If you think that digital art has no soul or dimension, you haven’t seen the work of these 15 visionary visual artists. Some work as concept artists or illustrators while others take more of a fine art approach, creating purely for their own pleasure. Many of them have backgrounds in traditional art, seeing the use of digital media such as Photoshop and Corel Painter as a natural evolution of the creative process but never losing sight of those mysterious elements that make a work of art truly effective.
Don Seegmiller is an artist, author and educator, passing on his gift for digital art at Brigham Young University. He has completed more than 600 paintings in 20 years, has had his work featured in a number of books and is a regular speaker at the Game Developers Conference.
Ray Caesar
Ray Caesar’s 17 years working in the Art and Photography Department of the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto has had a lasting impression on his work. One of the most famous and sought-after digital artists of the Pop Surrealism movement, Caesar has a unique style that blends otherworldly images with Victorian aesthetics. He creates models in a 3D modeling software called Maya, then wraps them in painted and manipulated texture maps and adds digital lights and shadows.
Bobby Chui
Digital painter Bobby Chui got his start designing Disney, Warner Bros. and Star Wars toys and that playful, imaginative tone remains in his illustration work for film and television today. Chui teaches digital painting at Schoolism.com and has won a number of CG Choice Awards from the CG Society of Digital Artists.
Of his choice to work with digital rather than traditional materials, Chui told It’s Art Magazine, “When I experimented a bit with Illustrator and Photoshop 3 I quickly realized that ‘digital’ will be the way to go in the near future. With digital art there is no need to buy paint or canvases and you can take your art with you to work on almost anywhere. You can’t do that using traditional materials.”
Cristiano Siqueira
Cristiano Siqueira, known as CrisVector, is a digital artist from Brazil who uses vectors, Photoshop and 3D to create his unique artwork. A former graphic designer, Siqueira was itching for a bit more creative freedom, which he has found now as a self-employed illustrator.
Siqueira told Abduzeedo, “All my illustrations are done entirely digitally I usually use 3 basic techniques: digital composition, digital painting and vectorial illustration. These techniques blend with each other many times, I may use composition elements on a painting (pictures insertion, for exemple), using vectorial elements in a composition or using digital painting elements in a vector illustration.”
Daniel Conway
UK artist Daniel Conway started out as an animator, but became intrigued by digital painting and soon taught himself how to create stunningly detailed fantasy art with a combination of Photoshop and Painter with a Wacom Cintiq, the hybrid LCD display and graphics tablet.
“I have a fascination with finding beauty amongst chaos,” Conway told ImagineFX. “I’ve always found the most memorable pieces of art are those that had some kind of an emotional impact on me. I really enjoy creating something that people can engage with. Emotion can be conveyed visually in many ways, from lighting and colour to the poses and facial expressions of characters.”
Sarah Rose Oliver
UK art student Sarah Rose Oliver hasn’t even graduated yet and she’s already making waves in the world of digital art, creating eye-catching pieces that have landed her on many a list of amazing digital painters. Her photo-realistic style is especially effective in portraits, which she creates using a Genius Pen Tablet and Photoshop.
Alberto Seveso
He might have no formal training in art, but Alberto Seveso clearly doesn’t need it. He has pioneered his own technique, which he named ‘sperm shaping’ for the shape of the vectors that he combines with images to create his own unique style. Many have asked Seveso to provide a tutorial but he refuses as he doesn’t want “clones of Alberto Seveso” running around and instead encourages other artists to go in their own direction.
Marek Okon
Polish artist Marek Okon creates each of his digital paintings as if they were a scene in a movie, capturing the most climactic moment of the story. A professional painter and concept designer, Okon produces his epic work on a Wacom Intuos3 A4 tablet.
On where he gets his inspiration, Okon told Psd tuts+, “When its a book cover, inspiration comes from the story I’m reading. During reading I see all the scenes in my imagination and then I pick one that will fit the cover best, one that will draw attention of the people passing by this book. When its personal works I usually create my own little story around the picture, so every piece of equipment presented, every location and character has its part in the world presented. I rarely go and create something accidental.”
Cris de Lara
Cristina de Lara Stockler, known professionally as Cris de Lara, made a name for herself in the world of digital art through her unique old-style pin-ups. Much of her work has a comic book feel due to the influence that working in the industry had upon her style.
De Lara told It’s Art Magazine, “The most important thing is what you can produce with your talent and skills, of course, the right tools help a lot, but you need to improve your skills every day to be independent of the digital weapons. If you really want to be an artist, in a digital environment, for sure a painting program helps a lot, but you should study art, painting, drawing, the masters and their styles and techniques, and so on, instead of being the best Photoshop operator, for instance.”
Tae young Choi
Game concept designer Tae young Choi uses Painter, Photoshop, 3ds Max and Maya to create imagery that fuses dystopian sci-fi and classical mysticism for his current employer, console game developer Midway. Though he says he’d like to work with more traditional media, he explained to Imagine FX that time and practical issues get in the way.
“As a professional concept artist, I need to create art very quickly and I’m asked to change the painting very often. That’s one of the main reasons for choosing digital techniques rather than traditional material at work. I guess I can be a ‘real’ painter after my retirement…”
Craig Sellars
Freelance visual development artist and concept artist Craig Sellarshas a background in both classical animation and video games, and it shows in his work, which has a traditional painterly quality but illustrates the sort of bleak interiors and desolate landscapes that are commonly seen in games.
Wen Xi-Chen
UK/Shanghai-based artist Wen Xi-Chen is a pathology student by day, digital painter by night, creating stunning portraits using Wacom Tablet (Intuos2) in Photoshop and/or Painter Classic/ Painter X. She offers a number of tutorials on deviantART.
Don Seegmiller
Don Seegmiller is an artist, author and educator, passing on his gift for digital art at Brigham Young University. He has completed more than 600 paintings in 20 years, has had his work featured in a number of books and is a regular speaker at the Game Developers Conference.
A Corel Painter Master, Seegmiller says “A great deal of work in the video game, movie and other entertainment industries requires the development of a relatively rough concept sketch of a character into a more finished and refined piece of art. Often, this is not only to sell the concept, but also to give other people who will be working on the various aspects of the project a clear idea of the artist’s vision.”
Alon Chou
Taiwanese freelance digital artist Alon Chou worked in traditional media like oil painting and watercolor while a student at National Taiwan University of Art, and began learning digital art media only after taking a 3D modeling job with XPEC. Though he excelled at CG, Chou still identifies more with traditional artists in terms of his subject matter and style.
Chou told It’s Art Magazine, “What I want to express in my art is similar to the dramatic appeals in traditional drawings. I always hope to have a complete composition and plot. As for the contents of paintings, I wish to start with the emotions of daily life because we humans have all sorts of feelings. Anything picked up from daily life has the chance of becoming a touching piece of art work. Therefore, if there’s people involved in the work, I will make the emotion I want to express as the starting point.”
Marta Dahlig
One of the most popular artists on deviantART, Poland-based Marta Dahlig has gained a reputation for beautiful digital fantasy art. Dahlig uses modern tools like Photoshop and Corel Painter to create her works, but is inspired by classicists like William Bouguereau. Best known for her ‘Seven Deadly Sins’ series, Dahlig provides tutorials on YouTube and various websites so that others can see exactly how she produces her art.
Linda Bergkvist
Swedish illustrator and digital fantasy artist Linda Bergkvist, known online as Enayla, started out as a traditional painter. When she was given a Wacom tablet on her 20th birthday by her parents, Bergkvist didn’t even think she would use it. But soon enough, she was hooked, and since then she has become one of the most talked-about CG artists and worked as a conceptual artist on the film The Golden Compass.