Daniel in the Lions' Den by Rubens
Camera in hand, Jurick is used to walking through the corridors of museums and art galleries to capture those moments of maximum concentration in which a work captures you to the point of wanting to live in it. From that snapshot, he paints them both: the hunted visitor and reproduces the work of art itself , they explain in My Modern Met. "I go everywhere with my camera, I paint the photos I take-moments in time, people doing their things," describes the artist on her website.
'The Luncheon of the Rowers', by Renoir
Museum Patrons is the name of the series that compiles all these creations and in which, despite having reproductions of such emblematic paintings as The Starry Night by Van Gogh or The Kiss by Klimt, what really matters is the people who appear in it and the form and body language with which they approach art.
Chuck Close Self-Portrait
The artist, who left her career when she was forced to follow academic classes instead of artistic education, she now publishes the book ArtistZ, in which she summarizes part of the series of her choosing an artist for each letter of the alphabet, with his corresponding painting and visitor before him.
'The disciples of Emmaus', by Caravaggio
"Summer" by Benson