One of the works of Turkish designer Hayatinin Evreni
Artist

Hayatinin Evreni Turkish designer

One of the works of Turkish designer Hayatinin Evreni
One of the works of Turkish designer Hayatinin Evreni

Art has no boundaries. To see this once again, just look at the works of a young Turkish designer and photographer Hayati’nin Evreni.

One of the works of Turkish designer Hayatinin Evreni
One of the works of Turkish designer Hayatinin Evreni

His own cultural passions – painting, cinema, graphic design – he skillfully combines into a single whole, creating real Internet memes. The result is funny, somewhat ironic and very hooligan works, the heroes of which are contemporary artists, characters from famous paintings, and the artists themselves.

Most of all, Evreny worked on paintings by Van Gogh, Davinchev’s Mona Lisa and Girl with a Pearl Earring by Jan Vermeer. The designer also added paintings by Salvador Dali and Frida Kahlo, famous paintings by Botticelli, Edvard Munch, Ilya Repin and other masters of the past.

One of the works of Turkish designer Hayatinin Evreni
One of the works of Turkish designer Hayatinin Evreni

Heroes and heroines of classical works of art are placed by the designer with the help of computer graphics in modern realities. As a result, the viewer sees the Mona Lisa doing fitness, Mary Magdalene accepting the engagement ring, the wounded Christ being dragged by the police and many other plots.

Evreni does the same with modern celebrities and characters of cult series and feature films. With his light hand, the singer Rihanna sat comfortably in the middle of Vangogh’s “Bedroom in Arles”; instead of Botticelli’s Venus, Lana Del Rey comes out of the sea foam, and Angelina Jolie looks at the viewer from the canvas of Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres “The Adoption Maiden”.

One of the works of Turkish designer Hayatinin Evreni
One of the works of Turkish designer Hayatinin Evreni

For especially ardent and uncompromising connoisseurs of fine art, many works by the Turkish designer may seem blasphemous. But if you put aside prejudices and look at the work of Khayatinin Evreni, “turning on” a sense of humor, you can not only laugh heartily at familiar life situations, but also reconsider your views on art in general.

One of the works of Turkish designer Hayatinin Evreni
One of the works of Turkish designer Hayatinin Evreni
One of the works of Turkish designer Hayatinin Evreni
Work of Turkish designer Hayatinin Evreni
One of the works of Turkish designer Hayatinin Evreni
One of the works of Turkish designer Hayatinin Evreni
One of the works of Turkish designer Hayatinin Evreni
One of the works of Turkish designer Hayatinin Evreni