I just discovered the work of Peter Yuill and am totally wowed! Apparently he is a Sheridan Illustration Graduate and now lives in Hong Kong and does incredible work with ink. Just take a look at this stunning work that he is still working on now:
He does very nice perspective drawings in ink as well:
Peter Yuill's Blog
Showing posts with label perspective. Show all posts
Showing posts with label perspective. Show all posts
Friday, 25 November 2011
Peter Yuill
Wednesday, 16 November 2011
Mathew Borrett
Thanks to Jonathan for introducing me to the work of Mathew Borrett! He is an artist from right here in Ontario, and a graduate of OCAD. I love his drawings of small nooks, crannies and rooms. This is what Mathew Borrett has to say about his work:
From a very early age I used to have frequent dreams about finding hidden rooms between rooms in my house. Usually some facet of my fears or desires would be present in these rooms. As a Lego fanatic, I'd often find fantastic new Lego sets I didn't know existed (which made waking up a disappointment). Later we moved into an old farmhouse with lots of nooks and crannies and a basement that often flooded. It underwent a lot of renovation over the 17 years we lived there, and I was always fascinated when a wall was removed or temporarily breached and you could pass from one room to another in a new way. The scope of the dreams expanded to include strange gaps and holes and secret shafts that dropped away into spooky abysses. Sometimes I'd explore basements beneath the basement, or attics beyond the attic. I think I've probably explored a thousand different dream versions of that old house.
Mathew Borrett's Website
From a very early age I used to have frequent dreams about finding hidden rooms between rooms in my house. Usually some facet of my fears or desires would be present in these rooms. As a Lego fanatic, I'd often find fantastic new Lego sets I didn't know existed (which made waking up a disappointment). Later we moved into an old farmhouse with lots of nooks and crannies and a basement that often flooded. It underwent a lot of renovation over the 17 years we lived there, and I was always fascinated when a wall was removed or temporarily breached and you could pass from one room to another in a new way. The scope of the dreams expanded to include strange gaps and holes and secret shafts that dropped away into spooky abysses. Sometimes I'd explore basements beneath the basement, or attics beyond the attic. I think I've probably explored a thousand different dream versions of that old house.
Mathew Borrett's Website
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