Time Lapse: Uphill Battle Part 5

2010-08-01 20:23 CET

This is the fifth and final part of my Time Lapse series which show how I created the painting “Uphill Battle”.

In part 1 I show the “brainstorming” or sketching phase which slowly turns into detail rendering in part 2. In part 3 I go back to the brainstorming or experimentation phase as I wasn’t happy with how the knight/paladin character turned out. In part 4 I finish the detail rendering on the other character which in the end turned out to be a rogue instead of a paladin as I had intended.

In the final episode I add the colors and lighting and make some final adjustments.

Time Lapse: Uphill Battle Part 4

2010-07-31 14:18 CET

This is the fourth part of my Time Lapse series which show how I created the painting “Uphill Battle”.

In part 1 I show the “brainstorming” or sketching phase which slowly turns into detail rendering in part 2. In part 3 I go back to the brainstorming or experimentation phase as I wasn’t happy with how the knight/paladin character turned out.

In this episode I finish the detail rendering on the other character which in the end turned out to be a rogue instead of a paladin as I had intended.

Continued in part 5.

Time Lapse: Uphill Battle Part 3

2010-07-29 11:28 CET

This is the third part of my Time Lapse series which show how I created the painting “Uphill Battle”.

In part 1 I show the “brainstorming” or sketching phase which slowly turns into detail rendering in part 2. In part 3 I go back to the brainstorming or experimentation phase as I wasn’t happy with how the knight/paladin character turned out.

Continued in Part 4.

Time Lapse: Uphill Battle Part 2

2010-07-27 14:00 CET

This is the second part of my Time Lapse series which show how I created the painting “Uphill Battle”.

In part 1 I show the “brainstorming” or sketching phase which slowly turns into detail rendering in part 2.

Continued in Part 3.

Time Lapse: Uphill Battle Part 1

2010-07-24 14:30 CET

This is the first part of a series which show how I created the painting “Uphill Battle”. Most of the time lapse runs at roughly 60x speed, however I had to speed it up to 90x and eventually to 120x in some later parts of the series in order to fit all of the video into five youtube clips. Seeing how the entire drawing and painting process took me 56 hours (real time) I still ended up with 56 minutes of video even though I speed it up to 60x (1 minute of video is equivalent of 1 hour in real time). Ideally I would have fitted it all into one video for convenience but it gets very difficult to see what I’m actually doing once you go above 60x.

The different parts are in chronological order, however they are also split up thematically (sort of). The first part shows the “brainstorming” or sketching phase which slowly turns into detail rendering.

Continued in part 2.

Forest Guardian

2009-09-06 15:52 CET
Title: Forest Guardian
Medium: Digital
Tools: Photoshop, Wacom tablet
Dimensions: 1358 x 1982 px (17 x 25 cm @ 200ppi)
Forest Guardian

Forest Guardian is one of those pieces that just didn’t work out too well in the anatomy department, but I’m still happy I finished it. You can really tell I was struggling with it in the time-lapse videos. It took roughly 13 hours to paint, but as always when I make these videos the real time it took was much longer due to the post processing and editing of the actual video.

Rebirth: The tale of a witch

2009-03-05 0:21 CET
Title: Rebirth: The tale of a witch
Medium: Digital
Tools: Photoshop, Wacom tablet
Dimensions: 1200×1200 pixels
Rebirth: Witch with a Black Angel Wing

As is often the case with my art this painting just “evolved” from a speed painting session. Even though it only took 9 hours I have been working on this for about a week now in my spare time, painting for about an hour at a time. This has allowed me to actually reflect on my painting a lot more and to analyze and prepare my next painting session. The only thing I had in mind when I started painting was this pair of eyes and this particular face of a woman that I just had to get out of my head. The image then naturally moved into an image of an angel and when I was working with the composition I saw the witch.

Just like my Medusa painting, this painting tells the story of a woman who is wrongfully accused and condemned. I gave the painting the title “Rebirth” as it tells the story of a Witch that is drowned by a mob and is reborn as a crow. The image is essentially about the power struggle between men and women.

Her tattoo is an Ankh, an ancient Egyptian symbol which represents “eternal life”. She gains eternal life in the afterlife (or if you will she turns immortal and escapes death as a crow/angel). As a Venus symbol it obviously represents her womanhood. It is no coincidence that the mob consists of men and the wrongfully accused is a woman. The jewelery on her wings are made of silver, which can symbolize a number of different things. As a symbol for “purity” it represents her innocence. Silver is also a “holy” metal and is used to shackle bad spirits.

The cross obviously represents Christianity and the Inquisition. However, what you see in the image is actually the reflection of a cross. In a sense it is an inverted cross, which is often used by satanists. In my painting it symbolizes the darker aspects of Christianity and religion in general.

Quite surprisingly, this painting makes more sense if you look at it upside down…

Witch with a Black Angel Wing Upside Down

And even more surprisingly the composition works quite well upside down as well, doesn’t it? The “mob” comes more into focus and it is as if we are under the water looking up and not above the waters surface looking at the reflection of the mob. She is sitting upside down, kinda like how vampires are depicted as sitting upside down in the ceiling like bats. I’m almost tempted to print it and hang it on my wall in such a way that I can spin it around easily and just flip it whenever I feel like. Drive people mad. My signature also kinda says “sɐɯ 5006″ (wonder what that means to a numerologist?). Too bad it’s not the year “999″ or that my name isn’t “Alucard”. :D

You might wonder why the wing is not attached to her back. I see it as if the wing grows out from her hair and she is in the middle of the metamorphosis stage so the wing can be just about anywhere. It’s called artistic freedom. :P

Me and my baby-blue guitar

2008-07-20 10:44 CET
Title: Me and my baby-blue guitar
Medium: Digital
Tools: Photoshop, Wacom tablet
Dimensions: 700×800 pixels

This painting took two and a half hours to paint using Photoshop CS3. This was actually my first time using CS3 (been using Elements 2 for many years) so I had some unexpected results. The time-lapse video above runs at roughly 45x the normal speed.

Me and my baby-blue guitar