I was alone in Paris, and was in a mood, so I created something. I sketched out la Notre Dame de Paris while in front of her, then added the figures later. This one was trapped in my head for a while, glad it's finally out.
Small update... This artwork got published in a special Notre-Dame hard-cover issue of a French magazine. It is uncredited as per my request. And the editor decided to leave the ‘artist profile’ page completely blank in my honor. This ode to anonymity makes me happy, somehow.
Small update... This artwork got published in a special Notre-Dame hard-cover issue of a French magazine. It is uncredited as per my request. And the editor decided to leave the ‘artist profile’ page completely blank in my honor. This ode to anonymity makes me happy, somehow.
This pleases me. And the fact that the upper-left corner of the previous page has the word 'Escape' is oddly fitting. Congratulations on getting published.
Yeah,Chase I wish that painting would've been nice on the cover of the New Yorker magazine as well.
And Yes could be a good idea to those editors to keep your name uncredited too.
popularized by a Twitter account in 2010. It is named after the misunderstood giant in the 2003 film Big Fish. Older or alternative terms used locally include simply "the fog" or sometimes "Big Mama", Seasonal Names: It is often associated with the terms "June Gloom" or "Fogust" due to its prevalence in the summer months.
Did you know....the horns on the viking's helmets are a myth? The popular image of the "horned Viking" can be traced back to the 1870s. Costume designer Carl Emil Doepler created horned helmets for Richard Wagner’s opera cycle Der Ring des Nibelungen to enhance the characters' theatrical presence. (I BELIEVE in the Where in Time game, they tell us this too....)