Caedes

  Slice and Dice Thrice  

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Uploaded: 12/06/21 11:44 PM GMT
Slice and Dice Thrice
Views: 98
Dlds: 28
Status: active

...or more, maybe 10 times? Doesn't matter I don't think:):) Thanks for looking and commenting.

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::corngrowth
12/07/21 1:37 PM GMT
---Slice and Dice Thrice or more, maybe 10 times? Doesn't matter I don't think---

Bruce, you're right with your above assumption.
I don't know how you've created this render, but it's both a magical and fascinating one, Buddy.
4∈ [?]
If you think you can't accept something, try to change it. But if this doesn't work, don't be frustrated, but give it later another try. The one who perseveres wins! Please CLICK HERE to see my journal! Feel free to save my images or to add them to your favorites.
::tigger3
12/07/21 1:45 PM GMT
You sure did a superb on this one, some fancy decor comes to my mind.
tigs=^..^=
4∈ [?]
Nature in all her glory is my uplift on life and so is my love of photography. sandi ♪ ♫
.casechaser
12/13/21 12:14 AM GMT
Great curves and color blends, Bruce. A very exciting composition to view.
4∈ [?]
::Nikoneer
12/13/21 6:45 AM GMT
Having gone to college for fine art, and decades in a career associated with art, it is impossible to view many of the Caedes submissions without seeing them through an artistic filter. This one, Bruce, immediately triggered a switch. While I see it as a beautiful representation of crystalline sculpture, in digital form, Marcel Duchamp also came to mind (but, to be honest, after Covid it takes me a while to remember things like that name). Henri-Robert-Marcel Duchamp was a French painter, sculptor, chess player, and writer whose work is associated with Cubism, Dada, and conceptual art. Duchamp is commonly regarded, along with Pablo Picasso and Henri Matisse, as one of the three artists who helped to define the revolutionary developments in the plastic arts in the opening decades of the 20th century, responsible for significant developments in painting and sculpture. The reason your gorgeous image triggered in my brain is because I don*t think anyone could look at it beside Duchamp*s Nude Descending a Staircase, and not get at least a little thrill (do those legs look familiar or what?). My professor introduced it to us in the same session as cubism (not a favorite of mine; usually triggers a headache). The work is widely regarded as a Modernist classic and has become one of the most famous of its time. Before its first presentation in 1912 in Paris it was rejected by the Cubists as being too Futurist. Personally, it is one of my favorites of the Modernists (and not just because I*m a dirty old man, or so my wife says ;o). I doubt anyone would ever diss your work but, if anyone does, tell them it is art. Fact. You got that from an expert.

-nik
7∈ [?]
If you've ever wanted to make a difference but found it hard to believe that one person could... check out the Kiva Team Caedes discussion thread and discover that anything is possible.

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