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Since the internet was made accessible to everyone, online galleries and buyers markets have gained immense popularity. Online art sales and buying is now the best way to collect: art buyers and sellers can purchase contemporary art directly from around the globe, you can also ask us to negociate for you to buy art online from any major artist or seller https://morlamfestival.com/. ArtMajeur was created in the year 2000 and has been a pioneer on the online art market, making it possible for buyers to safely purchases art from any artist in the world.
Of course ArtMajeur is mostly an art shop, as artists need to showcase and sell their art, but apart from the sale, we do love all arts, and certainly hope the platform we created reflects just that. Our art marketplace is not limited to view artworks and exclusive collections. We want it to be a place where art culture lives: the art shop is bound to a cultural space where one can also browse art fairs, explore hist favourite artist exhibit, learn about the latest art news and events and exhibitions. For those who enjoy going to the museum, contemporary art galleries, or even learn about arts at the library, our art blog provides useful tips to collect and buy modern art, gives you a better understanding artistic movements with portraits of famous artists and iconic works. Also with a glimpse of art history, we talk about both ancient famous arts and the most important works of the century. ArtMajeur is not only an art shop but also a vibrant art community where creative people who create, make and fabric the arts, including art major students (art schools, university and college student) can talk about the sale of artworks in their art shop. They can meet art lovers, art critics and people from the art market to talk about culture, enquire about a major exhibition and exchange about arts.
While traditional art galleries are limited by their physical space, there are no such limitation in a virtual gallery where space is "virtually" unlimited, and so it the number of pieces you can browse! Our art marketplace has over 1 million original pieces available for you to explore and choose from: you are assured to find works that fits you home, may it be a minimalist portrait, a colorful abstract painting or a large sculpture. Another advantage is that online platforms are always open! Unlike traditional galleries receiving the public within specific business hours, ArtMajeur is open 24/7 so you are welcome to come in and explore arts at any time during the day or night.
Retro graphic
The 60s is known as the modern decade that experimented with bright colors, LSD-inspired psychedelia, and fluid patterns. This time is seen as a turning point for graphic design. Visual communication took a very different approach from the earthy tones that dominated the 50s, transitioning to vivid neons. Here are the 1960s trends that are making a comeback.
If you want to recreate this image, then Picsart is the perfect platform for you. Open the app then pick an image either from your gallery or from the library of free images. Use the Cutout tool to quickly remove the background from your image, then use the Fit tool to add a newspaper background. Combine all this with stickers and a vintage filter of your choice and you’re all set.
To achieve this retro aesthetic you need some form of source material, such as old American comics or advertising art. And although a bit difficult to properly pull off, you can even go as far as using your own selfies for this.
Thanks to Andy Warhol and Roy Lichtenstein, pop art is back in 2024. This style uniquely emphasizes clichéd symbols of popular culture with modern elements like circles, pops of color, irony, and vision. It was regularly seen in fashion magazines and comic books to fine art.
What’s more vintage than newspaper clippings and collages? If you want to stand out on social media platforms, you should try this amazing retro design idea. You can use a very modern photo and simply combine it with design elements from the past to achieve an authentic retro aesthetic.
The term “optical art” was coined by Time magazine in 1964 to describe a form of abstract art that created flowing illusions using positive and negative space. This then rapidly became an ongoing trend to utilize kaleidoscopic patterns trend in every design idea.

Empire of the Sun artwork
Artists: Jules Andrieu, Pierre Antony-Thouret, Nobuyoshi Araki, George Barnard, Adam Broomberg and Oliver Chanarin, Luc Delahaye, Ken Domon, Roger Fenton, Ernst Friedrich, Jim Goldberg, Toshio Fukada, Kenji Ishiguro, Kikuji Kawada, An-My Lê, Jerzy Lewczyński, Emeric Lhuisset, Agata Madejska, Diana Matar, Eiichi Matsumoto, Chloe Dewe Mathews, Don McCullin, Susan Meiselas, Kenzo Nakajima, Simon Norfolk, João Penalva, Richard Peter, Walid Raad, Jo Ratcliffe, Sophie Ristelhueber, Julian Rosefeldt, Hrair Sarkissian, Michael Schmidt, Ursula Schulz-Dornburg, Indre Šerpytyte, Stephen Shore, Harry Shunk and János Kender, Taryn Simon, Shomei Tomatsu, Hiromi Tsuchida, Marc Vaux, Paul Virilio, Nick Waplington, Jane and Louise Wilson, and Sasaki Yuichiro.
This is an original, rolled, one-sheet movie poster from 1987 for Empire of the Sun starring Christian Bale, John Malkovich, Miranda Richardson and Joe Pantoliano. Steven Spielberg directed the film based on the novel by J.G. Ballard. John Alvin is the artist for the poster.
“The original idea for the Tate Modern exhibition Conflict, Time, Photography came from a coincidence between two books that have captivated and inspired me for many years: Kurt Vonnegut‘s classic 1969 novel Slaughterhouse-Five and the Japanese photographer Kikuji Kawada’s 1965 photobook The Map. Both look back to hugely significant and controversial incidents from the Second World War from similar distances.
“The idea of photographing absence became really important,” says Baker. “War is about destruction, removing things, disappearance. A really interesting photographic language about disappearance in conflict emerged and it is extremely powerful. How does one record something that is gone?””
Shomei Tomatsu (Japanese, 1930-2012) Atomic Bomb Damage – Wristwatch Stopped at 11.02, August 9, 1945, Nagasaki 1961 Gelatin silver print on paper 253 x 251mm Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography, Tokyo
