This is where you get to peek into the mind of the musician and graphic artist Robert Wright. My interest in art started as a high school student where I would paint Punk rock band album covers on the back panels of leather jackets. I made a lot of cash doing it too! I was also a graphic designer and silk screen artist with 4 years of offset lithography in high school. Getting sidetracked by music playing as a Heavy Metal Guitarist and vocalist, I kind of gave art a break for a while until the late 90ies. I needed album covers for my music project Digital Pump, so I started working with graphics again using the things I had learned from programming levels for the game Unreal. I was using just Bryce at first but started using Poser in my later work and importing the Poser models into Bryce. After a major Hard Drive crash in 2002, I lost all my programs, models and artwork I had done up to that date as well as all my recorded music. I was devastated and quit doing graphics. One of these days I will do some more artwork, but it has been so long I will have to relearn most of the graphics technics.
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Comments (3)
allengraph
very cool =-)
Pacifier
As far as I know the nazi-swastika was right winged, yours is left winged.
hemlock
Yeah, it was on purpose to counter the nazi clockwise popularization with an obvious use of the counter-clockwise religious symbolization of the buddhist/jain/hindu swastika representing well being, the sun, life in perpetuity, etc. During my religious studies, I thought it was very interesting to learn just how far-reaching and ancient (thousands of years BC) the swastika had actually been: from Persia, Pakistan, and Mesopotamia...found throughout Vienna, Italy, India, Turkey, and Greece...used by the Gallic, Teutonic, Scandinavian, Romans, early Christians, and Egyptians...adorning the monumental remains of primitive Mexicans and Peruvians...branded on priestesses and other females as a fertility rite, etc. Although not completely historically correct on a Focke Wulf 190, it was kind of "my little statement." But thanks for mentioning it; you get an A in observation skills ;-)