In these months ago we have ever passed through the beauty of the tiny and the small. There are many artists who outline the tips of their pencils or define the tips of their brushes well to demonstrate their skill in the minute. That art that focuses on limited spaces and in which you can find some serious proposals how was Brook Rothshank's four months ago and this is not much of Claudia Maccecchini.
We go back to it with Rachel Beltz and her passion for miniature in watercolor as an aritist who has been very interested in art from an early age. In her spare time, at school or in summer camps, Beltz has always been practicing one of her specialties so that in her 20s she is really interested in taking a step forward and turning her hobby into her profession.
We have a nice set of very tiny watercolor paintings that, as she says, were created secretly as a gift Christmas for your family. They were truly fascinated by these gifts, and the gratitude returned with a smile kept me going on with the work on these miniature watercolors.
All kinds of animals in their smallest form can be found to also pass us before their first years of life as it is that elephant, the raccoon or a couple of birds that look puzzled at that birdseed that reveals the true size of these artistic compositions.
His goal is to create a piece every day that can share on social network which has become one of the best showcases to meet the most skilled artists or those who have a very ingenious idea with which to show a concept.
You have on Instagram to know the rest of its tiny pieces and continue in that study.