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Axolatte Keychain
Coffee to go, with no spillage ♥
I was doing some Malon doodles and this popped out
Link's look is based on the Child timeline growing-up design I did the other day...
A cheeky pink Link.
March 2019 Work In Progress (5/6)
-Sleepy bulbasaur -Diglett charm restocks -Commission for a Carbuncle from the Final Fantasy games
Want to see more WIPs? Go check out my Patreon!
Etsy | Instagram | Patreon
Finally. A playlist for me
I make pretty art
No really...i do make pretty art...you should go buy some, maybe pretty up your walls a bit Sooooo preettttyyyy
Doodles
I like to draw people.
And not "normal" people either. I can care less about your stereotypical white washed perception of "Normal" and "Beautiful" and whatever other adjective you need to describe "Boring, skinny, white girls". What's the fun in that anyway? That's something that you see everyday. In the media, magazines, movies etc etc. What's the fun of drawing someone who has been deemed perfect and photoshopped into that perfection to begin with any way? Give me your freaks, weirdos, bums, and snazzy dressers any day.
Give me weird hair, weird make up and weird clothes.
Give me flaws, imperfections and odd shapes.
I am not judging the people that I see, I am not mocking the people I see, and I do not mean any harm to them either. I merely want to draw them because there was something unique about them that caught my eye out of the hundreds of people who walk past my stand on a Saturday.
Out of Order
When I first heard of glitch art I was like "OK, now they're officially just making shit up. They're not even trying anymore. Gimmie a break." It's starting to grow on me now, though.
I'm learning more about computer science, and the more I learn the more I think about how numbers, complex math and formal (computer) logic are now so critical to this new cyberconnected world that's emerging. Mathematics and computer science are defined by predictable, reliable, and clearly defined rules; to work with math and computers is to work in a world "hard-wired" into the confines of observable, verifiable reality.
Even so, there remains the existence of disruptions and unknown factors, even in computers. The ongoing paradox of human knowledge is that the further outward the field of human knowledge expands, the more exponentially the horizon of the unknown expands with it. And so we have two factors in play: 1) the predictable order of universal laws is a verifiably real thing, and 2) the unpredictable chaos seeping through the fabric of reality is also an inevitably real thing. You could say it's the macrocosm to the microcosm of human societies: how is it that the forces of wealth, power, and religion in human societies exert so much control over the lives of the common masses, yet for all their efforts, the world remains so out of control?
To me, glitch art - aside from being visually interesting in itself - illustrates that idea of the natural order and chaotic disruption interplaying with each other. I've not tried my hand at creating any myself, yet, and make no claim to know what current glitch artists think of their work, if they think about it at all. This is my initial impression as an outsider.
-- Brother Virgil