Post by Bonobo on Jan 14, 2020 21:41:27 GMT 1
I really like his art. So colourful. Besides, I like the cities he paints: Warsaw, Gdańsk and can play a guess game about the views.
t-b.pl/
www.thisiscolossal.com/2016/02/architectural-watercolors-of-a-dreamlike-warsaw-by-tytus-brzozowski/
www.lumarte.eu/en/tytus-brzozowski/tram-w839
Architect and watercolorist Tytus Brzozowski imagines a dreamlike world where giant structures rest on towering stilts and trains seem to emerge from tunnels in the side of residential buildings. Unusual motifs like dice and teapots dot the landscape (or float through the air), and yet everything seems in its place, a credibility attributed to elements lifted directly from the architecture seen on the streets of Warsaw, Poland. Brzozowski refers to his watercolor paintings as “the city of his dreams,” and just as dreams seem to defy space and time, his paintings bring together elements of the present and past. You can see more of his work on Facebook and many of his pieces are available as prints through Lumarte. (via Colossal Submissions)
www.thefirstnews.com/article/artist-creates-incredible-watercolours-of-warsaw-as-youve-never-seen-it-before-1594
Artist creates incredible watercolours of Warsaw as you’ve never seen it before
Art & Culture
Anne Chatham April 27, 2019
Savior square. Tytus Brzozowski
In his watercolours, artist Tytus Brzozowski reimagines the Polish capital’s urban landscape – Warsaw as it was, Warsaw as it might have been, and Warsaw how it is now.
The cityscapes combine Brzozowski’s penchant for architecture and painting. After graduating from the Faculty of Architecture of the Warsaw University of Technology, he worked at award-winning Polish architectural office Jems Architects. Now, he paints.
Bursting with cheerful colour and detail, his paintings juxtapose old and new, like in Warsaw itself. Tenement houses, rooftops, trams and even skyscrapers combine to create a dreamlike panorama.
“In a city like Warsaw, surreal elements are very much fitting, as not everything is obvious here,” Brzozowski told The First News in an interview. “This surrealism is alive in our city.”
A characteristic feature of Brzozowski’s cityscapes are buildings raised above street level on stilts. This, he explains, allows him to combine features of the 19th Century city, such as densely-packed tenement houses, with elements that were often lacking: greenery, sunlight and recreational space.
Brzozowski admits that his paintings are imbued with a certain nostalgia.
“For Warsaw, this means nostalgia for the time when it was called the ‘Paris of the North’,” he said, referring to the years before the Second World War, when much of the city was destroyed. “Now we glorify it – perhaps even over-magnify it. Warsaw’s residents long for those lost opportunities.”
People are important too, peppering the streets and rooftops of Brzozowski’s paintings – “to show that the city should be alive”, as he puts it.
Each painting begins with sketches, often drawing on old photographs of the Polish capital. Then Brzozowski draws an outline in pencil, before adding pigment using watercolour.
Brzozowski recently completed a bigger project: a mural in Warsaw’s Wola district, which was unveiled this summer. Rising to 35 metres, the mural covers an entire wall of the Spark office complex, not far from the Warsaw Uprising Museum. Painted in Brzozowski’s characteristic style, it depicts historical local buildings that no exist, along with more recent ones, like the Palace of Culture and Science in the distance.
Now another mural is in the works, in Warsaw’s Praga Południe district on the eastern side of the Vistula – though Brzozowski won’t reveal exactly where. It will combine references to the centenary of Polish independence with local elements, he says.
Brzozowski’s paintings can be viewed and purchased via his website. t-b.pl/
t-b.pl/
www.thisiscolossal.com/2016/02/architectural-watercolors-of-a-dreamlike-warsaw-by-tytus-brzozowski/
www.lumarte.eu/en/tytus-brzozowski/tram-w839
Architect and watercolorist Tytus Brzozowski imagines a dreamlike world where giant structures rest on towering stilts and trains seem to emerge from tunnels in the side of residential buildings. Unusual motifs like dice and teapots dot the landscape (or float through the air), and yet everything seems in its place, a credibility attributed to elements lifted directly from the architecture seen on the streets of Warsaw, Poland. Brzozowski refers to his watercolor paintings as “the city of his dreams,” and just as dreams seem to defy space and time, his paintings bring together elements of the present and past. You can see more of his work on Facebook and many of his pieces are available as prints through Lumarte. (via Colossal Submissions)
www.thefirstnews.com/article/artist-creates-incredible-watercolours-of-warsaw-as-youve-never-seen-it-before-1594
Artist creates incredible watercolours of Warsaw as you’ve never seen it before
Art & Culture
Anne Chatham April 27, 2019
Savior square. Tytus Brzozowski
In his watercolours, artist Tytus Brzozowski reimagines the Polish capital’s urban landscape – Warsaw as it was, Warsaw as it might have been, and Warsaw how it is now.
The cityscapes combine Brzozowski’s penchant for architecture and painting. After graduating from the Faculty of Architecture of the Warsaw University of Technology, he worked at award-winning Polish architectural office Jems Architects. Now, he paints.
Bursting with cheerful colour and detail, his paintings juxtapose old and new, like in Warsaw itself. Tenement houses, rooftops, trams and even skyscrapers combine to create a dreamlike panorama.
“In a city like Warsaw, surreal elements are very much fitting, as not everything is obvious here,” Brzozowski told The First News in an interview. “This surrealism is alive in our city.”
A characteristic feature of Brzozowski’s cityscapes are buildings raised above street level on stilts. This, he explains, allows him to combine features of the 19th Century city, such as densely-packed tenement houses, with elements that were often lacking: greenery, sunlight and recreational space.
Brzozowski admits that his paintings are imbued with a certain nostalgia.
“For Warsaw, this means nostalgia for the time when it was called the ‘Paris of the North’,” he said, referring to the years before the Second World War, when much of the city was destroyed. “Now we glorify it – perhaps even over-magnify it. Warsaw’s residents long for those lost opportunities.”
People are important too, peppering the streets and rooftops of Brzozowski’s paintings – “to show that the city should be alive”, as he puts it.
Each painting begins with sketches, often drawing on old photographs of the Polish capital. Then Brzozowski draws an outline in pencil, before adding pigment using watercolour.
Brzozowski recently completed a bigger project: a mural in Warsaw’s Wola district, which was unveiled this summer. Rising to 35 metres, the mural covers an entire wall of the Spark office complex, not far from the Warsaw Uprising Museum. Painted in Brzozowski’s characteristic style, it depicts historical local buildings that no exist, along with more recent ones, like the Palace of Culture and Science in the distance.
Now another mural is in the works, in Warsaw’s Praga Południe district on the eastern side of the Vistula – though Brzozowski won’t reveal exactly where. It will combine references to the centenary of Polish independence with local elements, he says.
Brzozowski’s paintings can be viewed and purchased via his website. t-b.pl/