Emma, pt.1

This is the first of a series of sketches of a character in a short story that I may or may not ever finish. Her name is Emma, and she is one of the primary characters in said story. She’s supposed to have a hipster/indie rock sort of feel. These sketches detail her appearance and assorted elements of her design.

 

The story itself involves the search for an ancient artifact: a crystal pocketwatch that is thought to be capable of raising the dead. What it actually does, however, is far more strange and terrifying.

 

Emma, pt.1

Emma, pt.1

Drawing utensils.

I’ve been working on this for some time now. I actually let it sit unfinished for a good portion of that time. Anyway, here is the final version of this piece. I’ve posed previews of it in the past. A pixelart that depicts assorted illustration tools.

You obviously need to click on the image to see the full magnification.

Illustration tools.

Illustration tools.

Black Helicopter Tryptich

This was a drawing II assignment, and the concept is a sort of dadaist, absurdist joke. (If I recall correctly, the assignment itself involved taking inspiration from Dada.) This thing would be incredibly pretentious if it were meant to be taken seriously, but it isn’t.

I decided to create an assemblage with a surrealistic sci-fi theme. It is also a parody of ‘black helicopter’ conspiracy theories. During the 80’s and 90’s some very foolish people began to claim that black helicopters were engaged in clandestine activities in the midwest, sometimes involving aliens and U.F.O.’s. For this project I decided to make fun of this conjecture by creating a narrative in which the ‘helicopters’ are actually large, aerial animals which only resemble helicopters, and live in large anthill-like warrens in the mountains of the American west.

 

I wanted to mix illustration with assemblage, so I did several drawings of the helicopter-creatures. I decided to give them a somewhat organic texture, and made the cockpits red. I also added some humorous touches. For instance, the drawings of the helicopters are cut out and mounted on foam core board, with Velcro on the back. There is also Velcro on the display aras of the folded boards, so you can move them around, though there is no reason to do so. There’s a magnifying glass, to examine the drawings up close, but there’s nothing to really see. There is a pen, but the quill is broken and there’s no ink. The parchment on the side with the pen is supposed to be an account of a sighting of one of the creatures that dates from the 1800’s (it’s not a ‘real’ account, I just made it up, and it’s just a few sentences.) The last side is made up of printed excerpts from goofy conspiracy theories.

 

The metal plates are just visual elements. There’s a good deal of symbolism in this thing, but I can’t explain it all, and all of it is just inside jokes.

 

Why did I do something this goofy? Well, it was fun to do it, but another reason is that I’ve always been fascinated with conspiracy theories, and why people believe in them. I’m also a skeptic, so I look at this stuff with a critical view, which naturally leads to me satirizing this type of thing.

 

I’ve always been pretty satisfied with this piece of art. It mixes assemblage, illustration, sculpture, and a number of media. It was a delight to combine all of this in to a single piece.

 

The boards have a various shapes painted on them in yellow, red, orange, and black. Those colors were chosen just because I thought they complimented the helicopter illustrations, and I think they look nice with the steel/metal elements, while the lighter yellows work with the parchment colors and the exposed parts of the wood. The paint itself is acrylic.

 

Anyhow, this things was really enjoyable to create.

Mission Statement.

This was an assignment for a class. The instructions were to create a mission statement for your life. It could take any form. Here are the results. Five envelopes, each with a word that pertains to an interest and a quote relating to it. Inside is an image that is relevant in some fashion.  The images are as follows:

BUILD: Seattle Public Library, by Rem Koolhaas and OMA.

DRAW: A painting by Jean Giraud, aka Mobius. My biggest artistic influence.

WORDS: The Voynich manuscript. Exact origins and authorship unknown.

CITIES: Hong Kong skyline. PHotographer unknown.

FUTURE: A nebula. Hubble telescope.

 

Red Panda Shirt cont.

Just an update on the Red Panda image that I may submit to Threadless. This is a closer iteration of what the final idea will resemble. The way the Panda interacts with the diamond shape is still a bit incongruous, but I just need to make the movement more dynamic, so it looks like the panda is leaping through the opening. Right now it looks like it’s just leaning over the edge, and doesn’t have a sense of motion. Anyhow, the next version will, hopefully, be posted within the next week or so.

Cthulhu Opera House development.

Sketches of various elements that will be part of a coat-of-arms for an opera house, with an octopus/cthulhu head.

Random scrap: futuristic barrier structure.

I just thew this together in about 45 minutes or so. It’s a concept for a large fence/barrier that plays a prominent role in a sci-fi short story I’ve been working on. The barrier is more than just a wall. It can also disrupt communications, and it can detect various types of activity nearby. Not the silhouette of the individual on the walkway, near the grass, for size comparison. I may do a proper illustration of it later.

Dancing Cthulhu.

Okay, this is a nice, accidental image. When I scanned and edited the flower images, the lower part of the third flower ended up resembling something that I thought was quite amusing. Take a look.

What kind of magic spell to use?

When I looked at this, I thought it resembled a figure, bent over, facing the viewer. Almost like it was dancing. The two circles near the ‘head’ are like stylized eyes. The overall shape of the head reminded me of Cthulhu, so I made this in to its own image and titled it ‘Dancing Cthulhu’.

Yeah, I’m a dork.

Alien plants.

A series of alien plants, drawn on vellum with Micron pens.

 

Both were created in the same manner as the flower in the previous post. The second one led to the creation of another image, which will be described in a new post.

Flower image.

This is the flower image used in the previous wallpapers. It was drawn on vellum with micron pens. As you can see, only one segment was drawn, and the rest was duplicated and repositioned to give it perfect symmetry. It’s supposed to be a strange, peculiar flower. Yeah, I like flowers.

Image

This was initially drawn as part of a series of alien plants. The remaining illustrations in that series will be uploaded shortly.

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