X
    Categories: lifehacksforu

Creative Agency NeoMam Recreates The Interior Of Famous Paintings In Real-Life


What is fascinating about the paintings of historic interiors are they not only show us the stylistic conventions from the past but it also shows the state of mind of the artist who created them. It gives us an opportunity to discover the past giving us insight into the people’s lifestyle back in the days.

With this idea, UK-based creative agency NeoMam decided to recreate the interior shown is famous paintings into real-life rooms of the modern world. The team that collaborated to create a realistic representation of each painting included specialist researcher Charlie Ashton, managing editor Jonathan Addy, CG artist, and interior designer Andrey Barinov and art director Povilas Daknys.

Curious to see how the paintings of Vincent van Gogh’s ‘The Bedroom’, Grant Wood’s ‘The Sun Shine on the Corner’, Wassily Kandinsky’s ‘Interior (My Dining Room)’ turned out?

More info: homeadvisor.com | neomam.com | Facebook

 

ADVERTISEMENT

 

‘The Bedroom’ by Vincent Van Gogh

Image credits: The Art Institute of Chicago

ADVERTISEMENT

The painting known as ‘The Bedroom’ depicts Van Gogh’s room in the French town of Arles. The artist himself described this painting as the evocation of peace and relaxation. The bedroom features simple wooden furniture and his own artwork on the walls. The use of strong, contrasting colors and claustrophobic walls tend to evoke the rest or sleep that he experienced in his bedroom.

Image credits: Home Advisor

Image credits: Home Advisor

ADVERTISEMENT

‘Interior with restful paintings’ by Roy Lichtenstein

Image credits: Museu Coleção Berardo

ADVERTISEMENT

One of the leading figures of the Pop art movement, Roy Lichtenstein, visualizes his living room quite unrestfully, almost disputing the title of his painting ‘Interior with restful paintings’ from 1991. The painting features stripes and dots that later on became his signature. His 2D take evokes the flatness of a comic strip, therefore, it has a real Pop Art feel.

Image credits: Home Advisor

Image credits: Home Advisor

ADVERTISEMENT

‘Interior (My Dining Room)’ by Wassily Kandinsky

ADVERTISEMENT

Image credits: Wassily Kandinsky

ADVERTISEMENT

The ‘Interior (My Dining Room)’ is an oil painting from the early stages of Kandinsky’s career. In 1909 (the time when the painting was made), Kandinsky was evolving from figurative to abstract art and the painting of his dining room surely has its features. The canvas is mainly warm with tones of red, green and pink, forming a cheerful and happy atmosphere.

Image credits: Home Advisor

Image credits: Home Advisor

ADVERTISEMENT

‘Interior’ by Konstantin Korovin

ADVERTISEMENT

Image credits: WikiArt

ADVERTISEMENT

The ‘Interior’ depicts Konstantin Korovin’s kitchen from 1913. Being a leading Russian impressionist painter, Korovin visualizes bare walls and wooden floor using soft, pastel colors. He focuses on function over form and emphasizes the use and value of every element.

Image credits: Home Advisor

Image credits: Home Advisor

ADVERTISEMENT

‘The Sun Shine on the Corner’ by Grant Wood

ADVERTISEMENT

Image credits: WikiArt

ADVERTISEMENT

American painter Grant Wood is best known for his famous masterpiece ‘American Gothic’ – the painting of a standing farming couple outside their wooden lowa home. ‘The Sun Shine on the Corner’ from 1928 has the same rural melancholy and quietness feeling as ‘American Gothic’. In his painting, Grant uses only two colors: the white for flowers, walls, fittings and fixtures, and the lively green for plant leaves forming a sense of stylishness.

Image credits: Home Advisor

Image credits: Home Advisor

ADVERTISEMENT

‘Empress Alexandra Feodorovna’s Sitting Room, Cottage Palace, St. Petersburg, Russia’ by Eduard Petrovich Hau

ADVERTISEMENT

Image credits: Cooper Hewitt Collection

ADVERTISEMENT

The interior of ‘Empress Alexandra Feodorovna’s Sitting Room, Cottage Palace, St. Petersburg, Russia’ painting by Eduard Petrovich Hau is decorated in the Neo-Gothic style. In his painting, Petrovich depicts Tsarina of Russia’s sitting room which looks rather posh with a lot of details of stained-glass, a Gothic chandelier and screens. It is worth noting that this was a part of a cottage built for the Tsarina to “rest her eyes from all that gold”.

Image credits: Home Advisor

Image credits: Home Advisor

ADVERTISEMENT