Going nowhere in the A370 for a good 40 minutes due to very high winds.
Drew some sheep.
Sheep in the wind.
Notebook: Beto
V-ball
🐑 🚌 💨
Going nowhere in the A370 for a good 40 minutes due to very high winds.
Drew some sheep.
Sheep in the wind.
Notebook: Beto
V-ball
🐑 🚌 💨

I updated “Owls Over The Stock Exchange” for the new Society6 All Over Graphic Tee template.
These are available now on the store.
“Owls” is a dream painting of a financial crash. There were owls hunting down the tiny money people as the bubble burst. I painted it a while ago.
It took a while to align the eye over the sleeve, but I’m quite pleased with the result.
“For over 150 years scientists have tried to solve the mystery of a controversial cuneiform clay tablet that indicates the so-called Köfel’s impact event was observed in ancient times. The circular stone-cast tablet was recovered from the 650 BC underground library of King Ashurbanipal in Nineveh, Iraq in the late 19th century. Long thought to be an Assyrian tablet, computer analysis has matched it with the sky above Mesopotamia in 3300 BC and proves it to be of much more ancient Sumerian origin. The tablet is an “Astrolabe,” the earliest known astronomical instrument. It consists of a segmented, disk-shaped star chart with marked units of angle measure inscribed upon the rim.”
UPDATE:
Upon posting this item I got some feedback from internet friend and self-proclaimed Noticer Of Things, Chris Harris. Please find his updates below:

Play by Robert Bolt.
Cinematographer by Ted Moore.
Pencil
Notebook: Beto
🎞
“Heinz Hajek-Halke was born in Berlin on December 1, 1898, but spent his childhood in Argentina. Back in Germany, he began to study graphics in Berlin in 1915. In 1916, he served as a soldier in World War I; thereafter he continued his studies.
Hajek-Halke began to take photographs in 1924, and soon he had work with the agency “Presse-Photo”. He experimented with photographic techniques – among them light montages, double exposures, photo collages and photo montages. One special technique is “combi-photography,” in which Hajek-Halke mounted several negatives for one print. His pictures were innovative and made use of the newly discovered possibilities for manipulating photographs.”
