Fan Art
- EntertainmentYahoo Celebrity
Artist imagined 'Riverdale' characters as Disney couples, and you're going to want to see the results
André Manguba, an art student in Manila, is such a fan of "Riverdale"and Disney that he mixed them together in some delightful new fan art.
- EntertainmentYahoo Movies
An artist reimagined Disney princesses as noir femme fatales, and it's amazing
Princess Jasmine, from "Aladdin," might say that artist Ástor Alexander has shown Disney fans a whole new world with his latest creations.
2 min read - NewsYahoo Movies
'Gotham City Sirens' Has One Fan Artist Itching to Picture Imagined Poison Ivys to Join Margot Robbie's Harley Quinn
Emma Stone imagined as Poison Ivy by artist Kode A., a.k.a. Christmas came early for Margot Robbie when Warner Bros. announced that her breakout Suicide Squad character, Harley Quinn, would be getting her own spin-off movie in the form of Gotham City Sirens. Based on the DC Comics title of the same name, which ran for 26 issues between 2009 and 2011, the movie will re-team Robbie with her Squad director, David Ayer, and partner Harley with two more Gotham City bad girls: cat burglar Catwoman a
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Ryan Reynolds Shares Fan-Made 'Deadpool 2' Poster That May Hint at Possible Release Date
Star of blockbuster circulates art with 2018 release date
- NewsGwynne Watkins
This Epic 'Star Wars' Infographic Will Blow Your Mind
An illustration of the Millennium Falcon from Martin Panchaud’s infographic
- NewsGwynne Watkins
See Police Composite Sketches of Famous Movie Characters
When a movie — say, The Hunger Games — is adapted from a book, the filmmakers have a ready-made description of how the characters should look. Sometimes, they follow it to the letter; other times, they take creative license. In his illustration series The Composites, filmmaker and digital artist Brian J. Davis enters descriptions of famous literary characters into the same kind of composite-sketch software that police use to draw pictures of suspects. Compare those characters to their movie vers
- NewsGwynne Watkins
See Delightful 'Force Awakens' Fan Art Drawn Calvin-and-Hobbes Style
In the realm of ‘80s nostalgia, Star Wars lives alongside Calvin and Hobbes — so it’s a treat to see these two triumphs of imagination come together. A series of fan drawings from Disney artist Brian Kesinger re-creates classic moments from Bill Watterson’s comic strip, using characters from Star Wars: The Force Awakens. Bill Watterson’s witty and innovative comic strip Calvin and Hobbes, which ran in newspapers from 1985 to 1995, revolved around the adventures of a young boy and his imaginary