Main menu:

browse entriesnext 10

previous 10

07-01-2010

BERST

By Leilani Momoisea

 

GBAK’s monstrous roller piece, 90 metres of pipeline sitting atop the ocean almost completely covered in paint, is a thing of legend – and not just in New Zealand’s graffiti circles. University students and...

07-01-2010

TWESH

Word by Jiroe

Twesh is one of many foreign style dons to have graced UK shores. He paints real well, is active and comes from a strong writing history. Totally Italian but with a certain understated humbleness that shouldn't be...

07-01-2010

KAK

Words Jiroe

Kak One is dope – ask anyone in the UK. Watch him paint and you see that age-old confidence of a writer that's out there non-stop. One of those guys that gets around and knows folks, but ducks under the big radar. He...

30-11-2009

Ben Horton

Words by Melissa Williams

Ben Horton is a skateboarder, graphic designer, skateboard company owner, family man, nature lover and artist who lives in California, USA. His creative work is innovative and inspirational, a...

Words by Sami Montague

Stephan Doitschinoff or under his nom de plume ‘Calma’ is an artist at the very top of his game. Working under both names, this Brazilian artist creates work of intense beauty and mystery....

30-11-2009

Jessica Joslin

Words by Kyle Niart

There’s a certain air of wonder and magic to inanimate objects that look like they’re alive but are not. Things so fine and precise in their detail they’re knocking on the doors of perfection, so totally...

30-11-2009

Gianluca Mattia

Words by Steed Williamson 

If high gloss, hyper-real, part-emo, part-punk-type vixens are your thing you will be more than glad to be introduced to the work of Gianluca Mattia. To describe these character illustrations is...

30-11-2009

Brandi Milne

Words by Melissa Williams

Self-taught South Californian Brandi Milne creates art that is a mixture of ‘nice and yummy’ with a sprinkling of ‘scary and kinda creepy’ thrown in. Mynameis? speaks to her about...

30-11-2009

OMENS

By Sami Montague

The name ‘Omens’ sounds a little menacing, perhaps even evil, but they are not reflected in the style of this writer. Omens’ style has a sweet and slick font-based look that is readable on rolling freights and...

30-11-2009

LIME

By Kyle Niart

 

There is so much innovative style writing currently coming out of France and Lime is another fine example. Hailing from Lyon, he is a highly creative individual, painting amazing pieces under the names of Lime...

browse entriesnext 10

previous 10

1075

21-07-2009
Belin

previous next

Belin

Words by Melissa Williams

 

Belin is a contemporary urban artist true to the nature of modern street culture. In a magical twist of history, skill and beauty, Belin blends Expressionism, Surrealism, Photorealism, graphic design and graffiti into a visual world without boundaries.

 

Belin grew up in the town of Linares in Spain. As a child he was always interested in drawing and did some art studies in high school that he found boring and uninspiring. He really got sucked into art in 1994 when he first laid eyes on a graffiti magazine: ‘I was totally impressed with what I saw and I just decided to launch to the streets and try to make what I saw in the magazine. I met with friends and we started to make tags and throw-ups. Then I realised that I could evolve and began to make pieces. From that I moved on to doing characters to give a fresh and funny feeling to my graffiti. Of course, not everyone that painted with me continued with the discipline.’

 

 

It was only seven years later, in 2001, that Belin really started to take his graffiti seriously and starting working with canvasses and mixed media, progressing on a personal and technical level. ‘When I started to see graffiti as something essential in my life, it woke up my imagination and formed a desire to overcome and I began to make better works.’

 

In graffiti, Belin (taken from his surname Belinchon) creates tweaked-out surrealist characters that seem to have popped straight out of some bizarre place in your brain onto the city walls. Slender ladies with pelican heads, chicken bodies with human heads and screaming human hands. His fine art consists for photorealistic characters. His older works consisted of elderly people in sombre landscapes and his most-recent pieces have been mostly tonal close-ups of young faces and swirls together his varied approaches with works of fluid expressionist characters. To Belin there are no borders in art; to him art is freedom and he slides through all styles, techniques and mediums to express his liberty.

 


The FULL interview with BELIN appears in issue 4 of Mynameis? magazine - click here to purchase your copy www.graphotism.com/Subscribe-Graphotism-or-MyNameIs-Magazine.74.0.html

social bookmark now:addthis.comask.comblogmarksdel.icio.usdigg.comFark.comgoogle.comhype it!Mister Wongnetvouznewsvine.comRedditscuttlestumbleupon.comTailRankTechnoratiWebnewsWinkYahooMyWeb
Stealth Isabey Letraset Mabef Stabilo Stylefile Tria Edding Fredrix Artbin Hardcore Nero Poison Aristo Montana Graphotism MyNameIs Sennelier Dr. Ph. Martin's Golden Raphael Clairfontaine Pyromaniac Krink Touch Mr. Grog Corio