8-Bit Versions Of Famous Art And Pop Icons Are All Kinds Of Yes

These ’80s recreations are, like, totally bitchin’.
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"The Last Supper"
Adam Lister

What can possibly make you happier than accidentally finding out that if you Google image search “Atari Breakout” that you can actually play the game?

Pixelated recreations of famous works of art and pop-cultural icons that look like they belong in the OG gaming system, that’s what.

Artist Adam Lister makes 8-bit versions of everything from Hokusai’s “The Great Wave” to Darth Vader with watercolors, and the end result looks fluid and beautifully rigid; futuristic and like a nod to the ’80s all at the same time.

“I had been painting non-representational geometric pictures for a long time,” Lister told The Huffington Post. “Then one day, I was in the studio and I needed a change. So I took the same hard-edge painting approach I had been using for abstract work and used it to make an image everyone would recognize.”

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"Bob Ross"
Adam Lister

Lister, who grew up in the ’80s playing video games, also admits that pixel-based images “were already a huge part of my imagination.”

Because of this, the images he chooses to recreate are ones that he feels closely connected to. “Sometimes they are childhood memories, sometimes they are just subjects that I like,” he said. 

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"La Grand Odalisque"
Adam Lister

Lister’s watercolors, all start the same way. “I look at the original subject that I'm working with and I begin to break it down in my head,” he said. “I try to give the pure essence of an image. Not every detail, but enough visual information that people can decipher the painting.”

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"Mister Rogers"
Adam Lister

Lister starts with pencil, “blocking in some the bigger compositional elements,” and then allows his imagination to grow from there, finishing each piece with watercolors.

The time it takes to create one of his 8-bit wonders depends on the complexity and size of the painting, which can vary from 8-by-10 canvases to palm-sized miniatures.

“I like to get in the studio and work for 12 hours straight, alternating between painting and drawing,” he said.

It’s time that, bit by bit, totally pays off.

"Olympia"
A recreation of Édouard Manet’s masterpiece.
"BB-8"
It may be hard for BB-8 to roll around the desert of Jakku with such rigid edges … but it looks cool.
"The Great Wave"
Hokusai’s famous piece has never looked slightly less fluid than normal, yet slightly more awesome.
"Boba Fett and Darth Vader"
Boba Fett and Darth Vader in all their 8-bit glory.
"The School of Athens"
This recreation of Raphael’s fresco is outside the box.
"Lady with an Ermine"
Leonardo da Vinci would be proud of this pixelated weasel.
"Stormtrooper"
Here’s hoping there is a pixelated version of Finn under that Stormtrooper helmet.
"La velata"
Raphael’s woman with a veil looks like she belongs in an Atari game.
"Bar at the Folies-Bergère"
Manet’s famous no-B.S. bartender looks ready to box.

Also on HuffPost:

20 People From Famous Paintings Who Can't Even
"You're looking at me as if I can help but I seriously cannot even."(01 of20)
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(credit:Rembrandt, 'A Polish Nobleman,' 1637 (Photo by The Print Collector/Getty Images))
"My shoes are made of paper and I can't even."(02 of20)
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(credit:Edouard Manet, The Spanish Singer, 1860 (Photo via Wikipedia))
"Literally, look at me one more time because I cannot."(03 of20)
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(credit:Artemisia Gentileschi, Self-Portrait, 1615-1617 (Photo via Wikipedia))
"We're the only two people in this bar and you choose to sit directly next to me, I cannot even."(04 of20)
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(credit:Edgar Degas, La Absinthe, 1873 (Photo via Wikipedia))
Hand-on-hip is the international sign of can't even.(05 of20)
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(credit:Renoir, Jeune garcon sur la plage d`Yport, 1883 (Photo via Wikipedia))
"This baby can't even so I cannot be expected to."(06 of20)
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(credit:Mary Cassatt, The Boating Party, 1893-94 (Photo via Wikipedia))
This lady, her monocle and her dachshunds cannot. Not today.(07 of20)
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(credit:Romaine Brooks, Una, Lady Troubridge, 1924 (Photo via Wikipedia))
This sleeve is enormous and he cannot even with it.(08 of20)
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(credit:Titian, Portrait of a Man, 1510 (Photo via Wikipedia))
Gertrude Stein can't even.(09 of20)
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(credit:Pablo Picasso, Portrait of Gertrude Stein, 1906 (Photo via Wikipedia))
"I'm trying to pretend that I can but I can't even."(10 of20)
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(credit:Judith Leyster, Jolly Toper, 1629 (Photo via Wikipedia))
Shhhh, half-naked angel. St. Francis can't even.(11 of20)
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(credit:Caravaggio, Saint Francis of Assisi in Ecstasy, 1595 (Photo via Wikipedia))
Someone named Oswolt Krel cannot even.(12 of20)
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(credit:Albrecht Durer, Portrait of Oswolt Krel, 1499 (Photo via Wikipedia))
Look into her eyes and feel how much she can't even right now.(13 of20)
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(credit:Egon Schiele, Portrait of Edith Schiele, 1915 (Photo via Wikipedia))
"Nothing about my expression should communicate that I can in any way, because I can't even."(14 of20)
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(credit:Vincent van Gogh, Self-Portrait, 1887 (Photo via Wikipedia))
Lol. She can't.(15 of20)
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(credit:Leonardo da Vinci, Mona Lisa, 1517 (Photo via Wikipedia))
Whatever is happening here they cannot, and they shouldn't, even.(16 of20)
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(credit:Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, The Medical Inspection (Photo via Wikipedia))
He's done, guys. He can't even.(17 of20)
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(credit:Caravaggio, David with the head of Goliath, 1606-1607 (Photo via Wikipedia))
You asked. And he couldn't. And now he really cannot even.(18 of20)
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(credit:Francisco Goya, Saturn Devouring His Son (Photo via Wikipedia))
Oh please, he cannot.(19 of20)
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(credit:Edvard Munch, The Scream, 1893 (Universal History Archive via Getty Images))
Never.(20 of20)
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(credit:Gerhard von Kugelgen, Portrait of Caspar David Friedrich, 1810âÂÂ20 (Photo via Wikipedia))

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