this is a sample page i did for dc comics. it's also the first piece i did after dreamwave closed down. not too shabby if i say so. always room for improvement, but i like it. not bad after drawing transformers for so long. l ike drawing where i get to drop a lot of black down.
i love black >_< dear God i cant get enough of tar black edgy shading.. the piece itself is amazing - but since i see the green checkmark on the thought header... i'm going to venture a few remarks? *cowers* when i saw the church columns i was really expecting something large and serpentine although i love the change of scenery.. it kindof bothers my eyes to see it contrasting directly with the other straight solid buildings behind.... also it looks like the gargoyle heads were designed around his posture - like he was drawn first and the scenery was given an afterthought... i'm just trying to visualize how the whole cathedral fits together.. the gothic building does greatly compliment the caped crusader's aura, grandeous but so out of place and misunderstood in the thriving metropolis behind
not like any city... specially in this day and age - older buildings are surrounded by slums until it assimilates the grime and is forgotten... some new england cities still keep the older charm but nowadays its all silicone and billboards...
are you sure, i was in new york and there were tones of older building surrounded by newer towers of glass and steel. also in toronto there is the old and new, and there not surrounded by slums. i guess it all depends on where you live. but to get back to the main point, gotham is a city where they just keep building around the old. who knows how much of the old city is historical, and you can't tear that down. like the church batman is standing on.
meh every plae is different... i havent lived near the best of cities.. and that is true.. i love how in the batman/superman crossovers gotham is still art deco while metropolis is completely modern...... always confused me as a child
The Artist has requested Critique on this Artwork
Please sign up or login to post a critique.