Artist Fabiano Millani's Painting
Artist Fabiano Millani is A contemporary Hyper-Realistic Brazilian Painter, he was born in 1981, Sao-Paulo, Brazil. Fabiano Millani paints on canvas in the technique of hyperrealism. The paintings are so reliable that they can be called photo-realistic.
It is extremely difficult for those who do not have such golden hands to understand how a person's face or a flower may be reproduced so realistically. Furthermore, the paintings are enormous, and the artist cannot see her whole work when standing in front of the canvas. He must take a step back in order to compare the painted components to the original.
Overall, we can only appreciate!
Millani began his early career in 1997, when he enrolled in an art painting school at Edegar Cavalheiro.
Such an event compelled him to focus his never-ending search for realism.
Fabiano Millani began his professional career in plastic (visual) art in 1998 at the same time he began teaching art in the city of Santo Angelo.
Fabiano Millani extended his horizons in 2003, when he placed third in the national competition "Descobrindo Talentos" with the piece "O Executivo."
In 2004, Fabiano Millani placed second in the competition "80 anos da Coluna Prestes" with the image "Cartas Vermelhas." He earned first place in a painting competition in Brazil in 2006, demonstrating a characteristic progression in his artistic visual works.
Fabiano Millani then created his studio, where he mostly works in the field of fine arts and teaches painting and graphics. Some of his most recent accomplishments include winning first place in the Dessiner WordPress National Competition for Realistic Drawings with Carona ao realismo, as well as academic and cultural recognition when two of his paintings were published in the book Crystal Biennale de Talentos, which was supported by the International Book Biennale in San Paulo, both in 2010.
Fabiano Millani took first place in the Dessiner WordPress National Competition for Realistic Drawings again in 2011 with his work "Resiliência," and his piece "Rosa Amarela" was featured in the yearly ACRILEX calendar.
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