Awesome work! I love how some elements look almost traditional art and others are like fully digital. Gives an amazing contrast. I love the textures too!
Awesome work! I love how some elements look almost traditional art and others are like fully digital
that's a nifty paint texture effect. It actually adds a weird layer on top to interpret from because like ... all paintings, all digital images etc, everything we see on a screen or on a painted canvas is a 2D representation of a 3D space. An illusion. And while like ...a photo of a painted canvas would create this same effect, intentionally adding those marks to make your image look as if it's painted on a 2-dimensional surface calls attention to the fact that the depth we see in the figure and the blood is an illusion, and asks us to step back and view it as trickery, and then to pull back again and realize that even THAT is another layer of illusion, created by the screen we are viewing it on. Talk about fourth wall. xD idk if you were intending to make that kind of statement or if you just thought it was a nifty effect, but in the end intent only matters so much and the viewer brings as much to the image as the painter and I thought I'd share my thoughts. :) Nice work.
that's a nifty paint texture effect. It actually adds a weird layer on top to interpret from because
Jokes (?) aside, I always thought that the issue with most digital art is that ot feels flat. No matter how impressive the strokework or coloring or rendering, its still not fine art. It lacks the texture and depth of a physical painting. So i came up with this.
Jokes (?) aside, I always thought that the issue with most digital art is that ot feels flat. No mat
Yeah, back in the glory days of physical painting there were artists who really experimented with the 3D tactile nature of paint and building up layers to give a literal 3D element to their paintings that were really, really interesting to look at, especially if you could see them in person
Yeah, back in the glory days of physical painting there were artists who really experimented with th