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What if you spent every day looking for One Beautiful Thing?

Winter Wonderlands

11 Comments

Jef Bourgeau

American artist Jef Bourgeau has been making art since the late 1960s. His photography is marvelous, and I love his sketches, and mixed media pieces, whether abstract or portraits, but it’s his digital landscape paintings that I love the most. I’m especially feeling inspired by his winterscapes. They make me feel like maybe winter won’t be the giant wasteland of suck that I always expect. Here’s hoping!

You can follow Jef Bourgeau on Instagram, Facebook, and Saatchi Art.

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Author: Donna from One Beautiful Thing

I have committed to spending part of every day looking for at least one beautiful thing, and sharing what I find with you lovelies!

11 thoughts on “Winter Wonderlands

  1. lois's avatar

    After looking at each one of these, I would think, “This is my favorite.” Nope. The next one is. Then the next. These are wonderful. Thanks, Donna.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. swallowridge2's avatar

    They all invoke a feeling of peace and I hope your winter reflects that rather than the giant wasteland of suck.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Laura (PA Pict)'s avatar

    I pretty much loathe Winter but these landscapes really do make it look magical and inviting. They remind me of the work of Kay Nielsen in that they share that same fairytale quality.

    Liked by 1 person

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  5. Poppy H's avatar

    Sadly, as much as this artist tries to obfuscate the medium used, these are all generated entirely by AI: whatever your thoughts are on that.

    Liked by 1 person

  6. Poppy H's avatar

    Really? I’ve never seen him admit it: he sells their prints as ‘digital paintings’, which they’re not. Could you point me to where he admits they’re made by AI?

    Liked by 1 person

    • Donna from One Beautiful Thing's avatar

      I saw him discussing the instructions he gives to his AI program to arrive at a particular piece of work, but I didn’t save the source, so I’m afraid I can’t tell you. I only remember it because it was the first time I truly understood how AI art was created. It was either in an interview or in the comments on one of his posts. I’m sorry I don’t have better information than that.

      Bourgeau has been making art since the 1960s, much of it digitally manipulated and/or created, so it stands to reason that most of his life’s work isn’t AI-generated.

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