Spiderweb Abstract
Painting on canvas is a joy—the glide of paint across the surface, the way light catches the texture, the slow drying, and the quiet satisfaction of completing a piece.
But canvases demand space, supplies, and a long list of practical considerations.
Over time, I discovered that drawing on paper or smaller surfaces offers its own powerful advantages: minimal storage, the freedom to use pencils, pastels, charcoal, and more. And with scanning and digital manipulation, the possibilities become infinite. Textures, patterns, colors, shapes, line variations—everything expands.
And in the end, preserving the artwork as zeros and ones feels priceless.
Is this what everyone is afraid of?
Think about it: Mankind has been using artificial intelligence since the beginning of human history: IMAGINATION!
But canvases demand space, supplies, and a long list of practical considerations.
Over time, I discovered that drawing on paper or smaller surfaces offers its own powerful advantages: minimal storage, the freedom to use pencils, pastels, charcoal, and more. And with scanning and digital manipulation, the possibilities become infinite. Textures, patterns, colors, shapes, line variations—everything expands.
And in the end, preserving the artwork as zeros and ones feels priceless.
Is this what everyone is afraid of?
Think about it: Mankind has been using artificial intelligence since the beginning of human history: IMAGINATION!