Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
In 2009, Dan Cederholm and Rich Thornett beta-launched Dribbble as an invite-only site where designers shared what they were working on: “The name Dribbble came about from the dual metaphors of bouncing ideas and leaking your work.” [3] The first "Shot" (a small screenshot of a designer's work in progress) was posted by the user "Cederholm" on July 9, 2009.
Websites with informational content on visual art, artists and art history. (Websites about individual artists or art vendors are not appropriate in this category.) Subcategories
Media art history is an interdisciplinary field of research that explores the current developments as well as the history and genealogy of new media art, digital art, and electronic art. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] On the one hand, media art histories addresses the contemporary interplay of art, technology, and science.
Drip painting is a form of art, often abstract art, in which paint is dripped or poured on to the canvas. [1] This style of action painting was experimented with in the first half of the twentieth century by such artists as Francis Picabia , André Masson and Max Ernst , who employed drip painting in his works The Bewildered Planet , and Young ...
Content from the Behance Network gets fed into a network of sites called the Served sites, which display work in specific categories such as fashion, industrial design, and typography. In September 2010, more were added, including branding, digital art and toy design. In April 2012, advertising, art, architecture and more were added as categories.
1974 in art – Death of Adolph Gottlieb, William C. Seitz, For the first time in art history, the chemogram invented by Josef H. Neumann closed the separation of the painterly background and the photographic layer in a symbiosis of painting and real photographic perspective.
The history of art focuses on objects made by humans for any number of spiritual, narrative, philosophical, symbolic, conceptual, documentary, decorative, and even functional and other purposes, but with a primary emphasis on its aesthetic visual form.
While dribbble can achieve similarly, technology wise, it's politically pretty Apple-oriented-only, on the client-side, it targets users who find anything else unusuable, and pretty much everyone who uses dribbble has something like an iMac, an iPhone, or an iPad Pro. I myself use my iPad Air with iPadOS 14.6 Stable as my only desktop computer.