ART

LORA
Original - TenStar Fund


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Robert Farkas is a contemporary illustrator known for his **elegant, dreamlike double exposure illustrations**, often blending **wildlife, nature, and human silhouettes** with soft, painterly textures. His style is reminiscent of **traditional watercolor and ink techniques** but adapted for digital art. Here’s a breakdown of his signature approach to double exposure:

### **Key Characteristics of Robert Farkas’ Double Exposure Art:**

1. **Soft, Organic Silhouettes**

- The primary subject (e.g., an animal, face, or object) is rendered as a **clean, smooth silhouette**, often in black or dark tones.

- The edges are slightly softened, avoiding harsh lines for a natural, flowing look.

2. **Watercolor-Inspired Inner Textures**

- Inside the silhouette, Farkas fills the space with **delicate, semi-transparent layers** of landscapes, skies, or abstract textures.

- His technique mimics **traditional watercolor washes**, with subtle gradients and bleeding edges.

3. **Nature & Wildlife Themes**

- Common interior scenes include:

- **Forests with dappled sunlight**

- **Mountains, oceans, or deserts**

- **Animals subtly blended into the scenery** (e.g., birds in flight, deer in a misty woodland).

4. **Limited, Earth-Toned Color Palettes**

- Favors **warm neutrals** (ochres, burnt sienna, olive greens) and **cool blues** for contrast.

- Colors are muted and harmonious, never overly saturated.

5. **Subtle Backgrounds**

- Outside the silhouette, the background is often a **minimal, textured wash** (e.g., speckled paper, light grunge, or soft gradients).

- This keeps focus on the double exposure effect.

6. **Emotional & Serene Mood**

- His work feels **timeless, poetic, and slightly nostalgic**—like a faded memory or a vintage poster.

### **How It Differs from Other Double Exposure Styles:**

- **Less "digital" and more "hand-painted"** compared to photorealistic or glitchy double exposures.

- **No hard edges or stark contrasts**—everything flows seamlessly.

- **Prioritizes atmosphere over complexity**; the scenes inside silhouettes are suggestive rather than hyper-detailed.

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"A painting in UV-reactive acrylic style, featuring vivid neon colors that glow under blacklight, including fluorescent pink, blue, orange, and yellow. High-contrast composition with dark background. Intricate psychedelic patterns, bold brush strokes, graffiti-inspired textures, and surreal or pop-art elements. Surfaces reflect semi-gloss sheen. Visual energy radiates with glowing edges and color splashes. Designed for maximum brightness under UV light."

Version Detail

Trained by Tensor
FLUX.1 Krea Dev
3500
9
A fusion art style that combines the bold, high-saturation colors and playful flatness of psychedelic pop-art (1960s counterculture posters, concert visuals, comic-inspired palettes) with the flowing, ornamental elegance of Art Nouveau (1890s–1910s decorative art, Alphonse Mucha, organic curves). It’s both loud and elegant: Psychedelic Pop-Art = bold, vibrant, surreal, pop-culture infused. Art Nouveau = ornate, flowing, organic, floral, decorative. Key Features Colors Extremely bright, bold, high-contrast palettes. Flat fills with minimal shading, but with clever color layering Often complementary colors (purple/yellow, blue/orange, pink/green). Linework Thick black outlines (comic/pop-art influence). Curvilinear, flowing shapes (Art Nouveau). Patterns woven into hair, fabric, or background. Frms & Shapes Surreal, dreamlike distortions (psychedelic). Organic curves, floral vines, cloud swirls (Art Nouveau). Balance between symmetry (like a playing card) and chaos (psychedelic bursts). Textures Minimal realism — surfaces are smooth and clean. Decorative flourishes instead of shading (spirals, floral motifs, geometric curls). Mood Feels like a visual “trip”: surreal, otherworldly, yet decorative. Has vintage retro elegance but updated with bold, pop-art energy. Where It Works Best Playing cards & tarot decks - stylized but symbolic. Posters & album covers - especially psychedelic rock / indie vibes. Fashion & modelling -hijab couture, gowns, ornamental styling. Characters - gods, heroes, or original icons reimagined in surreal ornamented forms. Environments - gardens, cities, or dreamscapes filled with swirls and bold motifs.

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