Pixelated Versions Of Your Favorite Paintings Create New Way To Appreciate Art

Adam Lister paints recreations of iconic images. This includes famous paintings, film stills, and posters, as well as portraits of recognizable figures from beloved movies and TV shows. Recreations are nothing new, but the spin Lister puts on his pieces is quite different.

These paintings are watercolors, and few of them measure more than 10 inches. Each are created by hand, but they might not seem that way at first. The paintings are carefully constructed out of meticulously measured rectangles of flat color, similar to a pixelated image on a computer screen. The difference is that Lister’s work features rectangles and squares of differing shapes and sizes to create the composition, rather than using a uniform shape.

Lister’s work takes art pieces people can recognize and abstracts them, reducing them to their simplest forms. While the details are lost, the basic form (the main visual cue that allows us to identify the images) remains. Thus, the paintings, despite looking like a collection of rectangles, remain significant and familiar to us. The variations of color that would normally be found in the original images are averaged into a single hue. Take a step back from the pieces, or let your eyes go unfocused, and they’ll look the same as the pieces that inspired them.

Many of Lister’s paintings are recreations of classics.


The Scream


La Grande Odalisque


The Starry Night


Sunflowers


A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of Grande Jatte


The Son of Man


Les Demoiselles d’Avignon

Picasso’s original already featured the human form as a series of geometric shapes, so Lister’s version pushes it even further into abstraction.


Nighthawks


The Kiss


The Arnolfini Wedding


Little Dancer of Fourteen Years

Besides doing recreations of work, Lister also sometimes creates images of art in a real space. In this case, this is a picture of Degas’ sculpture inside New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art.


Lister also focuses on pop culture icons.


The Grady Twins


Mister Rogers


Bob Ross


Sulu


Willy Wonka


The Simpsons


Yoda


Some of his pieces were also 3D printed!


American Gothic


Nighthawks


Ron Burgundy


Aside from pushing the limits of what is recognizable, Lister’s work also blends the traditional artmaking method (in this case, painting) with the precise measurements and almost mathematical color averages we associate with digital art. He also reduced the human form into its most basic forms. Art has long explored and celebrated the human form, and here, Lister presents us with a stripped-down version of it. He explores the boundary between representational and abstract art. He also asks us to ponder how we recognize things, and how much information we really need to identify and translate something.

You can check out more of Lister’s work on his website, as well as on Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr, and Instagram.

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