About George Grie



Real name: George Grie
Male, Married
Operates out of: Toronto, Ontario, Canada
By day: Multimedia graphic design artist
Describes themself as: I am writing this to answer your possible questions about sources of my art inspiration. Picture concepts could come from anywhere: unusual window views, fantastic movie scenes, or routine commercial posters. The ideas are in the air, they are all over the place. Usually they come as a vague vision of something interestingly abnormal, something you define as extraordinary and atypical. Generally, the first impression transforms dramatically at the end of the creative process. In the majority of my works I am trying to combine visual realities with subconscious emotions and philosophical thoughts. My pictures are similar to mental puzzles where you can travel from one point to another by analyzing a picture’s symbolic objects. Sometimes a picture’s subject matter is unclear when the path is hidden under layers of mutually excepted items. Sometimes a picture could look almost abstract and meaningless but there is always something for you to discover. I never force my vision or push my philosophical opinion on the viewer. I only hint them by image titles. It is entirely your job to build the picture concept based on your personal experience, understanding and preferences.
Personal Interests:

Zazzle Team meeting, Toronto April 23, 2008
Jason Kang, George Grie, Jacqueline Edwards, Melanie Sherk
Related websites
: Free clip art photo stock :free 3d max models : digital art : prints posters calendars : best modern art : best modern artists : animated wallpapers : best funny pictures pop-art
Artistic Interests: I’m confident that new graphic technologies unlocked endless possibilities to creative individuals. Visual capabilities of some contemporary 3d applications are far beyond common human comprehension. Today the sky is the limit to exercise your imagination, intelligence, and ambitions. “Everything is possible” could be a motto of present and future digital artists. I’m trying to prove it in every one of my modest creations. Never-ending combinations of renderings, lightings, and/or shape deformations bring you the sensation of full liberty. There are no more hours of a laborious painting routine. There is no more painful drafting. Everything is instant under the tips of your flying fingers. There is only one chilling obstacle between you and your perfect design – lack of imagination.