







These fantastic little worlds are the creation of artist Kathleen Lolley.
Besides the folk/fairy tale aspect of the characters, woodland settings, and rustic details, what really interests me about her work is the historical color palette, and the (perhaps deliberate?) many nods to both Hieronymus Bosch in both rendering style and creature/object design, and the desaturated stacked landscapes of Pieter Bruegel the Elder.
That similarity gives an ancient, otherworldly feel to her work, that seems to tell a definite story….even though you may not know what the story is.











Check out the photography of Lauren Simonutti. On her Flickr page, she asserts that her photographs are all done without the aid of digital effects - all manipulation is done in camera, or in the darkroom. Certainly refreshing these days.



Robert and Shana ParkeHarrison create fantastic, beautiful, surreal, and impossible photo collage works.
Subject matter ranges from desolate, isolated spaces, wounds, anachronistic men in period suits attending to various tasks, and colorful butterflies gathering in natural and man-made arrays. Their works are photographic collages, seamless combinations of images that tell a story. This Wikipedia entry has a lot of great information.
While many of their works are cleaner, lighter, and more colorful, these pieces from the exhibition “The Architect’s Brother” (of which there is also a book) are dark and timeless, with pollution and open space, and labor.