Painters Hyperrealism


Nuria Farre Abejon is a Spanish hyperrealist artist living and working in Barcelona, Spain.
Her often hyper-realistic works revolve around issues that concern her as a young woman: anxiety, melancholy, family, memories and identity. At first, Nuria created translucent paintings through which she represented the duality between life and death. Later she explored self-portraiture, and today Nuria tries to explore her present through photographs from her family album, through which she creates interesting visual oil collages.


Kurt Ard was a Danish illustrator, painter and printmaker. He became internationally famous for his narrative cover artwork published in popular magazines of the 1950s-1970s, including the Family Journal, the Saturday Evening Post and Reader’s Digest. Ard started his career at various smaller newspapers and worked in the same realistic tradition as his role model, illustrator and painter, Norman Rockwell. During WW II, Kurt struggled to fulfill commission orders. His painting and his reputation and success grew steadily in the post war years. His illustrations soon appeared in major European publications, and he subsequently achieved international fame. Over the course of his career, Ard has sold more than 1000 illustrations to the best magazines in Europe, and to American publications such as McCalls, Good Housekeeping and Redbook. Today, Kurt continues to create exceptional figurative, landscape and seascape paintings with uncompromising authenticity , capturing the charm, beauty and power of these diverse subjects. His work is especially notable for its brilliant light and precise detail.


Daniel Authouart is a French painter, draughtsman and lithographer.
He studied at the École des Beaux-Arts in Rouen and lives and works in the same city. Authouart is known for his hyper-realistic paintings and lithographs on themes of modern life. He also created book bindings, posters and theater sets.


Robert Alan Bechtle was an American painter, printmaker, and educator. He lived nearly all his life in the San Francisco Bay Area and whose art was centered on scenes from everyday local life. His paintings are in a Photorealist style and often depict automobiles.




Henri Cornelis Bol is a Dutch realist painter.
He studied at the Eindhoven Academy of Design and, in addition to painting, had a passion for antiques, the objects of which he used in his works. Bol created realistic still lifes with elements of the trompe-l'œil technique.


Will Cotton is an American painter. His work primarily features landscapes composed of sweets, often inhabited by human subjects. Will Cotton lives and works in New York City.
In 1996, Cotton began to develop an iconography in which the landscape itself became an object of desire. The paintings often feature scenery made up entirely of pastries, candy and melting ice cream. He creates elaborate maquettes of these settings from real baked goods made in his Manhattan studio as a visual source for the final works. Since about 2002, nude or nearly nude pinup-style models have occasionally populated these candy-land scenes. As in the past, the works project a tactile indulgence in fanciful glut. The female characters are icons of indulgence and languor, reflecting the feel of the landscape itself.


Don Eddy is a contemporary representational painter. He gained recognition in American art around 1970 amid a group of artists that critics and dealers identified as Photorealists or Hyperrealists, based on their work's high degree of verisimilitude and use of photography as a resource material. Eddy has worked in cycles, which treat various imagery from different formal and conceptual viewpoints, moving from detailed, formal images of automobile sections and storefront window displays in the 1970s to perceptually challenging mash-ups of still lifes and figurative/landscapes scenes in the 1980s to mysterious multi-panel paintings in his latter career. Eddy's work has been informed by wide-ranging, sometimes contradictory influences: old masters (e.g., van Eyck and Vermeer), Impressionist and Neo-Impressionist color, the analytical cubism of Braque and Picasso, Hans Hofmann, Conceptual and Minimalist critiques of Abstract Expressionism, and Pop art.


Tim Eitel is a German contemporary artist.
Tim Eitel's creative style remains realistic with elements of romanticism. Tim Eitel is one of the representatives of the "New School of Leipzig". His work is so faithful and close to the original that it could be presented as a colourful photograph.


Richard Estes is an American artist, best known for his photorealist paintings. The paintings generally consist of reflective, clean, and inanimate city and geometric landscapes. He is regarded as one of the founders of the international photo-realist movement of the late 1960s, with such painters as John Baeder, Chuck Close, Robert Cottingham, Audrey Flack, Ralph Goings, and Duane Hanson.


Audrey L. Flack is an American artist. Her work pioneered the art genre of photorealism and encompasses painting, sculpture, and photography. Flack's early work in the 1950s was abstract expressionist. But gradually, Flack became a New Realist and then evolved into photorealism during the 1960s. Audrey Flack is best known for her photo-realist paintings and was one of the first artists to use photographs as the basis for painting.[6] The genre, taking its cues from Pop Art, incorporates depictions of the real and the regular, from advertisements to cars to cosmetics. Flack's work brings in everyday household items like tubes of lipstick, perfume bottles, Hispanic Madonnas, and fruit.[6] These inanimate objects often disturb or crowd the pictorial space, which are often composed as table-top still lives. Flack often brings in actual accounts of history into her photorealist paintings, such as World War II' (Vanitas) and Kennedy Motorcade. Women were frequently the subject of her photo-realist paintings. She was the first photorealist painter to be added to the collection of the Museum of Modern Art in 1966.


Franz Gertsch is one of Switzerland's most outstanding contemporary artists. Throughout his career, he has produced a wide range of paintings and graphic works in which he tries to find a particular approach to reality. Although the author uses photographs or slide projections as his starting points, the paintings adhere to a logic of their own which seeks the correctness of all elements. Woodcuts also occupy a special place in Franz Gertsch's work.


Gregory Joseph Gillespie was an American magic realist painter.
Gillespie became known for meticulously painted figurative paintings, landscapes, and self portraits, often with a fantastical element. Many of his early works were made by painting over photographs cut from newspapers or magazines, transforming the scenes through photographic collage and by adding imaginary elements. In his later work he abandoned his early fascination with creating hyper-realized realistic imagery, instead focusing on a looser and more expressive style. He often combined media in an unorthodox way to create shrine-like assemblages.
Gillespie's work is in the collections of the Whitney Museum, the Arkansas Arts Center, and the Butler Institute of American Art, among others.


Ralph Goings was an American painter closely associated with the Photorealism movement of the late 1960s and early 1970s. He was best known for his highly detailed paintings of hamburger stands, pick-up trucks, and California banks, portrayed in a deliberately objective manner.


Gottfried Helnwein is an Austrian-Irish visual artist. He has worked as a painter, draftsman, photographer, muralist, sculptor, installation and performance artist, using a wide variety of techniques and media.
His work is concerned primarily with psychological and sociological anxiety, historical issues and political topics. His subject matter is the human condition. The metaphor for his art is dominated by the image of the child, particularly the wounded child, scarred physically and emotionally from within. His works often reference taboo and controversial issues from recent history, especially the Nazi rule and the horror of the Holocaust. As a result, his work is often considered provocative and controversial.


Don Jacot is an American photorealist artist.
Don Jacot is known for his paintings depicting toys living on accurately depicted city streets of the last century. Using archival photographs of cities, scale models of cars, and photographs of vintage signage as source material, Jacot created his own historically accurate compositions of mid-twentieth-century landscapes.


Hyung Koo Kang is a contemporary Korean artist known for his hyper-realistic portraits of historical figures, media icons and ordinary people.
The master's work is imbued with empathy for strong-willed figures who have struggled with the hardships of life and history. Kana's deep-eyed portrait subjects gracefully reveal their inner worlds and the imprint of the times they have lived through.


Tschang-Yeul Kim is a South Korean abstraction artist, one of the most famous figures in the history of modern Korean art.
He lived most of his life in Paris, France, where he developed his own unique style of painting. Tschang-Yeul Kim painted paintings with a variety of water droplets that appear to protrude from the canvases as if the canvas were "crying," but are in fact optical illusions.


Claude Lepape was a French painter, printmaker, theatre set designer and representative of the Paris School. He was the son of the painter Georges Lepape and studied painting at the Ecole Nationale Superieure des Beaux-Arts in Paris. Claude Lepape's still lifes and portraits convey the artist's intimate understanding of creatures and objects and have a surrealist undertone.


Damian Loeb is an American artist best known for contemporary realist painting, though he has also exhibited digital collage and photographic prints. He has shown in New York at Mary Boone and Acquavella Galleries and internationally with White Cube in London and Jablonka Galerie, Cologne, among others. He is currently co-represented by Acquavella Galleries and Pace Gallery. Loeb has also exhibited at institutional art venues including the Kunsthalle in Hamburg and the Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum in Ridgefield, Connecticut.








Denis Peterson is an American hyperrealist painter whose photorealist works have been exhibited at the Brooklyn Museum, Whitney Museum of American Art, Butler Institute of American Art etc. He was one of the first Photorealists in New York. He is widely acknowledged as the pioneer and primary architect of Hyperrealism, which was founded on the aesthetic principles of Photorealism. Originally, his floor-to-ceiling sized paintings centered around a single figure, with his monochromatic subjects characteristically cropped to appear as enlarged black and white photographs. His more recent photorealistic works encompass meticulously detailed New York cityscapes that focus on imposing billboards.


Rudolf Reschreiter was a German painter.
He painted mainly in the watercolour technique and was praised for his hyper-realistic depiction of nature. One of his most famous works is the depiction of the Waxenstein ridge from Mathaisenkar.


Luigi Rocca is an Italian hyperrealist painter.
Luigi was born into a family of artists and, influenced from a young age by his grandfather's photographic work, he eventually became one of the leading exponents of photorealism.
He made repeated exploratory trips to New York City, a city full of architecture, advertising and light, which inspired him to create magnificent photorealist motifs. Rocca combined his classical technique with modern realism, creating illusionistic and richly detailed paintings that are recognized by art lovers and collectors around the world. They appear so realistic that it's hard to see the difference between a photograph and a painting.


Terry Rodgers is an American artist known for his large scale canvases that focus on portraying contemporary body politics. He graduated cum laude from Amherst College in Massachusetts in 1969, with a major in Fine Arts. His strong interest in film and photography influenced his style in the direction of representational realism in art.
In 2005, three of his monumental figurative canvases were presented at the Valencia Biennial. Abroad he has had solo exhibitions in galleries in Brussels, Amsterdam, Zurich and Milan, and participated in group shows around the world. In the United States, he has had solo gallery exhibitions in New York City, Los Angeles, Atlanta, and Chicago.
He has also exhibited at numerous museums in the US including the Museum of Contemporary Art Jacksonville, the Erie Art Museum and the Mobile Museum of Art. Abroad, his work has been exhibited at the Stedelijk Museum – 's-Hertogenbosch, the Kunsthalle der Hypo-Kulturstiftung in Munich, the Museum Franz Gertsch in Burgdorf, the Museum Folkwang in Essen, the Gemeentemuseum Helmond, the Scheringa Museum of Realist Art in Spanbroek, the Kunsthal Rotterdam, the Kunsthalle Emden, the Kunsthalle Krems, the Galerie Rudolfinum and the Zentrum Paul Klee in Bern.


Salustiano is a Spanish painter who lives and works in Seville.
Salustiano graduated from the University of Seville (Spain) and in the early 1990s was inspired by the works of the Renaissance masters. The artist depicts human beings in the classical Renaissance style, but hyper-realistically, on a monochrome background, focusing entirely on the personality and soul. Surrealism adds mystery and mystery, even ambiguity, to the models.
Salustiano's paintings are highly praised by connoisseurs of contemporary art. He has shown his paintings in exhibitions at the Fowler Museum in Los Angeles, the Luma Museum in Chicago, and the Fostella-Malpartida Museum in Caceres. Various prestigious charitable organizations have invited him to collaborate on their projects: The Dalai Lama Foundation with the exhibition "The World Missing", Women Together International with the exhibition "Otras Meninas" and the Cisneros Foundation.


Tomás Sánchez is a Cuban painter and engraver, known for his landscapes. Sánchez is the most expensive living Cuban painter.
In 1980 he won the First Prize at the XIX Edition of the International Prize of Drawing Joan Miró, for his work Desde las aguas blancas, which launched his international career. The following year, he had an exhibition at the Joan Miró Foundation, Centre of Contemporary Art in Barcelona, Spain.
His work has been exhibited in over 30 countries. In May 2019 three of his paintings headed to Christie's Latin American Art sales.


Clifford Smith is an American landscape painter.
Smith studied at Southern Connecticut State College and the Pratt Institute, Brooklyn. He has had numerous solo exhibitions since the late 1970s and has also participated in group exhibitions across the country.
Clifford Smith's works appear at first glance to be photographs, so realistically are they painted. Whether depicting ocean expanses or urban and rural landscapes, the artist conveys the tension and sensuality of nature.




Ramon Surinyac is a Spanish painter living and working in Barcelona, Spain.
Ramon Surinyac holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts from the University of Barcelona. From a distance, his paintings look like large photographs of snow-capped mountain vistas, ocean waves or forest jungles, but when the viewer gets closer, he discovers the artist's amazingly realistic skill.


Rosmery Mamani Ventura is a Bolivian painter. His work is very realistic, with a high level of detail. She is considered one of the major contemporary artists in South America. She describes society with great sensitivity through hyper-realistic portraits of everyday men and women. Many art collectors seek his works because they are rare. Rosmery Mamani Ventura is a patient artist, she can spend several months on a single work.


Kehinde Wiley is an African-American portrait painter based in New York City, who is known for his highly naturalistic paintings of Black people, frequently referencing the work of Old Master paintings. He was commissioned in 2017 to paint a portrait of former President Barack Obama for the Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery, which has portraits of all previous American presidents.

