@akmerlow... Facing Dilemma... really great love the colors and the texture...
Here is my second entry
"Abalone"
used one displaced grid from Hexagon textured in Bryce with heavy glass set against a black backdrop with 5 spot lights and 6 radial lights all with procedural texture gels
Super, mtnmen...I'm probably wrong, but I think you've captured here theirridescent colours (link to Les Cowleys wonderful site) of the actual shell in where the animal lives.
Second entrance: I'm basing this work around the old joke: 'do you like children?', 'yes, I love 'em, but I could never eat a whole one'. Again POV v FOV applied.
So, the title is: 'Love children, but never eat a whole one'.
mtnmen: also very good. Nice is that the much more subdued colours of your work still lead to a very lively abstract.
Jamahoney: Very funny. Not so sure whether I would consider this abstract. By the way, the eye of the eater appears to be popping out. I assume that is intentional? And there are some very hard shadowlines that you might want to work on (e.g. on the upper lip and from the nose to the mouth). Hair looks very good, though.
Wow, Henryhor, not only does the 'Homeless Hunchback' look abstract, but your title sounds abstract too.
Thanks for the comment. The metaballs on the left seemed to have a hump but couldn't be considered as a camel so I called it "the Hunchback". And since Notre Dame in Paris is severely damaged the Hunchback is homeless now... Long ago I made a pic called "Romeo's liquefaction on my bathroom wall (and Juliet doesn't feel very well either)". My best title ever.
Eating kids is like eating shrimps. Better remove the head. With ed3D's cleaver.
@ mtnmen: magical cave. One expects an apparition.
Oh wow, Henyhor, never picked up on the 'Homeless Hunchback' reference to the sad demise/burning of Notre Dame...apolgies for my ignorence.
I (like so many tourists) walked through its interior once...and what a wonderful experience - that window...phew. Let's hope the billions (yes, controverscial) will restore it back to how it was.
Jay - I rather see eating children as abstract than a bad habit. Though I agree with Hansmar's observations, I thought it was intentional to emphasize the abstractness.
Cheers, Horo, abstract can be abstract (the very notion that we are discussing 'abstractness' is, in itself, abstract - think self-awareness, time-awareness....phew...heavy stuff).
I think the theme that abstractness isn't just a representation of confusing-like pictures, images, etc., open to interpretation, but, more that on another level, the conscious and sub-conscious becomes exposed...visually.
"Abalone" - wow, this is something slippery and slimy!
Jamahoney:
Thanks for that sea shell link. Live and learn, as they say.
"'Love children, but never eat a whole one" - ha, this one is eccentric! Expressions of their eyes are very surreal.
I think i have slightly different interpretation of vision:
I see child as passenger, and man-eater's head as some sort of transport, like airship of sorts. So he doesn't eat children, instead he is taxi for them. Or maybe his head is tower, so mouth is window? Which is close to what hubert proposes above.
horo, hubert, jamahoney, hansmar, mermaid010, akmerlow thanks for the great comments, and Jay... thanks for the link..I love irridescents
@jamahoney...Love children... at first I said this isn't abstract but more surreal... however, your thoughts about abstract thinking etc has brought me over to looking at this as abstract thought rather than just a physical depiction... very good! I like multi-dimensional thinking...
I wanted to make something different. So if my previous render was based on applying psychedelic materials to imported figure, this time i decided to do some modelling in Bryce. Need to say, after being used to other applications (which are polygon modelling mostly and with more modern ergonomics which allow more quicker interaction through keyboard/mouse shortcuts), trying to construct in Bryce felt a bit tedious - but perhaps i haven't optimized my methods yet, though using director's camera helps greatly because of it's easy option of center object tracking. I also didn't understand whether Bryce refuses to accepts values like 0.2 when i input them in Attribute, as it was changing it to closest full number instead; so i had to move objects manually instead. However, now i appreciate Bryce's approach to booleans - that you can object placement and function at any time as it's not "applied operation".
So, this "Sculpture" which i tried to do. It's based on sculpture that i saw in book and liked. It's "Le Clown" by Henri Laurens, who was french cubism style artist (more information: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henri_Laurens ). Original looks like this: https://www.kuma.art/de/file/11477 . My recreation isn't precise as i think i didn't get all proportions and attitudes of elements right, and i also simplified some parts. I also gave it metallic material without additional drawings on surface together with pedestal while original looks like painted gypsum.
I guess this is my first render to use "premium" mode, as on "regular" image is much more noisy. Used HDRi is by Horo, i think, from "gemstones".
akmerlow - very well done model inspired by the clown. Subdivision modeler like Wings3D, Hexagon, etc. are currently more popular than booleans. I like booleans. Strange that 0.2 is not accepted in the attributes. What parameter was it?
Comments
Henryhor:
"The Homeless Hunchback"- looks very bohemian! "Superluminal intromission" - very pleasant metamorphic liquid.
-
adbc, Henryhor - thanks!
Cheers, ed3D
Wow, Henryhor, not only does the 'Homeless Hunchback' look abstract, but your title sounds abstract too.
Thanks also mtnmen
Akmerlow, very cool, and I hadn't noticed the faces until Henryhor pointed them out
You see, it's dilemma Thanks
akmerlow - Facing Dilemma came out excellent. Once this challenge gets to voting, we all will be facing dilemma.
Much thanks for cheering up, Horo!
@akmerlow... Facing Dilemma... really great love the colors and the texture...
Here is my second entry
"Abalone"
used one displaced grid from Hexagon textured in Bryce with heavy glass set against a black backdrop with 5 spot lights and 6 radial lights all with procedural texture gels
mtnmen - that looks great, it has a bit of a liquid look with the specular and rainbow-like colour elements.
@@akmerlow regarding "Facing Dilemma": Cocococo! (**)
@@mtnmen: "Abalone" has a strange and fascinating material!
@Thank you all for your friendly comments.
Super, mtnmen...I'm probably wrong, but I think you've captured here the irridescent colours (link to Les Cowleys wonderful site) of the actual shell in where the animal lives.
Jay
Second entrance: I'm basing this work around the old joke: 'do you like children?', 'yes, I love 'em, but I could never eat a whole one'. Again POV v FOV applied.
So, the title is: 'Love children, but never eat a whole one'.
Akmerlow: superb colourful abstract.
mtnmen: also very good. Nice is that the much more subdued colours of your work still lead to a very lively abstract.
Jamahoney: Very funny. Not so sure whether I would consider this abstract. By the way, the eye of the eater appears to be popping out. I assume that is intentional? And there are some very hard shadowlines that you might want to work on (e.g. on the upper lip and from the nose to the mouth). Hair looks very good, though.
Thanks, Hansmar...very observent - as to what abstract is...well???
Jay
Cheers_
Jamahoney : 'do you like children? _ _very cleaver
Ed3D...I have two nieces, two nephews, and they are the light of my life. I want to explore more with your comments: what are you actually asking???
Jay
@ Jamahoney:
Thanks for the comment. The metaballs on the left seemed to have a hump but couldn't be considered as a camel so I called it "the Hunchback". And since Notre Dame in Paris is severely damaged the Hunchback is homeless now... Long ago I made a pic called "Romeo's liquefaction on my bathroom wall (and Juliet doesn't feel very well either)". My best title ever.
Eating kids is like eating shrimps. Better remove the head. With ed3D's cleaver.
@ mtnmen: magical cave. One expects an apparition.
Oh wow, Henyhor, never picked up on the 'Homeless Hunchback' reference to the sad demise/burning of Notre Dame...apolgies for my ignorence.
I (like so many tourists) walked through its interior once...and what a wonderful experience - that window...phew. Let's hope the billions (yes, controverscial) will restore it back to how it was.
Jay
Jay - I rather see eating children as abstract than a bad habit. Though I agree with Hansmar's observations, I thought it was intentional to emphasize the abstractness.
Cheers, Horo, abstract can be abstract (the very notion that we are discussing 'abstractness' is, in itself, abstract - think self-awareness, time-awareness....phew...heavy stuff).
I think the theme that abstractness isn't just a representation of confusing-like pictures, images, etc., open to interpretation, but, more that on another level, the conscious and sub-conscious becomes exposed...visually.
Jay
Akmerlow - wow awesome colors, cool idea Facing Dilemma
Mtnmen - beautiful render, love the colors
Jay - eating children, cruel but lovely render
@@Jamahoney: A nightmarish concept which could possibly be solved........... with plenty of ketchup. ;)
Teasing aside: This scene could also depict your Inner Child which takes a curious look at the World.
mtnmen, hubert, Hansmar, mermaid010 - thanks!
-
mtnmen:
"Abalone" - wow, this is something slippery and slimy!
Jamahoney:
Thanks for that sea shell link. Live and learn, as they say.
"'Love children, but never eat a whole one" - ha, this one is eccentric! Expressions of their eyes are very surreal.
I think i have slightly different interpretation of vision:
I see child as passenger, and man-eater's head as some sort of transport, like airship of sorts. So he doesn't eat children, instead he is taxi for them. Or maybe his head is tower, so mouth is window? Which is close to what hubert proposes above.
horo, hubert, jamahoney, hansmar, mermaid010, akmerlow thanks for the great comments, and Jay... thanks for the link..I love irridescents
@jamahoney...Love children... at first I said this isn't abstract but more surreal... however, your thoughts about abstract thinking etc has brought me over to looking at this as abstract thought rather than just a physical depiction... very good! I like multi-dimensional thinking...
Gonna give this a try. I call it Electric Taffy
Super cool, Art.
I'm back with another entry.
I wanted to make something different. So if my previous render was based on applying psychedelic materials to imported figure, this time i decided to do some modelling in Bryce. Need to say, after being used to other applications (which are polygon modelling mostly and with more modern ergonomics which allow more quicker interaction through keyboard/mouse shortcuts), trying to construct in Bryce felt a bit tedious - but perhaps i haven't optimized my methods yet, though using director's camera helps greatly because of it's easy option of center object tracking. I also didn't understand whether Bryce refuses to accepts values like 0.2 when i input them in Attribute, as it was changing it to closest full number instead; so i had to move objects manually instead. However, now i appreciate Bryce's approach to booleans - that you can object placement and function at any time as it's not "applied operation".
So, this "Sculpture" which i tried to do. It's based on sculpture that i saw in book and liked. It's "Le Clown" by Henri Laurens, who was french cubism style artist (more information: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henri_Laurens ). Original looks like this: https://www.kuma.art/de/file/11477 . My recreation isn't precise as i think i didn't get all proportions and attitudes of elements right, and i also simplified some parts. I also gave it metallic material without additional drawings on surface together with pedestal while original looks like painted gypsum.
I guess this is my first render to use "premium" mode, as on "regular" image is much more noisy. Used HDRi is by Horo, i think, from "gemstones".
akmerlow - very well done model inspired by the clown. Subdivision modeler like Wings3D, Hexagon, etc. are currently more popular than booleans. I like booleans. Strange that 0.2 is not accepted in the attributes. What parameter was it?