latest book is Life-Size Dragons ; and he is also one of the featured artists in Fantasy Art Masters , which includes details of his working methods. Posted in: Illustration , Concept & Production Art , Sc-fi and Fantasy | Comments » As fond as I am of the French Impressionists, I’m drawn even more to painters at the edges of their circle; painters who were influenced by their approach, like the so-called “American Impressionists”, or predecessors, like Gustav Courbet or Camille Corot and other members of the Barbizon School, who presaged and influenced the Impressionists in their break from the academic traditions. A little know counterpart to the French artists of the Barbizon school was a group of Italian painters in Florence and surrounding Tuscany called the Macchiaioli (pronounced mah-key-ay-OH-li) who were active around the same time. A critic at my house sees some paintings. Greatly perturbed, he asks for my drawings. My drawings! Never! They are my letters, my secrets. - Paul Gauguin The mind is excited by what painters refer to as 'broken color', the juxtaposition of two or more colors in a single passage. - Eric Wiegardt Monday, November 5, 2007 Fred Gambino Posted by Charley Parker at 8:28 am Bookmark on del.icio.us Link: www.fredgambino.co.uk Unofficial gallery on ImageNETion (ad warning) Profile on ImagineFX Review of Ground Zero on infinity plus Artcyclopedia Sunday, November 4, 2007 The Macchiaioli Posted by Charley Parker at 12:49 pm Bookmark on del.icio.us
 
 
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