This Nikola Tesla art print was originally created to celebrate the mind that lit the world. I wanted to capture the collision of intellect and inspiration — a man surrounded by storms of his own making.Fine linework radiates outward like arcs of current, while layered textures suggest both machinery and lightning. The interplay of light and shadow mirrors Tesla himself: precise and visionary, yet touched by madness and wonder.
Though drawn digitally, the piece retains a hand-inked energy, alive with movement and imperfection — much like the experiments that defined Tesla’s restless pursuit of progress. It’s a visual ode to creativity, curiosity, and the electric spark that drives invention.
This Lovecraft art print was originally created for a theatre production celebrating his otherworldly mythos. My goal was to capture that sense of awe and insignificance that defines Lovecraft’s world — a place where reality bends, and the unknown waits just beyond perception.
Using intricate linework and dense, textural blacks, I aimed to evoke the feeling of old ink illustrations found in early 20th-century pulp magazines — rough, obsessive, and full of lurking detail. The shifting forms and shadows within the piece suggest both the alien beauty and the creeping madness that Lovecraft so masterfully wrote about.
Although created digitally, this illustration maintains a hand-inked intensity, a tactile imperfection that mirrors the disquieting energy of Lovecraft’s imagination. It’s both a homage and an invitation — to gaze too long into the abyss and wonder what might gaze back.
Few writers have cast a longer shadow than Edgar Allan Poe — the dark heart of American Romanticism. Drawing early inspiration from Lord Byron, Poe became a master of atmosphere and emotion, shaping modern detective fiction and helping spark the birth of science fiction. But it was his haunting poetry and tales of mystery and the macabre that sealed his legacy. His most famous poem, “The Raven,” made him a household name — though fame found him only briefly before his mysterious death in 1849.
This Poe art print was originally created as a poster for the Barter Theatre in Abingdon, Virginia, for a winter production celebrating Poe’s works — including The Tell-Tale Heart, The Raven, and The Fall of the House of Usher.
It was one of my first fully digital illustrations, and it became a personal turning point. I experimented with intricate line work and crosshatching to carve light and texture out of deep, inky blacks. Those dark, brushy strokes add a sense of urgency and madness — a visual echo of Poe’s own descent into the unknown.
Although created digitally, the piece retains a raw, hand-drawn energy — the kind of imperfect, expressive texture that mirrors the haunting beauty of Poe’s imagination. It’s a tribute not only to his stories, but to the dark romantic spirit that continues to inspire artists today.
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