Based in Vienna, digital artist Georg Hübner says in an interview for IEEE Computer Graphics Magazine : “…sensitive people feel and know there is more than one level in our world. The level we all well know is the purchasable, the touchable. This reality doesn’t interest me so much in creating my artwork.  Too many artists through history have done great veridical paintings. There is nothing to top for me. The ‘things between and behind’ is precisely what I’m looking for when I create my digital images. Pictures occupy my thoughts long before they are transposed.          Experiences, feelings, dreams.... this is the material from which the real form arise. With the aid of photographs, photo files as well as 2-D, 3-D and fractal programs, the final image is composed.†My pictures are regularly exhibited at Pixart and in many leading online galleries like here on Renderosity. If you want to purchase a high quality archival inkjet print or poster please visit Digital Paintings
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Comments (12)
fractalinda
An original, enchanting and beautiful composition. So excellent!
thomaniac
A really coool composition! Like it very much!
blatte
Neat. Like an abstract sculptor's take on icebergs. Very graceful and elegant.
leanndra
An unusual and excellent piece of art! Love the flood effect! It snowed here today too! Leann
Redshift
I like this, Excellent composition!
Deagol
I'm with Linda
CavalierLady
Very original indeed. Excellent!
algra
Beautiful plasticity and pleasant lines!
mansco
One of your best, my friend, congratulations!
Rykk
VERY creative image and composition!
morin3000
Very nice work, great fractal and reflection!!!! V
Turin_Returns
How dare you! Why would you consign penguins to somewhere so obviously hostile to their physiognomy? You have also erronously assumed the stereotypical range of monotone hues that are believed to placate penguins. It is a lie! My investigations had lead me to discover that penguins enjoy a broad spectrum of chromaticity, from delicate pastels to vibrant fluroscent shades. I believe the misunderstanding arose from a fallacious mistranslation of the name 'penguin' from the Welsh words 'Pen - Gwyn', meaning 'white headed' or 'having a mental preference for the colour white'. The name is in fact an Anglicization of the word 'pwhnggrrnngwgn', which means 'hoping-we-evolve-into-a-lifeform-that-spends-a-lot-of-time-on-the-beach-being-feed-by-humans' in the most common penguin language, Prrepharunce-phurphharrqkng