Friday, August 12, 2011

Moth Eyes

Just finished this guy last night, decided to post the original scan, before I go in and do some digital stuff - it's part of a series I'm doing on Biomimetics. This ones about moths and thier eyes which are covered in a nanostructured film that eliminates reflections, allowing moths to see well in the dark, as well as to not be seen by predators. The structure consists of a hexagonal pattern of tiny bumps, each of them roughly 200nm high (nanometers - really, really small) and spaced 300nm apart. The way it works has something to do with the fact that the bumps are smaller than the wavelength of visible light, which creates this anti-reflective effect... I'm not exactly an expert on the subject, but I'm always inspired by science and technology - and especially interested in this idea of learning from nature. We're finding out with modern science that nature really is the most advanced form of technology out there (it has had 3.8 billion years to develop, after all) and we're finally beginning to be able to understand that on a meaningful level, and make use of the knowledge.

Friday, August 5, 2011

White Nose Syndrome

Apparently in caves across North America, bats are being killed off en mass by a poorly understood sickness called white nose syndrome. It was first detected 2006, and has gone on to kill over a million bats since, with no signs of stopping. The disease leaves the bats with white patches all over, particularly on the nose, has the appearance of mould, and is predicted to cause the "little brown bat" to become extinct within 20 years as well as making the situation of several species that are already endangered much worse, including the "big-eared bat" and the "indiana bat". I wanted to accentuate the idea of extinction by drawing the bat completely solitary, with nothing around it at all... as the bacteria Geomyces destructans slowly destroys it.

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Quantum Compass

So apparently new research indicates that a quantum effect known as entaglement is responsible for birds' (and possibly other animals) ability to sense and navigate with earths magnetic feild - the way it works is that differences in the way entagled electrons wobble creates visible patterns on the birds retina that can be used as a compass. I just had to do a drawing about this - how cool!

Thursday, July 14, 2011

Connectomes



Oh yeah and here is the finished version of a piece I posted a while ago... mostly had it on the first go, but just wasn't satisfied so I went back in, redesigned the digital element and did a little more painting.

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Scientist Sketches

Steven Weinberg
Brian Greene
Paul Davies

Reza Aslan Sam Harris



Walter Sinott-Armstrong


Roger Bingham



So recently my buddy introduced me to this great site called The Science Network. Tons of talks and debates from some prominent modern scientists across a broad spectrum of subjects... there's always something interesting to check out. Anyway, I've been having some fun drawing the faces of the various scientists from the videos... (edit: so Reza Aslan is not a scientist, and the drawings of him and Sam Harris are actually from a debate i saw here (just the first video in a series))

Sunday, January 23, 2011


Been busy; working a lot, attempting to draw and paint as much as possible, and taking a yoga teacher training course that has been extremely interesting. Feel like I've finally found a working process that really actually works for me... Got distracted there for a while, lost in process and my own thoughts. Produced some cool work, but it was taking forever and I spent more time thinking about it than actually doing anything. It didn't resonate.

Decided to start with some subject matter that wasn't so personal, so I chose science. Watched a TED talks video about connectomes, and got this. It happened really naturally, starting with an inspiring sketch in my sketchbook, and moved on to become a final in the process of a day or two. Something just felt right.


Thursday, July 15, 2010



So it's been a while. But I'm back with some (mostly) finished work that I'm pretty jazzed about. These are the finished peices of the sketches I posted months and months ago... they're all cut out paper, painted and layered... it's quite a process, but I'm really happy with the results. Sorry for the crappy pics.