Istvan Sàndorfi ~ Hyperrealist Figurative painter
István Sándorfi [1948-2007] also known as Étienne Sandorfi, was a naturalised French painter of Hungarian origin. He received his formal art education at École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts and at École nationale supérieure des arts décoratifs in Paris.
He mastered what art critics now term hyperrealism. But he did so with his very own blend of surreal elements. Having been introduced to oil painting at the age of 12, Sandorfi dedicated much of his life to perfecting his painting techniques in order to achieve the photoreal and at the same time pull the carpet away under the viewer by letting part of a person dissappear in thin air.
He worked at night and was reclusive. If he could choose, he saw very few people other than his family. The contact with galleries and collectors was kept to the bare minimum and enough to make ends meet. To begin with he survived on advertising illustrations and portrait commissions.
Sándorfi and his enigmatic portraits of women
By the late eighties the subject matters were now increasingly women mixed in unusual poses with parts secluded or entirely missing. Drapery and runny paint was used as illusionary cue points to his partially disappearing parts.
This never had the character of mutilation of the figures. No rather, what we’re left with is a poetic take fleeting moment of us being a human beings. The pictures are riddles. The studio, the painting medium, and various props are deliberately fused together in compositions of beauty and melancholy. Along with depicting the human, it is almost as much paintings about painting in a way.
Wonderful Apartment Designed in Colors, in Lisbon, Portugal
“As the sun colors flowers, so does art color life.” Ana Cordeiro, a real artist, designed a wonderful apartment in Lisbon, Portugal. She used pleasing combinations of colors to achieve a welcoming and cheerful interior. The ‘Julian’ Blue on White wallpaper from Thibaut was the starting point of Ana’s inspiration. Blue, the preferred colour of the apartment residents, was decided it would run throughout the rooms in different shades, with accents of green, yellow, orange and red. White cabinetry and furniture ensured that the overall effect remains modern. The bathroom’s green tile run floor to ceiling in a boldly way. Some toy zebras mounted on the white-blue wall are a delight in the child’s room. Because the entry of the apartment was quite small, Ana covered the walls in striped wallpaper and she chose a mirror for the wall at the far end of the hall, to create the illusion of a space going on forever.
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