I’m experimenting with dark background and rust. You might know the robot from Peachtober’s “Robot”. I found myself liking this fella.
Anyway! I want to share the timelapse video, but I want to be mindful of my site storage too. For the time being — until I found an alternative — you can find the timelapse video in my Instagram “nindya_draws”.
While I love the idea, the colors came off too strong, and I just realized I went overboard with Overlay layer after I’m done. It also feels half-done, and I know I can do better.
Ancient Greek and Roman sculpture was once colorful, vibrantly painted and richly adorned with detailed ornamentation. Chroma: Ancient Sculpture in Color reveals the colorful backstory of polychromy—meaning “many colors,” in Greek—and presents new discoveries of surviving ancient color on artworks in The Met’s world-class collection.
The exhibition’s topic reminds me of a once-popular discussion of how the ancient Greek statues that we all know and see are not actually white.
What this means is that the sculpture and architecture of the ancient world was, in fact, brightly and elaborately painted. The only reason it appears white is that centuries of weathering have worn off most of the paint.
And it makes my dear little heart pretty happy to know that the opening ceremony of Athens 2004 is not far from the truth.
(Pictures taken from the Youtube video)
Nindya’s quick blurbs
Saw this site mentioned the other day on Slack: neocities.org.
Scroll down and you will see “Featured Sites”. Never knew it brings back early 2000s, and it makes me so, so happy.