![]() ![]() Kerem Beyit, on the other hand, decided to embrace the old style of D&D and change it up a bit - making it into digital art rather than traditional. The text above is taken from Dragon Art by Graeme Aymer (ISBN 978-1-84786-300-3). I envisioned the dragons in Todd Lockwood’s style, one of the original Dungeons and Dragons (D&D) artists, which made each different type of dragon look unique. His work is phenomenal, and his dragon art some of which we were lucky enough to feature in our illustrated book Dragon Art cannot fail to appeal to any lover of the mystical. ![]() For the majority of my life, I have always loved art related to dragons, but it seemed no artist could capture how I envisioned them. The reason why I am so fond of Kerem’s art is because, in my opinion, he has captured the true essence of dragons in his art, and his detail in his other fantasy art is breathtaking. Graeme Aymer has been writing about creativity and design for over ten years for titles that include Computer Arts, Computer Arts Projects and MacWorld. ![]() ![]() Kerem has also been featured in the book Dragon Art by Graeme Aymer: a book featuring the best dragon artists of all time (a link to Dragon Art on amazon.ca can be seen at the end of this post). He is famous in the fantasy artist world and is followed by over 79,000 people on DeviantART (his page alone has gotten over 2 million views). He has done countless artwork in the fantasy realm ranging from card art to cover illustrations, character concepts to game art for World of Warcraft. One of my favourite illustrators of all time is Turkish illustrator Kerem Beyit. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |