Stunning 3D Street Art Designs
Street art design recorded since early Street painting has been recorded throughout Europe since the 16th century. Street painters in Italy e called madonnari (pronounced: mah-doan-are-ee with madonnaro being the singular form) because they often created pictures representing the Madonna.In 1972 the first International Street Painting Competition was held in Grazie di Curtatone, Italy. This recognition caused a whole new generation of street painters to emerge.
Julian Beever is an English chalk artist who has been creating trompe-l’œil chalk drawings on pavement surfaces since the mid-1990s. His works are created using a projection called anamorphosis, and create the illusion of three dimensions when viewed from the correct angle.
Besides this pavement art, Beever also paints murals with acrylic paints and replicas of the works of masters and oil paintings, and creates collages. He works as a freelance performance artist and creates murals for companies. He has worked in the UK, Belgium, France, The Netherlands, Germany, Austria, Denmark, Spain, the U.S., Australia, Brazil and Argentina.
Enjoy our 20 Stunning 3D Street Art Designs
Edgar Mueller was born in 1968 and grew up in Germany. He entered a street art competition at the age of 16. At age 19 he won said competition with a copy of the famous “Jesus at Emmaus” by Caravaggio. Since 1998 Mueller has held the title of master street painter, a prestigious award given to him by the world’s largest street painting festival, The Grazie Festival held in the small town of Grazie, Italy.
Kurt Wenner was using a born in Ann Arbor in Michigan, usa. He attended both Rhode Island School of Design and Art Center College of Design. He was employed by NASA as an advanced scientific space illustrator, creating conceptual paintings of future space projects and extra-terrestrial landscapes according to the latest scientific information provided by the Voyager spacecraft. He is an artist best known for his street painting and chalk muralsprojection called anamorphosis. These 3D chalk drawings on pavement have been featured in many newspapers and on several television shows. In anamorphic art, paintings are meant to “deceive the eye”. A painting may look ordinary from one angle, but view it with a curved lens and it becomes 3-dimensional.
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