Yo I'm Gen, I do illustrations, pixel art, and TTRPG design.
Thought I'd make a thread to post work, answer questions, and talk about art process stuff for my own enjoyment and for those who are interested.
Stuff I post to NG is a slow trickle of my back catalogue of work. If you'd like to see my entire body of work then you can find it on either Tumblr, or Twitter. And if you'd like to see my in-progress TTRPG Songs we Sing, I have it on my Itch.io for free! But you can also throw a few dollars at me for it.
Anyways here's a few deets about my tools:
Tablet: Cintiq 13hd (I had a kamvas pro 24 but its usb out port broke right as it went outside of warranty, so I'll have to see if i can solder that back into place)
Art Program: Clip Studio paint
If you want to ask questions then drop them in this thread! I love being helpful.
To start off let me talk about my old favorite:
This is a piece I'm very proud of. I made it as an attempt to emulate the sorta diorama-esque feel of modern gacha game art such as arknights. The dynamic whisp of smoke along with the interesting silhouette created by the multiple arms always grabs me when I look back on it. It probably sounds conceited to gush about your own art, but I'm just that happy with some pieces.
The face has a subtle pattern to it to evoke the feeling of paintings such as Malevich's Black Square. Despite being, well, a single solid color, it has depth to it. There's imperfections and ghosts of something beneath that your eyes start to pick out as you look at it. I placed subtle texture on the face to create that feeling of being drawn in as one would be drawn into the horror of a blank canvas, which has all the possibility in the world, but none that you can grasp. It's an expanse that consumes your soul and identity. Were you ever an artist? Will you ever draw again? That's the sort of emotion this trickster diety is meant to prey upon.
Deity's in my setting are neither inherently good or bad. They can be benevolent, malicious, or simply transactionary. They're gods of things as well as concepts. They're the gods of things we've made and the things we fear. They're those ideas given name and form. There's something so fearful about this deity's promise to give you inspiration for your left hand as described in the quote below the piece in the gallery. It's a tangible sacrifice for something that's important to you. It's a sacrifice of your body for art. How hard someone would consider such a thing says a lot about their relationship with art and how healthy that relationship is.
Also I'll admit he's sorta sexy.