Showing posts with label animal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label animal. Show all posts

map of the supercontinent Pangaea


"Our world long ago, all the lands joined together
When first appeared beasties of fur and of feather"

This is a map of the world as it may have looked around 240 million years ago in the middle of the Triassic period. Drawn with pen and ink, coloured and textured digitally.

Two massive lands Gondwana and Laurasia had just bumped into each other, creating the Appelation Mountains and forming the supercontinent Pangaea.

Although there are other maps of Pangaea around, I could not find any illustrated in an old world style with monsters roaming the land and seas. So I just had to have a go at making one myself. Yep... nerd. I know.

Please note, I am an artist not a scientist. Although I did a fair bit of research to get it as right as I could, there is still plenty of artistic license. For instance, I made up all the rivers - sorry, I just couldn't find reference which told me where the real ones were. A few of the mountains could well be wrong too. And that volcano in between South America and Africa, well it just looked good there. So to any time travellers out there, this map is not to be used for navigation, it is decoration only!




Meet the beasties...

The animals featured are all carefully based on life that would have been kicking around within ten million years or so of that time. I intentionally didn't label them on the map, as I think leaving the creatures a little vague and generic aids imagination. Further more, when these creatures actually existed they didn't have titles such as Saurisichisan or Amonite, instead they would have thought of each other as 'the scaley thing with big teeth it is better not to go near' or 'the tasty little furred critter' or maybe 'the giant winged one who poos from the sky'.

But for the curious, and for a closer look at all the detail going on, here is a list of what the beasties are meant to represent. (You are allowed to scroll quickly through this bit. I am being a little self indulgent)


Cynodont illustration
Cynodont
Eoraptor

Nothosaur
Stagonolepis


Coelophysis
Placodont


Pterorynchus
Thalattosaur


Rutiodon
Panphagia


Cynognathian
Ichtheosaur


Eudimorphodon
Amonite


Eoraptor
Rauisuchus

Dicynodont
Helicoprion - alas I drew its mouth
swirl upside down. Whoops!


Temnospondyl










The Triassic plants featured are fern trees, ferns, conifers, giant club mosses, quillworts and cycads.

As you can see this artwork has an extraordinary amount of texture and detail. It is designed to look its best when printed at poster sizes. It would be ideal educational artwork for a classroom or decoration for a kids room.

R :)

Illustration Friday - stripes

broadclub cuttlefish animated gif

I saw a great documentary on tv called 'Cuttlefish - Kings of Camouflage'.

One of the cuttlefish featured in the documentary was a Broadclub Cuttlefish which has the remarkable ability to bamboozle its prey with a crazy strobing stripe pattern. Truly bizzare stuff.

If you want to see a real one in action here's a link I found to a clip from the documentary.

Cuttlefish are so cool.

R :)

Christmas Cephalopod card art

Did you know I am selling Christmas cards featuring my artwork online via Redbubble? Buy online and have them delivered straight to you!

Here are a couple of non religious and mostly tasteful designs.

Christmas cephalopod
Cephalopod is a fancy way of saying octopus
  • Discount of 30% on every order of 16+ cards
  • Superior writing surface for your words of wisdom
  • 300gsm card with a satin finish
  • Greeting cards supplied with envelopes and optional cellophane sleeves, ideal for reselling
  • Standard Greeting Card - 100 x 150mm / 4” x 6”
  • Large Greeting Card - 125 x 190 mm / 5” x 7.5”
  • Postcard - 100 x 150mm / 4” x 6”


If you have recieved a Christmas card from me sometime in the last few years these design may well look familiar...

R :)

Illustration Friday - mesmerising deer-cat


Look into the eyes of the deer-cat. Look deep into its eyes. 

Feel the mesmerising power of the deer-cat. 
The deer-cat wants you to leave a comment. 
You know you will...

This is a scan of a stencil art Christmas card I sent to friends and family. The original had glow in the dark eyes! For this weeks illustration friday theme 'mesmerising' I scanned a print and gave it a slight animated tweak.

Its okay. The deer-cat says you can look away now.

happy wanderer

happy wanderer illustration


I was at a loss with what to draw over the weekend, so I had a look in the garden and discovered the happy wanderer is flowering.
Oh, and here are some dugong sketches too.
R :)


science fiction homages and aardvarks

illustration of Herbert George Wells and his Martian walking machines


triffid illustrationscience fiction iconography with aardvarks

mad max aardvark illustrationaardvark darthvader

As a member of the Melbourne Science Fiction Club I get to use their magnificent library, listen to author talks, and meet other like minded nerdy sci fi types. In return I like to occasionally contribute art for the club magazine.

Here is a collection the cover art I have contributed.

As the club magazine is called Ethel the Aardvark you will note a recurring theme of aardvarks. I don't know why they named the magazine after a Monty Python sketch (Ethel the aardvark goes quantity surveying), but I suppose it's as good a name as any other and it gives me the opportunity to create absurd science fiction homages with aardvarks.

illustration of kids and animals on a hotted up thong trike


cartoon illustration of children and animals riding a motorised flip flop



A couple of weeks ago I did a quick line image for Illustration Friday of a cockatoo driving its friends around on a hotted up thong-trike.

I couldn't leave it uncoloured, so here it is in all its Aussie colour palette glory.

R :)


spoonbill stirring tea

cartoon illustration of a spoonbill at a tea party

A spoon shaped face should never be 
socially deterring. 
It is ideal at tea parties 
for doing all the stirring.