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Craig Mullins - The best digital artist in the world?

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  • K Offline
    kwistenbiebel
    last edited by 8 Sept 2008, 22:48

    There are just 'artists'......and 'artists we like'.

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    • T Offline
      toxicvoxel
      last edited by 8 Sept 2008, 22:54

      I think you'll find some are 'liked' more than others.

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      • K Offline
        kwistenbiebel
        last edited by 8 Sept 2008, 23:21

        In that case, Craig Mullins won't make it.
        I don't think he will be named most when the entire population would be asked to vote.
        Hope you get my point.

        There is no way to point out the 'best artist'. There are just no common standards to base judgement on.

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        • G Offline
          gaganraj
          last edited by 9 Sept 2008, 04:25

          he's awsome. here are some more great concept / digital artists

          http://www.thomlab.com/
          http://www.dermotpower.com/
          http://www.grnr.com/
          http://www.artpad.org/
          http://www.ghull.com/news/news_main.php/
          http://www.ryanchurch.com

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          • T Offline
            toxicvoxel
            last edited by 9 Sept 2008, 06:58

            @unknownuser said:

            I don't think he will be named most when the entire population would be asked to vote.

            Come on Kwisten, that's a silly argument.
            If on the other hand, if his piers that work within the same genre were to vote, he may come pretty close:
            http://www.ballisticpublishing.com/articles/craig_mullins/

            gaganraj,
            Thanks for the links, - some of which I don't know.
            Hopefully there will be more posts highlighting artists (which we like!)
            .

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            • R Offline
              Ross Macintosh
              last edited by 9 Sept 2008, 08:58

              I note in that article about him that he uses a combination of photoshop & painter. The use of Painter really shows - so painterly! I also note that in his galleries he has some traditional media examples. The watercolours are inspirational.

              Regards, Ross

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              • P Offline
                pilou
                last edited by 9 Sept 2008, 09:35

                You will find some crazzy digital artists here πŸ˜’
                http://conceptart.org/ (maybe the best forum in the world? πŸ˜„

                Frenchy Pilou
                Is beautiful that please without concept!
                My Little site :)

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                • T Offline
                  toxicvoxel
                  last edited by 9 Sept 2008, 10:25

                  @unknownuser said:

                  (maybe the best forum in the world?

                  Pilou
                  There is no such thing as the best forum, only forums... πŸ˜„
                  .

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                  • E Offline
                    Edson
                    last edited by 9 Sept 2008, 10:47

                    i am always puzzled by statements like: the best small italian restaurant in the world, the best beer in the world, etc, and now the best digital artist in the world.

                    how so? do we know the work of ALL the artists out there?

                    perhaps mullins is the best among the ones published in english-speaking magazines, who knows, or maybe among an even more restricted circle.

                    i would leave it at: c. g. is an exceptional artist.

                    edson mahfuz, architect| porto alegre β€’ brasil
                    http://www.mahfuz.arq.br

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                    • K Offline
                      kwistenbiebel
                      last edited by 9 Sept 2008, 10:58

                      Hi Toxicvoxel,

                      I was teasing a bit off course by nitpicking on the title of the thread.
                      He's an exceptional artist for sure, and may be even the best in the world to your taste.

                      Personally, my favorite artist would be Panamarenko, but he has nothing to do with digital whatsoever.

                      Cheers,
                      Kwistenbiebel

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                      • T Offline
                        toxicvoxel
                        last edited by 9 Sept 2008, 11:53

                        Kwisten,
                        I know what you are saying. The selected topic heading was selected in the hope of sparking some debate and comparrison with other artists.
                        (You may have noticed the question mark.)

                        If we agree that not all artists are equal , then it follows that there will be a small group on either side of that spectrum that vies for the position of 'worst' and 'best' based on whatever criteria you apply. The measure of that status relies heavily on the observer's knowledge and understanding of what represents 'good' or 'bad' in order to measure it, and where this falls short we tend to judge intuitively , sometimes wrongly based on our personal frame of reference. What I considered to be 'good' in my twenties I now think of as 'mediocre'. The object has not changed but my values and perception of it has.

                        So yes, the perception of quality is based on whatever personal measure we apply. The point is that our nature dictates that we gravitate to making comparrisons and we express that response in the value that we attach to the work and skill of individual craftsmen, artists and even sportsmen. To deny that such a response exists is to deny human nature itself.

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                        • K Offline
                          kwistenbiebel
                          last edited by 9 Sept 2008, 12:07

                          I don't deny that.
                          We mean to say the same thing I believe. You expressed a personal feeling about this artist. Nothing wrong about that. In the end, experiencing art IS an emotional thing.
                          Some people make efforts to rationalize art (art critics need to make their living'), but in the end art is a matter of 'appeal', which in any case has an emotional component.

                          The US would rationalize this emotional factor to reaching 'the sublime', while the Europeans would tend to measure art to 'the power of concept'.

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                          • C Offline
                            Chris Fullmer
                            last edited by 9 Sept 2008, 21:55

                            @kwistenbiebel said:

                            The US would rationalize this emotional factor to reaching 'the sublime', while the Europeans would tend to measure art to 'the power of concept'.

                            That doesn't sound familiar to me at all.

                            But I did want to throw in that somtimes one has to know some of the background to art before they can appreciate it fully. I speak from experience.

                            Chris

                            Lately you've been tan, suspicious for the winter.
                            All my Plugins I've written

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                            • K Offline
                              kwistenbiebel
                              last edited by 9 Sept 2008, 23:25

                              I shouldn't be generalizing.
                              The idea of 'reaching the sublime' was explained to me by my brother in law who teaches esthetics on a US university. We had long discussions on how to 'rate' art and which parameters to use when classifying a work as a piece of art ..
                              He explained me the meaning of the word 'sublime' and how it related to US culture.
                              But I guess the States is a big place with lots of other view points and approaches on this.

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