Tuesday, March 6, 2018

Den Sidste Krig (The Last War)


One of the many drawings I've done for my book with the working title Den Sidste Krig - The Last War in English.
I guess the picture above pretty much gives you an impression about what it's all about...
I hope to finish it soon and that it'll be out later this year. For now only in Danish :)



This is one of the main characters, Miss Gunn...



Our protagonist is getting himself trapped by the invaders! What a once-in-a-lifetime experience, huh?


The Great Martian War


It's very well executed, though you can't help noticing how even extra-terrestrial superior beings prefer steampunk and knots and bolts in the early 20th century...

But the soundtrack is really bad - anything would have suited the video better, than this. So turn it sown and watch the invsion in all its artistic splendor :)

Tuesday, May 3, 2016

The Unbearable Lightness of Being Alien


I always bugs me how nearly all aliens in movies, litterature and TV obviously evolved on Earth, left  the planet ages ago, forgot all about it, turned purple, only to return and try to recapture it?
Of course I know that it's about emotions and understanding and seeing ourselves from the outside, but wouldn't it be great if just once in a while something alien - truely alien - turned up?

All aliens seems to have evolved from the exact same branch of vertebrae - mamals - with spine, skull, jaws, arms, legs fingers and toes. They're all very monkeylike. Even those with scales and wings. And this just doesn't add up or make sense.


Nom, nom, nom...
Features:
So lets just talk about the jaw for example:
All aliens have jaws. And they're full of humanlike teeth. 
The vertebrate jaw usually bears numerous teeth and probably originally evolved in the Silurian period. The jaw evolved from the most anterior two gill arches supporting the gills and appeared in the Placoderm fishThis further diversified in the Devonian. The two most anterior arches are thought to have become the jaw itself and the hyoid arch, respectively. So getting yourself a set of gills-turned-into-jaws, and then adding white teeth and fleshy lips on top of them, seems to be the hippest thing since... I don't know.. five fingers? If you want to know more about jaws, there is a neat Discovery documentary about it here.

Of all the animals here on earth it's only vertebrates, that's got this feature and a little googling has made it clear that even though species like fish (including lampreys), amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals are vertebrates, more than 95 percent of known animal species on earth are in-vertebrates.
So how come that 95 percent of all alien lifeforms are vertebrates? 
And how about that spine, eh?


How come almost no designers or worldcreators thinks about where and what their beings are coming from? And how a different evolution on a very different planet would affect life. The only way mamals could be on top of things here on Earth is because the dinosaurs died out 65 mio years ago, and left the place to us! 

99.9 % of Star Trek aliens differ from humans so little that you start wonder why they bother putting on the make up at all. I'd love to see aliens being... well, alien for a change. Not even like THE Alien, but alien as in uncomfortably strange.

One of the few TV-programs I find interesting in this way - and inspired me quite a deal - was the Discovery Channels docufiction Alien Planet The show uses computer-generated imagery, which is interspersed with interviews from such notables as Stephen HawkingGeorge LucasMichio Kaku and many moreWayne Douglas Barlowe (Illustrator and Head designer on Avatar and more) has done most (if not all) of the designs of the alien creatures together with the 3D animators, scientists and zoologist, that's contributed to the making of the show. Alien Planet was filmed in Iceland and Mono Lake in California and it's so worth watching. Just remember: It's a docu-fiction, so remember it's not science fact, just imagination. 


I sometimes wonder if aliens - if we ever meet any - have more in common with the oddness and unfamiliarity of the designs of HP Lovecraft than those of George Lucas. 





Friday, February 26, 2016

Why MEN?

Why do we have two sexes. Or more specific: Why do we have men? 



Why waste all that effort and energy in producing and caring for offspring that doesn't carry offspring themselves? Kinda pointless, right?

The maintenance of sexual reproduction in a highly competitive world has long been one of the major mysteries of biology given that asexual reproduction can reproduce much more quickly as 50% of offspring in sexual reproduction are males, unable to produce offspring themselves.

"Almost all multicellular species on earth reproduce using sex, but its existence isn't easy to explain because sex carries big burdens, the most obvious of which is that only half of your offspring—daughters—will actually produce offspring. Why should any species waste all that effort on sons?” lead researcher Professor Matt Gage, from University of East Anglia's School of Biological Sciences, said in a statement

Researchers from the University of East Anglia (UAE) believe they may have found an answer, suggesting that the evolutionary force known as ‘sexual selection’ plays a key role in improving population health and protecting us against extinction.

"To be good at out-competing rivals and attracting partners in the struggle to reproduce, an individual has to be good at most things, so sexual selection provides an important and effective filter to maintain and improve population genetic health,” said Gage. 

So - 2 sexes is a major asset, when it comes to a species survival in a competitive enviroment. But would it be so universal that we would expect to find it on other worlds as well? 

Satoshi Kon - Editing Space & Time




Tuesday, November 17, 2015

Shebacca, Her Solo and Lucy Skywalker...


...And the Millennium Falconesse.



I've always loved Star Wars, but I would kinda like to see this version as well. Sometimes it really annoys me how stereotypic genders are portrayed in actions movies. 
Recently I stumpled upon the talented Austrian artist lanimalu, who'd illustrated the hobbits from LOTR as female characters, and I really loved that take on the tale, so I decided to have a go at it myself.
Especially because Han in Danish means Him - so it made sense calling this charming rogue Her :)

Bilba Baggins. Art by lanimalu


Tusken Raiders are people too!