For me, art is a voyage of discovery. I am as surprised by the art I create as anyone else who views it. Though I constantly strive to improve my skills, I am much more interested in creating something new (and hopefully beautiful) under the sun than in craftsmanship. I feel that photography has superseded other forms of art when it comes to reproducing the external world -it is the interior landscape that I strive to explore and reveal.
BIO
Born in Paris, France in 1950. Moved to New York when I was 5 years old. From an early age, developed an (unhealthy? obsessive?) interest in fantasy, science fiction, surrealism and anything that was beautiful and mysterious. My parents called me "Jean de la Lune" because I was often distracted by things that they couldn't understand. Also had an aptitude for drawing from an early age, but never really pursued it seriously back then. Went away to college in 1967, at the time that the psychedelic zeitgeist was reaching critical mass & got swept up in the maelstrom. Ego disintegrated & a new one rose like a phoenix from the ashes. Began drawing & painting in a stream-of-consciousness mode, bypassing the rational mind. Fell in love, moved to Berkeley, California, and had a son. Took art classes (illustration, figure drawing, portraiture, color theory, etc.). In the late 70's, began playing with computers. Learned to program & wrote simple applications for generating visual patterns. Having no real aptitude for marketing my artwork, I instead embarked on a career in information technology, which lasted 22 years, at which time I quit (in May of 2003). My current incarnation as a digital artist began with the first release of Fractal Design Painter. I experienced a breakthrough with the first release of Bryce, which was the medium that enabled me to finally satisfy my creative impulses. I use many other supporting pieces of software (Amorphium, Poser, & several others), but they only provide me with input for Bryce. All of my images are rendered only in Bryce, with no post-processing at all. Each of them starts with a bare-bones idea or model or texture which I then attempt to allow to evolve in whatever direction "it" decides & which I have never been able to predict. I obsessively tweak shapes, colors, textures, & visual relationships until the image seems "right". If the final result is somewhat disturbing and disorienting, yet at the same time beautiful, then I have succeeded...
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Comments (15)
giulband
Fantastic creation !!!!
ralphwarnick
Delightful.
woodywoo
This is awesome !
ShadowWind
What a unique use of Bryce and a very cool one at that...Great work...
peedy
Beautiful! Gorgeous colors. Corrie
mbz2662
Very interesting and cool.
soffy
So beautiful colors and Bryce ABS****
anahata.c
The image affirms what you've written about demons---that they can be benevolent beings right alongside malevolent. An eye popping image. There's menace here---it has so many spindly profusions and laced sinewy enclosures, etc, that we could see this as a creature from the deep, emerging out of the ocean, and dripping with bad intentions. ("Hi! Hope you don't mind but we brought a FRIEND for dinner...he's harmless, but he EATS a lot...") But it's got so much light, balance, and sumptuousness, it could be a beneficent god or goddess, come to us to grant gifts. This piece is much closer to that than to a "devil". Maybe 'demon's history (from a root meaning "genius, offering," eventually meaning "a devil") tells us how we've handled wonder through the centuries: We've slowly turned it into objects of fear...In any case this is about the earlier meaning, and it's splendid! You get these sheen-filled surfaces, and chrome like reflections; and transparent space-age plastics, and glass-like orbs---which look like eyes---and head-dresses and oozes and deep orbs inside finger-y grasps (the green 'orbs' inside the red funnels, on each side at the bottom). (You know, it's très clumsy finding words for abstract shapes! Abstract art should come with numbered parts, and a glossary, and a printable .pdf!) I like that your peripheries are 'spun glass', which meanders on well out of the frame...This feels like it came right from Ancient India: 'Krishna' could've made this, when he opened his jaws for his friend Arjuna, on the vast battlefield of "The Mahabharata": Benevolent, scary and all-giving. Beautiful work, Claude. Same spirit that we see in your eye-popping photography.
TwoPynts
Epic! Alwasy love seeing new creative juices flowing from your computer and across the interwebs!
Faemike55
Very cool work thanks for sharing
cvrad
very cool image love the sculpture
UVDan
Amazing! You have been away from Bryce too long. The dark side beckons you!
auntietk
Thanks for the link! :) I would have missed this, and that would have been a shame. It's got such personality! I love the sense of transparency. It's only a demon, I suppose, if someone thinks it is. To me, it looks more like a motorcycle. But hey ... I'm not much on religious interpretation, so don't go by me. :P
irisinthespring
Cool work!
danapommet
Alien invasion for sure - great zoom and colors!