Grill: My Old Art
You know what time it is!!!
While I was cleaning out my computer a few days ago, I came across some old 3-D art which I had made a few years back. It was pretty interesting to see how much I have improved since I made these old pieces of rubbish which you'll see in a minute. It was like my own art expo, where I was the main attraction. Anyway, here are a few old pieces that I just thought I'd put up for the heck of it. Time to grill!
The Robot: (2001)
This was the first piece of 3-D art that I had ever made. It was based loosely off of Gir from the television show Invader Zim. It took me about five minutes to make, and I was actually really proud of my work; even if it is just an untextured, poorly lit, hunk of something. Junk.

Smacky the Freaky Bird (2001)
One day I decided to test out the new feather texture I had gotten for the animation program that I was using. I could not make a really detailed bird back in 2001, so this is what came out instead. A bird that looked like a piece of wood. Oh well, I guess it is better than nothing right?

Different, Yet the Same (2002)
This render was actually done for a project at school. It projected the message that people may look different in one way, but they also can have things in common. This is a very cheesy way of putting it, but I don't really care about how my wording sounds right now. (It's 2:46.) I guess I didn't really get my message across; because all I see here is a picture of two poorly built, flat nosed wannabe humans that look more like babushkas then anything else.

Abstract: (2002)
Wow. That's all I can say is wow. I put a whole bunch of circles around a light source; circles that look like chewed bubble gum and jawbreakers. I could just imagine what people would say in the art galleries:
Billy: Hey Bertha, look at this piece over here.
Bertha: What is it supposed to be? Is the last one on the right a piece of chewed gum?
Billy: I'm unsure, but it seems that the creator of this piece was obviously thinking about circles when he was creating it.
Bertha: You're right, I wouldn't be surprised if there was a bowling ball hidden in there somewhere.
Billy: I feel stupid for just looking at this thing.
Bertha: That's because you are.
See? Now wasn't that piece just amazing? We have come to the end of this early morning roast, tune in next week when I blast television shows that start with the letter B out of this world!
While I was cleaning out my computer a few days ago, I came across some old 3-D art which I had made a few years back. It was pretty interesting to see how much I have improved since I made these old pieces of rubbish which you'll see in a minute. It was like my own art expo, where I was the main attraction. Anyway, here are a few old pieces that I just thought I'd put up for the heck of it. Time to grill!

This was the first piece of 3-D art that I had ever made. It was based loosely off of Gir from the television show Invader Zim. It took me about five minutes to make, and I was actually really proud of my work; even if it is just an untextured, poorly lit, hunk of something. Junk.

Smacky the Freaky Bird (2001)
One day I decided to test out the new feather texture I had gotten for the animation program that I was using. I could not make a really detailed bird back in 2001, so this is what came out instead. A bird that looked like a piece of wood. Oh well, I guess it is better than nothing right?

Different, Yet the Same (2002)
This render was actually done for a project at school. It projected the message that people may look different in one way, but they also can have things in common. This is a very cheesy way of putting it, but I don't really care about how my wording sounds right now. (It's 2:46.) I guess I didn't really get my message across; because all I see here is a picture of two poorly built, flat nosed wannabe humans that look more like babushkas then anything else.

Abstract: (2002)
Wow. That's all I can say is wow. I put a whole bunch of circles around a light source; circles that look like chewed bubble gum and jawbreakers. I could just imagine what people would say in the art galleries:
Billy: Hey Bertha, look at this piece over here.
Bertha: What is it supposed to be? Is the last one on the right a piece of chewed gum?
Billy: I'm unsure, but it seems that the creator of this piece was obviously thinking about circles when he was creating it.
Bertha: You're right, I wouldn't be surprised if there was a bowling ball hidden in there somewhere.
Billy: I feel stupid for just looking at this thing.
Bertha: That's because you are.
See? Now wasn't that piece just amazing? We have come to the end of this early morning roast, tune in next week when I blast television shows that start with the letter B out of this world!
Hi! Just want to say what a nice site. Bye, see you soon.
»
Posted by
Anonymous |
2:24 PM