Analog Artwork

View More

Digital Artist Brenna Murphy Makes Mainframes Out of Ordinary Objects

Portland-based artist Brenna Murphy mostly makes digital art but every once in a whole she goes analog. Murphy seems mostly interested in art based around CAD drawings, Photoshop and the highly-pixelated digital debris often associated with Internet art.

As an artist, Brenna Murphy clearly displays a digital world view. Occasionally this outlook is translated in way that even a Luddite could understand and appreciate. Murphy uses food, rocks, dirt, pencils, and anything else she can get her hands on to make several large repeating, textile-like patterns.
Trend Themes
1. Analog Artwork - Utilizing physical, everyday objects to create art with a digital aesthetic can disrupt traditional notions of media barriers.
2. Digital Debris - Transforming digital remnants into art, such as Brenna Murphy's pixelated formations, can disrupt artistic paradigms in the emerging field of digital art.
3. Repeating Texture - Creating repeating patterns from ordinary materials, as Brenna Murphy does, offers opportunities to disrupt traditional textile design through inventive techniques.
Industry Implications
1. Fine Arts - Exploring ways to fuse traditional artistic mediums with digital aesthetics can significantly impact the world of fine arts.
2. Textile Design - Adapting repeating, digital-like patterns to textile weaving could disrupt traditional material manipulations and the textile manufacturing industry.
3. Digital Art - The emergence of digital and internet art opens up novel opportunities for inventiveness with unconventional mediums, offering diverse avenues for future growth and disruption.

Related Ideas

Similar Ideas
VIEW FULL ARTICLE & IMAGES