To make the Split Clown I went to Burger King on 42nd street to take pictures of the hamburgers and fries that I ordered. It was around 2-4 am and I was the only customer in the store except for a guy that looked like old timer pimp. This was in the early 2000's. I ordered a meal, arranged it on a table by the window, took out my Canon camera and started taking pictures of it. A manager came and asked if I worked for Burger King. Perhaps he thought I was some sort of quality inspector. The following days i realized I didn't have enough material to start the painting I had in mind. So I went to the McDonalds on 42nd street close to 5th avenue. There I mostly took pictures of the setting, the ceiling and walls. Having finished with taking the photographs I combined the images in Photoshop, tasted the colors and the composition. Once I got the image i wanted it I set up to draw it on canvas. After some days of intense drawing with pencil I added several layers of oil paint which made the final product that is now in a private collection. The NFT here is based in a picture that I took before the oil layers made the color pencil drawing disappear.
Split Clown
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Split Clown
- PrixPrix en USDQuantitéExpirationDe
- PrixPrix en USDQuantitéDifférence avec le prix plancherExpirationDe
To make the Split Clown I went to Burger King on 42nd street to take pictures of the hamburgers and fries that I ordered. It was around 2-4 am and I was the only customer in the store except for a guy that looked like old timer pimp. This was in the early 2000's. I ordered a meal, arranged it on a table by the window, took out my Canon camera and started taking pictures of it. A manager came and asked if I worked for Burger King. Perhaps he thought I was some sort of quality inspector. The following days i realized I didn't have enough material to start the painting I had in mind. So I went to the McDonalds on 42nd street close to 5th avenue. There I mostly took pictures of the setting, the ceiling and walls. Having finished with taking the photographs I combined the images in Photoshop, tasted the colors and the composition. Once I got the image i wanted it I set up to draw it on canvas. After some days of intense drawing with pencil I added several layers of oil paint which made the final product that is now in a private collection. The NFT here is based in a picture that I took before the oil layers made the color pencil drawing disappear.