#muralist

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By @donrimx via @RepostWhiz app: Terminal 23 NYC @jumpman23 Thank you to @adriankmiles @humeyrab @js

By @donrimx via @RepostWhiz app: Terminal 23 NYC @jumpman23 Thank you to @adriankmiles @humeyrab @jshryb / incredible work! #art #artistlife #jumpan #sneakers #jordan #jordanbrand #sneakerheads #muralist #streetart #supportinglatinotalent


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I Painted Nga Vương-Sandoval in This street Art Time-Lapse Session

#timelapse    #time-lapse    #artwork    #street art    #murals    #mural process    #muralist    #streetart    

This will make you wanna smile!

#artwork    #reveal    #artist    #painting    #painter    #muralist    #murals    #street art    #streetart    #denver    #colors    #drawing    #thomas evans    #thomas detour evans    #iamdetour    #detour303    #detour art    

This is why I do interactive art!

#artist    #artwork    #arting    #muralist    #interactive art    #interactive    #art technique    #colorado    #museum    #gallery    #thomas evans    #thomas detour evans    #iamdetour    #detour303    #detour art    
[ The Black Rabbit 4th Year Anniversary ]“Almiraj / The Black Rabbit V” Sketchbook &

[ The Black Rabbit 4th Year Anniversary ]

“Almiraj / The Black Rabbit V” Sketchbook & Digital / Pencil & Exterior House Paint, 2019

Almiraj is ode to spring, new growth, and color emerging from the remnants of the mean seasons. The titling comes from the horned rabbits of sea serpent island in Zakariya al-Qazwini’s The Wonders of Creation.

It’s a little earlier than intended, but I’m excited to close out my fourth year as The Black Rabbit with this piece ushering in year five and all that it has to offer on the horizon. Feel free to go see the mural for yourself if you’re in the Atlanta area off Carroll Street :)

“I fell in love with the sound of my heels on the wooden floor; I don’t want my footsteps to be silent anymore”


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Whatever floats your boat or sinks inThe A-Team @bb.hl.aa.nk.ue @_rum_tha_jogi_ #murals #art #mura

Whatever floats your boat or sinks in

The A-Team @bb.hl.aa.nk.ue
@_rum_tha_jogi_

#murals #art #mural #graffiti #urbanart #muralart #graffitiart #wallart #painting #muralpainting #muralsofinstagram #murales #muralist #contemporaryart #graff #instagraffiti #paint #urban #urbanwalls #interiordesign #wallpainting #instaart #drawing #wallmurals #graffitiwall #muralism #love #walls #graffitiworld #graffitiporn (at Shalimar Bagh, Delhi)
https://www.instagram.com/p/CSULURDll2m/?utm_medium=tumblr


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ART SCHOOL | INTERVIEW WITH BUNNIE REISS A combination of folk art, psychedelia, nature, magic, starART SCHOOL | INTERVIEW WITH BUNNIE REISS A combination of folk art, psychedelia, nature, magic, starART SCHOOL | INTERVIEW WITH BUNNIE REISS A combination of folk art, psychedelia, nature, magic, starART SCHOOL | INTERVIEW WITH BUNNIE REISS A combination of folk art, psychedelia, nature, magic, starART SCHOOL | INTERVIEW WITH BUNNIE REISS A combination of folk art, psychedelia, nature, magic, starART SCHOOL | INTERVIEW WITH BUNNIE REISS A combination of folk art, psychedelia, nature, magic, starART SCHOOL | INTERVIEW WITH BUNNIE REISS A combination of folk art, psychedelia, nature, magic, starART SCHOOL | INTERVIEW WITH BUNNIE REISS A combination of folk art, psychedelia, nature, magic, starART SCHOOL | INTERVIEW WITH BUNNIE REISS A combination of folk art, psychedelia, nature, magic, starART SCHOOL | INTERVIEW WITH BUNNIE REISS A combination of folk art, psychedelia, nature, magic, star

ART SCHOOL | INTERVIEW WITH BUNNIE REISS 

A combination of folk art, psychedelia, nature, magic, stars and animals, the artworks by LA based artist Bunnie Reiss imagines a visual language and beauty that is both narrative and full of storytelling. Bunnie’s large scale murals have been and are still popping up all over Los Angeles, so we wanted to catch up with this talented lady to find out more about how she got interested in art, the subjects and themes of her work, and what she’s got coming up the rest of the year! 

Photographs courtesy of the artist | Portrait by Tod Seelie

Could you introduce yourself to everybody? 
I’m Bunnie Reiss, muralist, installation artist and painter, living and working in Los Angeles. My work is a combination of folk art from my eastern European background, places I’ve traveled around the world, psychedelic dreams, strange imaginary worlds, nature, magic, the stars and animals. 

I’ve worked really hard to create a fairly diverse career that includes painting huge 9-story buildings, designing custom patterns for fashion icons like Isabel Marant, building large space boats that float on imaginary clouds, and writing/illustrating children’s books. It keeps me crazy busy, and I am grateful to be living such a full life. 

I own a 5 acre property in Landers, just outside of Joshua Tree, where we go for breaks from crazy city life and often gather with many of my artist friends. It’s super magical and I love it out there. I also have a very small Maine Coone kitty named Robert Plant that I treat like a dog and comes everywhere with me ;)

How did you first find yourself creating art or being interested in art?
I was a tiny rebel with a large imagination, and I kinda knew from the beginning that I didn’t fit in. There are no other artists in my family, and I was definitely the odd ball. Art was, like most misunderstood kids, the only thing that felt really good to me. I loved museums, fashion, weird books and storytelling. There seemed to be huge worlds that were out there, and I had zero fear in discovering them. Recently a family friend sent a package with tons of drawings and art I did for her when I was a child, and it’s amazing to see the same imagery I use now in many of the funny things I drew as a kid.

How would you describe your work to someone who perhaps is just coming across it for the very first time? What would you want that person to maybe take away from it?
As I mentioned above, my work is crazy combo of different things: Eastern European folk art, nature, imaginary worlds, psychedelic landscapes, animals. I have worked hard on my own visual language, my own dictionary, and continue to do so. It is an ever expanding vocabulary that I hope will keep growing until the day I die. I always want people to feel like they have a sense of place, that they can feel good, even for just a brief moment in the day (which is actually a tall order for most people). I want people’s imagination to go crazy when they see one of my murals!

What are your favorite things to paint or draw in your works?
I absolutely love painting animals. They are my top. And hands are right below that.

In your various works you often paint portraits of animals, hands, mythical creatures and the natural world. Tell us about your subjects and themes you explore in your works?
I have fairly consistent imagery, but the conversations are always different. For instance, the children’s book I wrote and illustrated a few years ago, The Cosmic Child, was actually about Plato’s Cosmology and the idea that we have a twin star in the universe. It was a book about never feeling alone. I like taking my simple imagery and combining it with complicated stories. It adds a layer of honesty and vulnerability. I am currently working on a new book about climate change, that will consist of 50 animal portraits. I decided that instead of trying to explain why climate change is such an important issue, I am using the idea of irreversible loss to describe what is might feel like to loose entire species. Visual art is so interesting because you don’t often get the back-story about why someone has made what they have made, but you can usually feel the emotion behind it. That to me is really successful, thoughtful work.

When your working developing a new painting or piece, how does it begin - take us from sketchbook, to color choices, to finished painting?
I an an avid sketchbook user, and I tend to try and do as many drawings as possible, with no specific direction. It take the pressure off of things having to be ‘something’ and keeps things really interesting. When I’m ready to work on a body, I look back over the sketchbooks to see if there is a connection to any of the drawings. Sometimes I go back to sketchbooks from 5 years ago! Sometimes entire sketchbooks become dedicated to one idea. This process allows for a very organic build of my paintings. I am almost always looking at animal references, old quilts and folk art, and reading about magic symbols and the universe. All of my paintings and murals come from my sketchbooks, and are often repainted over and over again in different ways or patterns. I like exploring how many times I can do a single image and make it look unique. My color palette is fairly consistent, and I will push on darker or lighter themes (navy blues vs pastels), depending on what the mood I’m working with is. I like painting on antique papers and things that already have energy living in them, and my colors will be based off of the color of the papers. Mural walls are treated similarly, where I’m often trying to preserve and enhance the architecture of the building. I generally try and tie in my murals with something local, like an animal that is native, a myth about the city, the state flower, etc. It’s really fun and usually feels like some kind of treasure map where I’m unearthing weird facts about the places I paint.

What’s a typical day in the studio for you like? And what are you currently working on in or out of the studio?
I try and keep regular day hours as often as possible in my studio, because if I don’t I sorta become a vampire who stays up all night and sleeps all day. I bring Robert Plant, my kitty, with me and he’s always around when I’m working. Sometimes I have to ‘clean’ all day long in order to actually get to painting. Sometimes I have to organize and move things around, or do other weird stuff, in order to get things going. It all depends on my mood. I just wrapped a bunch of paintings for my last show at KP Projects in Los Angeles, and that particular body of work will continue for a while. It’s mostly portraits of animals that are extinct or close to extinction, and ties into my book as well. I am always working on mural concepts, and there are tons of drawings and sketches on my walls that may or may not turn into murals. I also quilt sometimes and love to sew, especially when I am not feeling very inspired to paint. Murals and other public work can be fairly demanding, and quilting helps me to recoup when I have wrapped a big project and need to take a little break from painting.

How do you unplug yourself so to speak? What do you do to center or re-focus yourself if you find yourself stressed out about deadlines, art shows, and the sort?
It’s definitely challenging, especially when you live in such a wild city like Los Angeles. I am so grateful to have a property in the desert, and I will often go out there for a few days to unplug and just be in the quiet. The stars are amazing, and laying on my deck and staring up at the sky does wonders for my brain. I also love to ride my bike and will sometimes go out on night rides, which tends to help me refocus and feel like I’m back in my body. When I have time, surfing is the absolute best! Painting, especially big things, takes you out of your physical body and puts you in a deep space of meditation. You are usually on a large lift, far away from anyone, concentrating but also kinda in a trance. You don’t really feel much of anything. When you finish a large project, you feel everything come back into you, and it can be overwhelming and exhausting. It’s imparitive that you find outlets that really help you to keep going at a healthy pace without getting to rundown.

What inspires you and your art? What are things that influence what you do and what you make?
My imagination keeps me really busy, but reading Popular Science, going to libraries and book stores, walking in neighborhoods that I’m unfamiliar with, and traveling to countries where I do not speak the language keep me filled with information. I love architecture and looking at buildings, I get obsessed with walls I want to paint and will sometimes drive by to visit them. Going out in nature and just listening to the trees speaking to each other is pretty amazing.

Not only do you create painting, but you have been doing large scale mural works for quite a bit. How did that start and how different is it for you compared to works on paper or canvas? What do you like about muraling and what do you find to be the most challenging part of it?
I lived in the Bay Area for a long time (well over a decade) and space was always an issue. I loved painting big, but hated trying to store anything after I was finished. I would also get fairly lonely working in my studio for long hours, and liked interaction, but a very specific kinds. Public art and mural painting solved a lot of these problems. I could paint HUGE and leave it, walk away, never look at it again. It was a freedom that I loved, and the very special was to interact with people and neighborhoods. At the time, it was so unique and didn’t compare to anything I had ever done. This was a long time ago, and I still feel exactly the same way. There is no better way to understand a community, a city, a neighborhood, then painting outside and really being a part of it. And people are so happy and grateful that you are adding something beautiful to their neighborhood. I also love that murals are free for people to look at, and so many demographics are affected by the work. You never know who will see it and be inspired. It’s powerful and humbling at the same time, mostly because the work is incredibly physical. It sometimes feels like you are running a marathon, painting for 12-15 hours a day, dealing with weather and trouble-shooting all kinds of strange things that can happen with different kinds of walls. I love big boom lifts, dancing and singing when I am way up high with my headphones on. I have such a great time when I am painting a monster wall in the sun! I can’t stand painting in the cold ;)

What’s been one of your most rewarding projects? And what kind of challenges did you face and how did you overcome them?
This past year I was invited by the United Nations to paint a mural in Mexico City on climate change. It was amazing! I painted at the largest market in Mexico, and it was nuts. So much going on around me, so much pollution mixed with sun blasting a huge wall for more than half the day. I loved it, but it was also pretty crazy.

Since we call this feature, Art School, what tip do you have for artists and folks interested in becoming an artist?
Work hard, harder than you ever thought you could work, but also work smart. You have a very long career, and lots of time to develop your own style and really build your craft. There is no rush, and your work will be that much better if you take the time to really develop who you are as an artist. Also, ask for help. Reach out to other artists and see if they need help. Be an active community member and don’t isolate yourself too much in the studio. Have fun! Travel the world ;)

Who are some important artists, past or present, you are inspired by?
Remedios Varo
Johannes Vermeer
Louise Bourgeois
Antoni Gaudi
Shel Silverstein

So we gotta ask what are your FAVORITE Vans?
The Era.

What do you have planned for the coming up? What are you looking forward to starting?
Mural season is in full-swing, and it’s going to get really busy, with murals everything month until the end of the year. I am working super hard on my climate change book, and putting together a few projects that will tie in with that project. (and maybe a book tour). I continue to build up my desert property, and love that I can put energy into it slowly and really make it a life-long art project. I am working on expanding my mural practice into 3D objects, mosaics tiles, furniture and playgrounds. My murals are only one part of a much larger puzzle that I am putting together, and soon you will get to see entire worlds built by me. It’s an exciting time!!

FOLLOW BUNNIE | WEBSITE|INSTAGRAM 


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Waiting and begging for the rain to stop so I can finish my damn outside jobs ‍

#muralwatch #martinique #france #streetart #streetarteverywhere #mural #muralist #fortdefrance (at M

#muralwatch #martinique #france #streetart #streetarteverywhere #mural #muralist #fortdefrance (at Martinique - Fort De France)


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✨❄️If you haven’t seen this yet on @kevitadrinks Instagram, well here it is!The winter mural. ❄️✨

✨❄️If you haven’t seen this yet on @kevitadrinks Instagram, well here it is!
The winter mural. ❄️✨
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It was a blast working on this and I’m glad I can finally share it! ❤️
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#kevita #kevitalove #kevitadrinks #muralart #muralist #denverart #denverartist #wintersolstice #cabininwinter #cutewinterwonderland #illustrationartists #illustrator #illustration #advertorial #editorial #artistsoninstagram
https://www.instagram.com/p/Bs02f1ll22e/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=1syab6ddljyzj


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