This is one of the pencil pictures I was asked to draw. Today I could finish it. I had a good flow.
The result of the scanning is not very good, but it is sufficient enough to show you what I was working with the past few weeks.
The picture itself is a replica of an oil painting, original artist was Rudolph Alt and it was created in 1802. It show the Kartause Gaming, a famous church in Austria.
here is the original artwork: https://www.online.landessammlungen.....rtause-gaming#
The result of the scanning is not very good, but it is sufficient enough to show you what I was working with the past few weeks.
The picture itself is a replica of an oil painting, original artist was Rudolph Alt and it was created in 1802. It show the Kartause Gaming, a famous church in Austria.
here is the original artwork: https://www.online.landessammlungen.....rtause-gaming#
Category Artwork (Traditional) / Scenery
Species Unspecified / Any
Size 1280 x 872px
File Size 543.4 kB
I love your take on it reimagining the vivid colors in contrasting greyscale. Despite the values being entirely different in a lot of sections, it still manages to be identifiable as a tribute to the original work. It's incredible and breathtaking.
Also would you say that this is an "alt" of Rudolph Alt's work? :P
Also would you say that this is an "alt" of Rudolph Alt's work? :P
Looking at your work here and at the original, it's astounding how you've been able to reproduce it with such precision. Absolutely beautiful though with such intricate detail I can only imagine how much hard work it will have been. Given how good it looks with the scan it must be even more impressive seeing it in life.
Thank you very much.
The original souce material I was given was just about the size of a postmark and I never could have worked with that. So I searched on the internet and to my unexpected luck there was exactly one entry with this particular painting featured on an auction side.
It really was time consuming, that´s for sure.
The scann is a little off, because the paper was too large to place it well enough on the scanner, but the most important part is visible.
Two more pictures to go and then this order will be finished
The original souce material I was given was just about the size of a postmark and I never could have worked with that. So I searched on the internet and to my unexpected luck there was exactly one entry with this particular painting featured on an auction side.
It really was time consuming, that´s for sure.
The scann is a little off, because the paper was too large to place it well enough on the scanner, but the most important part is visible.
Two more pictures to go and then this order will be finished
Wait...is this Hallstatt, Austria? My computer gave me a lockscreen of it in Winter and it looked beautiful! The location is also beautiful itself regardless of what season it is.
That's not a joke by the way, my computer randomizes what location's photos are on my lockscreen, and I got Winter Hallstatt Austria today. It can give me photos from Japan, China, America, South America, Mexico, the UK, even Islands! Hallstatt looks so beautiful.
That's not a joke by the way, my computer randomizes what location's photos are on my lockscreen, and I got Winter Hallstatt Austria today. It can give me photos from Japan, China, America, South America, Mexico, the UK, even Islands! Hallstatt looks so beautiful.
No. Hallstatt is located in Salzburg, another district of Austria. Gaming can be found in the district Lower-Austria. The original name for this location was "Kartäuser Kloster Marienthron"
Here are the infos, if you are interested: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaming_Charterhouse
Here are the infos, if you are interested: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaming_Charterhouse
Whoa, I once saw something similar but it was not quite a chapel. But it was a sort of square-shaped estate that was around the size of a small palace or mansion, and it was located somewhere within or near Greece or Rome. But it was built so long ago that it was buried and had collapsed from errosion and the elements.
It looks beautiful, though I don't know if that buried estate was as big as this chapel. Either way, both look beautiful! Well, the buried one used to look beautiful, the ones who excavated it tried to envision what it use to look like in nice condition.
It looks beautiful, though I don't know if that buried estate was as big as this chapel. Either way, both look beautiful! Well, the buried one used to look beautiful, the ones who excavated it tried to envision what it use to look like in nice condition.
Vielen Dank^^
To be honest, this image above is just made with pencil and no ink was used. Due to the paper I was working with a little more pressure with the pencil resulted in a much more darker shading, but it was tricky: Too much pressure and the paper would have ripped.
The result looks good nontheless, that I admit^^ thanks again
To be honest, this image above is just made with pencil and no ink was used. Due to the paper I was working with a little more pressure with the pencil resulted in a much more darker shading, but it was tricky: Too much pressure and the paper would have ripped.
The result looks good nontheless, that I admit^^ thanks again
It really is.
This is how the church looks like today:
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipe.....senansicht.jpg
This is how the church looks like today:
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipe.....senansicht.jpg
FA+

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