zee tee art
And here’s the second one. Lots of story went on between the first and second images, it’s actually quite a long myth, oops!  Short version is that Psyche is now living at a magical palace as Cupid’s wife but he doesn’t want her to know it’s him so he only comes at night and forbids lamps to be lit. Psyche’s sisters visit and get really jealous, convincing Psyche that her husband is an EVIL MONSTER OH NO! Worried about this, she lights a lamp that night and finally finds out who her husband is, wow I guess that knife won’t be needed, huh Psyche?  Unfortunately as she sat there staring at him a drop of oil fell from her lamp and woke Cupid up, and he flew away all angry at her, saying things like “THERE CANNOT BE SUSPICION IN A MARRIAGE” and ignoring the fact that he was acting really suspiciously.. (I think Bad Logic is something he got from his mom.)

This was the first time I did a papercraft piece with a strong light source, I was so nervous! I think it turned out well, though! I do wish the edges of the red background papers weren’t so obvious, they’re paint samples from the hardware store and flake really easily. Can’t do much about it.

There’s a third illustration to round out the set in the works, but I just didn’t have time to finish it.  The sketch stage for this project took far longer than it should have, and this piece alone took 10 hours to make! I finished it at 5AM the morning of the 9AM duedate, there was no way I could throw together another one.  If time permits I’ll do the third one over the weekend.

And here’s the second one. Lots of story went on between the first and second images, it’s actually quite a long myth, oops! Short version is that Psyche is now living at a magical palace as Cupid’s wife but he doesn’t want her to know it’s him so he only comes at night and forbids lamps to be lit. Psyche’s sisters visit and get really jealous, convincing Psyche that her husband is an EVIL MONSTER OH NO! Worried about this, she lights a lamp that night and finally finds out who her husband is, wow I guess that knife won’t be needed, huh Psyche? Unfortunately as she sat there staring at him a drop of oil fell from her lamp and woke Cupid up, and he flew away all angry at her, saying things like “THERE CANNOT BE SUSPICION IN A MARRIAGE” and ignoring the fact that he was acting really suspiciously.. (I think Bad Logic is something he got from his mom.)

This was the first time I did a papercraft piece with a strong light source, I was so nervous! I think it turned out well, though! I do wish the edges of the red background papers weren’t so obvious, they’re paint samples from the hardware store and flake really easily. Can’t do much about it.

There’s a third illustration to round out the set in the works, but I just didn’t have time to finish it. The sketch stage for this project took far longer than it should have, and this piece alone took 10 hours to make! I finished it at 5AM the morning of the 9AM duedate, there was no way I could throw together another one. If time permits I’ll do the third one over the weekend.

First of my Cupid and Psyche illustrations!  This illustrates the scene in which Cupid (who has been sent by Venus to punish Psyche for everyone thinking she’s prettier than the goddess of love herself) first sees Psyche, and accidentally pricks himself with his own arrow. He falls deeply in love with her (And really, he already was thinking she was rather pretty anyway) and decides to disobey his mother, removing any enchantment he had put on her.

I did a lot of research for this, I hope it shows!  Instead of Greek art I’m branching out to the next peninsula over and emulating Roman wall painting, since this is really more of a Roman story than Greek.  It’s as if a wall painting from Pompeii or something has been found and restored, with pieces chipped off and missing which just happen to highlight key details.  His barely-there bit of cloth is rather dramatically ballooning behind him, but I assure you it’s completely realistic for ancient roman art!  They used very over-dramatically billowing fabric to indicate movement on their often very stiff figures.

The paper I used for Cupid’s wings was really flimsy, and it actually fluttered slightly whenever I worked on Cupid. Very distracting but really cute!  I’m almost disappointed I had to glue them down so they’d stick to the crack they were on…

First of my Cupid and Psyche illustrations! This illustrates the scene in which Cupid (who has been sent by Venus to punish Psyche for everyone thinking she’s prettier than the goddess of love herself) first sees Psyche, and accidentally pricks himself with his own arrow. He falls deeply in love with her (And really, he already was thinking she was rather pretty anyway) and decides to disobey his mother, removing any enchantment he had put on her.

I did a lot of research for this, I hope it shows! Instead of Greek art I’m branching out to the next peninsula over and emulating Roman wall painting, since this is really more of a Roman story than Greek. It’s as if a wall painting from Pompeii or something has been found and restored, with pieces chipped off and missing which just happen to highlight key details. His barely-there bit of cloth is rather dramatically ballooning behind him, but I assure you it’s completely realistic for ancient roman art! They used very over-dramatically billowing fabric to indicate movement on their often very stiff figures.

The paper I used for Cupid’s wings was really flimsy, and it actually fluttered slightly whenever I worked on Cupid. Very distracting but really cute! I’m almost disappointed I had to glue them down so they’d stick to the crack they were on…