1. ‘Burglar Baby

     

  2. Doodle from my sketchbook. I’ve been pretty inspired by Mcbess recently.

     

  3. Beautiful

    Daft Punk by Mark Abrahams

    (via fyeahdaftpunk)

     

  4. Speed Painting of Manet’s Absinthe Drinker- 30 min

     

  5. Oh, just makin flying cactuses. You?

     

  6. Played around with the camera a bit yesterday

     

  7. Some photos from the Tulsa Aquarium

     

  8. theairtightgarage:

    Career Timeline: 1985 - Internal Transfer

    In 1980, Moebius met and became enamored with French philosopher and spiritualist Jean-Paul Appel-Guéry. They formed a somewhat tight student/teacher relationship, something that Appel-Guéry did often, gaining him a following of people that believed in his new age teachings(some have said his group operated under suspiciously cult-like behaviors, and at one point Appel-Guéry told all of his followers that they had to move to Tahiti in order to achieve spiritual harmony, which Moebius did for a year). He had also convinced Moebius to re-examine his primary artistic subject matter:

    “Appel-Guéry encouraged Moebius to tap into the more positive zones of his subconscious. ‘Most of the people that were studying spirituality with Appel-Guéry did not know much about comics, but they immediately picked on the morbid, and overall negative feelings that permeated my work,’ said Moebius. ‘So I began to feel ashamed, and I decided to do something really different, just to show them that I could do it.’”

    —Randy & Jean-Marc Lofficier, from Moebius Comics #1, Caliber Comics, 1996

    So in the early 80s, along with Appel-Guéry, writer Paula Salomon, and animator Arnie Wong, Moebius began conceiving of an animated film called Internal Transfer. This was to be a full-length feature, meant to embody Appel-Guéry’s philosphical message. Most of the conceptual artwork was done in 1984 and 1985, including lengthy storyboards and an unfinished comic. Moebius and Wong even hand-animated a short ‘pilot’, which you can see here(at the 3:45 mark).

    The film lost all of its financing, and was abandoned in 1986. Appel-Guery’s influence on Moebius lived on though, as his Aedena Cycle is partially rooted in these concepts.

     

  9. (via deathoe)

     

  10. (via deathoe)