Cranial drawing of the archaeocete whale Dorudon atrox,
from the Eocene of Egypt. 2d, graphite, 2007-2009.
The next drawing I completely forgot about; this is a drawing of a walrus (Odobenus rosmarus) cranium on display at the Smithsonian. This was shaded waaay too much, but the particular style of drawing I developed in high school called for really dramatic contrast and lights and darks, so that's what I'm stuck with.
The next drawing is actually pretty big; I finished this one on sunday. This is a lateral view of a 7-9' long (can't remember exactly) Sei Whale (Balaenoptera borealis) cranium on display at the UC Museum of Vertebrate Zoology in Berkeley. The drawing is nearly 2' wide.
Cranial drawing of a Sei Whale, Balaenoptera borealis. 2d, graphite, 2009.
The last drawing took a couple days; this one's of a pretty gnarly critter - the skull of Otaria flavescens, the Southern Sea Lion. The skulls of this animal have all sorts of grotesque knobs and protrusions. This individual wasn't too bad, but note the projections on the dorsal braincase posterior to the orbits.
Outstanding!
ReplyDeleteWill you work for free? :-)
I am in awe. I can drawl, but not draw worth a darn.
ReplyDeleteThose are beyond awesome!
ReplyDeleteThough I have a lot of artistic background in my family, I largely haven't had any practice drawing; so for now I'm stuck in Stick Figure Mode. Which's a shame given how useful of a skill it would be for figures and the like.
You never fail to impress, sir. Keep it up!
ReplyDeleteThanks for the kind words, folks - I'll be keeping up on this 'hobby' more often now.
ReplyDeleteYes, I can work for free, especially if its an illustration that has some hopes of being published...
would you mind if I used your walrus skull as a reference picture for a tattoo? Excellent work :)
ReplyDeleteNope, go ahead! Be my guest.
ReplyDelete