St. Luke is the patron saint of artists. You'll often see him in paintings making a drawing or painting of the Virgin and Child. As my lovely wife reminded me, when I started my first home studio it was on the top floor of our house - the attic.
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Matthew [at] DrawingMatthewClark [dot] com
Pen and watercolor on paper. This is an illustration for an essay on Josephus. If you can figure out the link between Josephus and zombies, you'll have my eternal admiration.
Pen and ink on bristol board. I did this illustration for a magazine called Modern Reformation. They needed drawings of Moses, Jonah, David and Joshua. I like doing these kind of pictures - clean, simple and direct.
Pencil, woodcut, watercolor on paper. St. Anthony was an early desert ascetic (the originator of the monastic movement) who was beset with temptations. His desire was to go into the desert, free himself from the distractions of the world and do battle with the devil. So, here's an episode in his struggle.
Linocuts and watercolor. Flowers and trilobites... do you need more? I think I have said elsewhere that trilobites are some of the absolute greatest of extinct invertebrates ever.
Pen and ink. This is an illustration for an essay about the book of Ruth. In the book, Boaz provides for a destitute Ruth and Naomi by leaving extra grain in his fields for them to glean and also by giving six measures of barley directly to Ruth. Her gleaning of grain from the fields is strongly reminiscent of the Israelites collecting the manna that God provided for them in their wanderings. The association of manna with the bread in communion and the even stronger association of grain with bread make this scene in Ruth a foreshadowing of Jesus giving bread and wine to his Church in the form of the elements in communion.
Screenprint and oil on paper. I love alligators and I miss them very much now that I live in PA. I guess I always took them for granted in Florida; my wife and I still catch ourselves scanning drainage ditches and small ponds for gators. I also miss the spring when the baby lizards hatch and run across the sidewalk as you walk past them!
Pencil and watercolor on paper. This is an illustration for Animal Farm. I was thinking Ralph Steadman when I made it. I guess I stayed in the lines a bit much for Steadman, but still...
Ink on paper. This was an illustration for the Inferno. The souls that were neutral in life don't even get to go to hell. They have to wait in the anteroom to hell where they are tormented by wasps and maggots.
Ink, goauche on paper. A cyclops skull of course. You may be saying that it looks like an elephant skull all dressed up as a cyclops skull because, really, real cyclops skulls are hard to come by. But what you don't know is ol' Polyphemus' skull has been in my family for generations.
Ink on paper. This is a claw, or cheliped for those of you in the know, of a crawdad (or crawfish, or even - gasp - crayfish). Crawdads happen to be some of my favorite animals on earth. I used to spend hours hunting them when I was a kid. Actually, I still do spend hours hunting them whenever I get the chance.
These are all ink on illustration board. They are, from the top: The mighty Hektor, mortal foe of (the mightier) Achilles, a muskrat skull, and an alligator skull.
Here are some more teasers. I have gobs and gobs of pictures in these books, so don't worry that you may see all the images here for free and that if you buy the books they will be full of reruns!
Ok. So you've fallen in love with my drawing books - I know you have because you've all told me you have. (Unless, of course, you've ever met me; in which case you're thinking I'm an egomaniac. Fair enough, but I still think you'd like the books if you ever saw them.) So this is your greatest opportunity to own one! Seeing as how I have no intention of ever turning loose of the real things, these are the next best alternatives! Go to www.blurb.com/user/bustard and look at "Hell" and "Sanctification". To whet your appetite, above are some images from the drawing books.
Ink and Photoshop. I suppose if you want to get picky, this is just a regular knight in rusty armor - the knight himself has no rust as he is made of flesh and blood. Now that we have established that, it's an illustration for George MacDonald's "Phantastes".
Polycarp. Pencil, watercolor, gold leaf, ink on paper. Polycarp was an early Christian martyr. He famously defied the Romans in their pleas to him to renounce Christ. As a result he was burned alive.
A Fight between a Human and a non-human Hominid. Photoshop and Illustrator. This is an illustration for The Lost World by Conan-Doyle (like the sharks below). I spent WAY more time on it than I should have! It's easy to get sucked into invisible details when you can blow the image up to 400%.
Frilled Shark. Watercolor on paper. Again, a weird Japanese shark that normally makes its living deep down but found its way to the surface for some reason. And, like the Chimaera, it's based on a photo.
So, here are some drawings in no particular order. I suppose they'll probably go up as I do them. Enjoy. By the way, this is an illustration for Cicero. I'm not sure what it's about, but I was asked to do a severed hand, and I did a severed hand. Watercolor on paper.