Fleeting beauty: portraits of women in abandoned houses
Beauty is fleeting. This idea is embodied in his works by the Australian Tyrone Wright, known in the art world under the pseudonym Rone.
A street artist from Melbourne creates tender portraits of beautiful girls in very original and absolutely deserted places. Tyrone paints on the time-beaten walls of abandoned industrial buildings and residential buildings, breathing life into the ruins with his art.
Tyrone paints his delicate murals on the surviving and time-worn walls of abandoned industrial buildings and residential buildings. According to the artist, such unusual places are not chosen by chance. These forgotten or dilapidated spaces can disappear at any moment.
"There is real beauty hidden in fleetness," says Tyrone. "After all, at any moment, beautiful portraits can disappear, preserved only in photographs."
Elegant female images in an atmosphere of chaos and destruction remind us that these places themselves once looked completely different. Someone built them, ennobled them and breathed life into them. But one day it stopped, and only an echo remained of the former glory and beauty. And now-the portraits of Rone.
One of the artist's projects called Empty was presented in an old theater in Melbourne, which is subject to demolition. More than 3000 people came to the presentation of the project.
Rone's works can be found not only in Australia, but also around the world: in London, New York, Paris, Havana, San Francisco, Gothenburg, Mexico City, Detroit, Hong Kong and other cities.
Keywords: Girls | Abandoned | Design and architecture | Artist | Portraits | Murals | Street art