While out with the family yesterday my son Talbot made a new friend who took an interest in my sketchbook. I asked him to let me know which character was his favourite then promised to animate it. I stupidly forgot to ask his name... if you're out there send me an email so I can properly dedicate this to you.
After three and a half hours taking in the texture, detail and spatial relationships of an environment your senses are primed and the world looks astounding for the rest of the day.
Oppy is a charming individual who has been running collaborative drawing projects under the banner The Scribble Project. I've been following the project for a while, and decided it was about time I participated.
Melbourne chocolate company Koko Black are running a creative drawing prize. I've always loved the way hares box each other and thought it would make for a bold image.
More wacky characters from my sketchbooks moving in sync with the musical stylings of freezwalm. The track is appropriately called Wax My Crack
I've scanned two sketchbooks full of a year and a half worth of weird sketchy friends style characters, have a browse in the sketchbook section. I'm also working on a new Sketchy Friends clip, synced to the track Wax Your Crack, by freezwalm.
An very short animation created in a day for the Barnyard Animals session of the animation club's Secret Handshake.
Printed from a drawing for 2008, the year of the rat defeating the year of the pig.
Moving away from cartoons for a moment, this print is made from mirrored photocopies of a sketch of Buddy, who sadly passed away in 2004. You can see the original drawing on the sketchbook page.
An odd animation created for the Superheroes session of the animation club's Secret Handshake.
It was the most popular on the night!
This piece was created for Illustrators Australia's annual 9x5 Exhibition and Auction.
These prints were created from frames taken out of various animated loops I've created over the past few months.
A prologue created for a Heidelberg Theatre production of Skull in Connemara, directed by Justin Stephens. It's about a 60 / 40 split between rotoscoping and imagined animation.
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