David Robinson is a 2D and 3D digital artist. He has been a member of and staff artist for Ad Astra Magazine for the National Space Society. He is also the current staff artist for the Orange County Space Society California and the Journal of United Societies in Space, Inc. He has created artwork for the Mars Homestead Project and was picked to judge the Space Art Calendar contest sponsored by the National Space Society this past year.
In addition, David is an artist member of the International Association of Astronomical Artists (IAAA).
David was one of eight artists picked to highlight the latest version of the 3D program Bryce by DAZ and you can find his Bio there. Bryce has currently over one million users worldwide.
David’s work has been featured by Ad Astra magazine, the Mars Society, Space.com, the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, the Hemet Science and Water Museum, Royal Astronomical Society of Canada, Harper & Collins books, Smithsonian books, the Space Review, the Sci-Fi Channel, as well as numerous other aerospace publications.
His work has been shown at the ISDC (International Space Development Conference) in Washington, DC, Los Angeles, and Dallas, Texas.
David has won numerous awards for his work in the Bryce communities as well as other 3D communities on the web.
If you would like to see more of David’s work, you can visit his website at http://www.bambam131.com or https://david-robinson.pixels.com/
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Comments (9)
Eugenius
Very cool scenery; the water is a nice touch.
cjones
Nice space scene and excellent ring system. Though that asteroid does look as if it's precariously balanced on the brow of the hill.
Spiritbro77
Nice rings! Nice star field too, do you do that in bryce or import it?
jenay
cool pic - i like the theme...
Bambam131
The star field was created doing each star one by one in Universe, hope this helps ;-)
Bambam131
the asteroid does look like it's too close but actually it's quite far away. The planet with out the rings itself XYZ perportions are set at 12000 all together with ring it come out to around 15000. So if I actually took the Jupiter2 and put it up next to the planet it almost looks like a dot next to it. This took over 24 hrs to render. Thanks for the comment....;-) By the way, the reason I can allow for long render time is that I have 3 P-III system on my network at home...;-) all with 768 megs of ram and lots of harddrive space. I'm not bragging, that was just a question someone had asked. Why do I allow for such long render time. Hope this helps...:-{)
zhaanman
This is Great I love how you have a reflexion of the landscape in the lower half of the Jupiter 2 very nice touch.
SteveJax
Great?!? Try Superb! Excellent! Yowsa!
SeigMancer
Awesome work, great planetary work. Great terrain Great image overall :D