artotem iv painting as a Spherical Depth Map b
by Paul Davenport
Original - Not For Sale
Price
Not Specified
Dimensions
100.000 x 100.000 cm.
This piece is not for sale. Please feel free to contact the artist directly regarding this or other pieces.
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Title
artotem iv painting as a Spherical Depth Map b
Artist
Paul Davenport
Medium
Painting - Oil Paint On Board And Digital
Description
This 'Extraction' is a spherical Depth Map of my 'artotem iv' oil painting. Ive just started experimenting with Depth Maps and thought thought some of my paintings would produce some interesting shapes. Any white plots as '0' and appears on the surface of the 3d sphere, black is theoretically in the centre, and averything else is plotted accordingly.
These Spherical Depth Maps of the 'atrotem iv' painting are all of the same model, viewed from various positions.
Have been looking today for suppliers that could print this out as a solid object, which I would love to try.
Uploaded
March 6th, 2015
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Viewed 2,148 Times - Last Visitor from Fairfield, CT on 04/25/2024 at 2:51 AM
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Comments (18)
Christopher James
Congratulation.....your wonderful work has been featured in the 1000 Views on 1 Image Group l/f/p
Paul Davenport
Thank you to Fred Jinkins for featuring this artwork in the 'We Paint Every Day' group :-)
Paul Davenport
Thank you very much for the feature in the " Images That Excite You" group John :-)... mutch appreciated!
Maggie Terlecki
I was intrigued with what you said, about it being a function in photoshop, so went to look it up and found out, people use the function in photoshop to take 2d objects and create 3d objects with them. It is something I might play with one day in the future, as it is always fun to try and see what interesting things one can do by manipulation. This is very different and I like it; thank you for answering! :-) Maggie
Paul Davenport replied:
I knew that:-)... Its just that Ive been using photoshop for as long as its been around, as it really is designed for commercial work... so things usually fit a requirement! - Ive never come across a commercial requirement to use this function at all... I think its strange being there! - there are much more controllable and flexible ways of producing 3d renderings!... but it is fun :-)
Maggie Terlecki
wow, not really sure how you did this, and yes, I read the description but it's very cool and incredibly interesting. I hope you find a 3d printer to make the entire shapes. :-) Maggie
Paul Davenport replied:
It's a Photoshop function... I only quite recently discovered PS could handle 3D! It basically wraps your image around a sphere and then etches it away based on tones, and creates a 3D model... it doesn't have to be a sphere - I did some flat ones, that end up looking like those office games you press your face into:-) ... I cannot imagine what people use this function for really!
Ines Garay-Colomba
Love it Paul ! F
Paul Davenport replied:
Happy you like it Ines... just very interesting watching these pop up on the screen!
Johnny Hildingsson
Lovely work
Paul Davenport replied:
Thank you Johnny.... happy you like it.... it is rather odd to think that these are contained in the original paintings!