Vercmagnus
Vercmagnus is an American artist who focuses on watercolor, collage art, modern and contemporary paintings & digital art as his mediums.
Vercmagnus is a traveller and an entrepreneur who loves to explore new things in different countries. Nature and technology influence his creative imagination.
He is a professional artist who started as a watercolorist during the early 2000s. He soon painted using inks, paints and started exploring the world of digital art and new media.
His artworks vary in genre. Abstract is his main subject in different forms. Minimalism and geometric are mostly seen in his art pieces including pop art.
He has done solo exhibitions within the United States and internationally.
As a young child, he tried to explore the world of poetry but it seemed it was not enough. So he decided to put colors in his hobbies. That is when watercolor flourished as his first medium.
Discover contemporary artworks by Vercmagnus, browse recent artworks and buy online. Categories: contemporary american artists. Artistic domains: Painting, Collages. Account type: Artist , member since 2022 (Country of origin United States). Buy Vercmagnus's latest works on Artmajeur: Discover great art by contemporary artist Vercmagnus. Browse artworks, buy original art or high end prints.
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Biography
Vercmagnus is an American artist who focuses on watercolor, collage art, modern and contemporary paintings & digital art as his mediums.
Vercmagnus is a traveller and an entrepreneur who loves to explore new things in different countries. Nature and technology influence his creative imagination.
He is a professional artist who started as a watercolorist during the early 2000s. He soon painted using inks, paints and started exploring the world of digital art and new media.
His artworks vary in genre. Abstract is his main subject in different forms. Minimalism and geometric are mostly seen in his art pieces including pop art.
He has done solo exhibitions within the United States and internationally.
As a young child, he tried to explore the world of poetry but it seemed it was not enough. So he decided to put colors in his hobbies. That is when watercolor flourished as his first medium.
- Nationality: UNITED STATES
- Date of birth : unknown date
- Artistic domains: Works by professional artists,
- Groups: Professional Artist Contemporary American Artists
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Artist value certified
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Solo Expositions
Activity on Artmajeur
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All the latest news from contemporary artist Vercmagnus
Vercmagnus His Kaws And Breabrick Tribute Paintings
One of the favorite Kaw and Bearbrick vinyl toys of Vercmagnus are now painted by him as a tribute and inspiration. "I am a fan indeed. I love painting them. It's like a party" said, Vercmagnus.
VERCMAGNUS BEARBRICK INSPIRED PAINTING STANDING 4 FEET
Vercmagnus, also known as V. Estuardo, is an American artist who focuses on watercolor, acrylic paints, collages, photography & new media art as his mediums and styles. Vercmagnus is a traveler and an entrepreneur who loves to explore new things in different countries. Nature, fashion and technology influence his creative imagination. His artworks vary in genre. Abstract is his main subject in different forms including modern figurative pop art. Minimalism by collages using fabrics and other mediums and geometric characters are mostly seen in his art pieces. He has done solo exhibitions within the United States since year 2010.
What is New Media Art?
What Is New Media Art?
September 11, 2022
I am sharing the significance of new media art and its history.
What is New Media Art?
New media art pertains to all forms of contemporary art made, edited or altered, or transformed using new methods of media technology. This includes digital art, interactive art, internet art, and virtual art, as well as works of art made of 3D printings, manipulated photographs, including video games, biotechnology, robotics and computer animation and many more ways to create an artwork by using technology. (Source: queennoble.com)
The Origin Of New Media
The origins of new media art can be traced to the moving image inventions of the 19th century such as the phenakistiscope (1833), the praxinoscope (1877) and Eadweard Muybridge's zoopraxiscope (1879). From the 1900s through the 1960s, various forms of kinetic and light art, from Thomas Wilfred's 'Lumia' (1919) and 'Clavilux' light organs[4] to Jean Tinguely's self-destructing sculpture Homage to New York (1960) can be seen as progenitors of new media art.[5]
Steve Dixon in his book Digital Performance: New Technologies in Theatre, Dance and Performance Art argues that the early twentieth century avant-garde art movement Futurism was the birthplace of the merging of technology and performance art. Some early examples of performance artists who experimented with then state-of-the-art lighting, film, and projection include dancers Loïe Fuller and Valentine de Saint-Point. Cartoonist Winsor McCay performed in sync with an animated Gertie the Dinosaur on tour in 1914. By the 1920s many Cabaret acts began incorporating film projection into performances.[6]
Robert Rauschenberg's piece Broadcast (1959), composed of three interactive re-tunable radios and a painting, is considered one of the first examples of interactive art. German artist Wolf Vostell experimented with television sets in his (1958) installation TV De-collages. Vostell's work influenced Nam June Paik, who created sculptural installations featuring hundreds of television sets that displayed distorted and abstract footage.[6]
Beginning in Chicago during the 1970s, there was a surge of artists experimenting with video art and combining recent computer technology with their traditional mediums, including sculpture, photography, and graphic design. Many of the artists involved were grad students at The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, including Kate Horsfield and Lyn Blumenthal, who co-founded the Video Data Bank in 1976.[7] Another artists involved was Donna Cox, she collaborated with mathematician George Francis and computer scientist Ray Idaszak on the project Venus in Time which depicted mathematical data as 3D digital sculptures named for their similarities to paleolithic Venus statues.[8] In 1982 artist Ellen Sandor and her team called (art)n Laboratory created the medium called PHSCologram, which stands for photography, holography, sculpture, and computer graphics. Her visualization of the AIDS virus was depicted on the cover of IEEE Computer Graphics and Applications in November 1988.[7] At the University of Illinois in 1989, members of the Electronic Visualization Laboratory Carolina Cruz-Neira, Thomas DeFanti, and Daniel J. Sandin collaborated to create what is known as CAVE or Cave Automatic Virtual Environment an early virtual reality immersion using rear projection.[9]
In 1983, Roy Ascott introduced the concept of "distributed authorship" in his worldwide telematic project La Plissure du Texte[10] for Frank Popper's "Electra" at the Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris. The development of computer graphics at the end of the 1980s and real time technologies in the 1990s combined with the spreading of the Web and the Internet favored the emergence of new and various forms of interactive art by Ken Feingold, Lynn Hershman Leeson, David Rokeby, Ken Rinaldo, Perry Hoberman, Tamas Waliczky; telematic art by Roy Ascott, Paul Sermon, Michael Bielický; Internet art by Vuk Ćosić, Jodi; virtual and immersive art by Jeffrey Shaw, Maurice Benayoun, Monika Fleischmann, and large scale urban installation by Rafael Lozano-Hemmer. In Geneva, the Centre pour l'Image Contemporaine or CIC coproduced with Centre Georges Pompidou from Paris and the Museum Ludwig in Cologne the first internet video archive of new media art.[11]
Maurizio Bolognini, Sealed Computers (Nice, France, 1992–1998). This installation uses computer codes to create endless flows of random images that nobody would see. (Images are continuously generated but they are prevented from becoming a physical artwork).[12]
World Skin (1997), Maurice Benayoun's Virtual Reality Interactive Installation (Photo Safari in the Land of War)
Simultaneously advances in biotechnology have also allowed artists like Eduardo Kac to begin exploring DNA and genetics as a new art medium.[13]
Influences on new media art have been the theories developed around interaction, hypertext, databases, and networks. Important thinkers in this regard have been Vannevar Bush and Theodor Nelson, whereas comparable ideas can be found in the literary works of Jorge Luis Borges, Italo Calvino, and Julio Cortázar.
( Credit/Source: Wikipedia).