Published 3 October 2012 by Pauline
“Bodyscapes” by Jean-Paul Bourdier
Jean-Paul Bourdier is a French born photographer currently based in California. Apart from his daily job as a professor in the department of architecture at UC Berkeley, Jean-Paul Bourdier takes beautiful pictures mixing body art and land art. His series of photographs entitled “Bodyscapes” presents human bodies painted in such a way as they fully fade in the natural background that surrounds them. Jean-Paul Bourdier’s work has won several national and international awards including Guggenheim, American Council of Learned Societies, NEA, Graham, UC President’s humanities and Getty. Don’t hesitate to check out his portfolio or to follow him on Facebook to see much more.










40 awesome sand sculptures
The best 100 digital agencies in the world
Insane photographs by Julia Fullerton-Batten
20 insane creative works by Ben Heine
Stunning 3D sci-fi works by Stefan Morrell
Astonishing trompe-l'oeil drawings by Julian Beever
Beautiful photos by Gregorius Suhartoyo
Stunning portraits of homeless people by Lee Jeffries
We Love Webdesign #193
Short Animation Film #169 : La mano de Nefertiti
We Love Webdesign #192
Short Animation Film #166 : Micro Mayhem!
We Love Webdesign #191
Short Animation Film #165 : Spacebound
We Love Webdesign #190
Short Animation Film #164 : Shave it
32 amazing data visualization
41 awesome logos focusing on animals
31 stunning Mobile UI designs
40 amazing LEGO sculptures
The best websites of 2012
Beautiful ice and snow sculptures from Harbin 2012
The best websites of 2011
100 beautiful artistic wallpapers
Interview Benoit Ferrière, illustrator/co-owner Tokkun Studio
Interview Matmaxx, the world in HDR
Interview Julien Tauban : talented Art & Creative Director
Interview of Felicia Simion : up & coming photographer
Interview : Nicolas Bouvier (Sparth), concept artist
Interview Frederic St-Arnaud : hollywood matte-painter
Interview Olli-Pekka Jauhiainen : the king of photo-manipulation
Interview Stephen Arens : the master of HDR

