Menu
The New Contemporary Art Magazine

Surreal Dreams by Illustrator Ramona Ring

Illustrator Ramona Ring created eight illustrations for a German magazine called ZEITmagazin. The body of work entitled Surreal Dreams is made up of highly imaginative illustrations that represent sleeping and dreaming in designer beds featured in each drawing. Another body of work entitled ou tópos highlights idilic scenes as well as degraded realities. She found inspiration for her illustrations depicting utopian idealization or dystopian concepts from novels such as English writer Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World, George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four, Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid's Tale and more. See more after the jump!

Illustrator Ramona Ring created eight illustrations for a German magazine called ZEITmagazin. The body of work entitled Surreal Dreams is made up of highly imaginative illustrations that represent sleeping and dreaming in designer beds featured in each drawing. Another body of work entitled ou tópos highlights idilic scenes as well as degraded realities. She found inspiration for her illustrations depicting utopian idealization or dystopian concepts from novels such as English writer Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World, George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four, Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale and more. See more below!












Meta
Topics
Share
Facebook
Reddit
Pinterest
Email
Related Articles
We live in strange times and artists Michael Kerbow and Mike Davis both have something in common: they use surrealism and time travel to address modern and existential issues. Click above to read the Hi-Fructose exclusive interviews with painters Mike Davis and Michael Kerbow about their respective solo showings.
Artist and animation director Joe Vaux paints what he likes. His personal work is teeming with impish demons. His cheerful hellscapes are populated with lost souls, sharp toothed monstrosities, and swarms of wrong-doers. And yet, there’s an innocence to all of this. Click to read the Hi-Fructose exclusive interview with Joe Vaux.
Vibrant and bold, Oscar Joyo’s latest body of work which was exhibited at Thinkspace Projects in Los Angeles, vibrates the retina; while delving into his childhood memories childhood in Malawi and themes of Afrofuturism.
Something interesting happens when when artists like Alan and Carolynda Macdonald, who have the painting fundamentals mastered, decide to subvert expectations and perplex a viewers expectations conceptually. Click to read the Hi-Fructose exclusive interview.

Subscribe to the Hi-Fructose Mailing List