Such an interesting technique, and an enormous variety out of a seemingly--but only seemingly-- simple method. I particularly liked Ness and Heron Hour, the former has a simple, musical elegance, and the latter makes such nice use of the cutouts. But all are appealing, and I thank you for introducing me to this artist and his work.
(One FYI: in the slide approach used here, I can't view these on my laptop, as the printed matter overlays them too much. This is also the case on my laptop, though not quite as problematic. I seem to recall you may already be aware of this, and I don't know whether this is fixable, but I wanted to note it, just in case.)
I'm glad you enjoyed his work. I only recently discovered him myself and was glad to be able to share it.
As to the issue with the captions, if you click on the image you will turn off the text to see the image fully and then click again to turn them back on. Sorry for the inconvenience.
It is interesting art and certainly takes a lot of time to produce them, but they don’t really appeal to me.
Such an interesting technique, and an enormous variety out of a seemingly--but only seemingly-- simple method. I particularly liked Ness and Heron Hour, the former has a simple, musical elegance, and the latter makes such nice use of the cutouts. But all are appealing, and I thank you for introducing me to this artist and his work.
(One FYI: in the slide approach used here, I can't view these on my laptop, as the printed matter overlays them too much. This is also the case on my laptop, though not quite as problematic. I seem to recall you may already be aware of this, and I don't know whether this is fixable, but I wanted to note it, just in case.)
I'm glad you enjoyed his work. I only recently discovered him myself and was glad to be able to share it.
As to the issue with the captions, if you click on the image you will turn off the text to see the image fully and then click again to turn them back on. Sorry for the inconvenience.
Ah, why didn’t I think of that! Thank you!