WHAT A WORLD A collection of environment concept art pieces
WHAT A WORLD
Bendix
A collection of environment concept art pieces
Samantha Bendix
WHAT A WORLD A collection of environment concept art pieces
Samantha Bendix
WHAT A WORLD A collection of environment concept art pieces
Copyright © 2020 Samantha Bendix All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law. For permission requests, write to the publisher, addressed “Attention: Permissions Coordinator,” at the address below. Any reference to historical events, real people, or real places are used fictitiously. Names, characters, and places are products of the artists’ imaginations.
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Front cover image by Fred Dupere. Essay by Paige Chu Book design by Samantha Bendix. Printed by Houchen Bindery Ltd in Utica, NE, Untied States of America. First printing edition 2020. This book is a school project made for GRPH324 Publication Design during the Fall 2020 semester at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. This book is for purely educational purposes and will not be used commercially in any way.
For Patrick and Terri Grim
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PREFACE The environment is not something I looked too much into growing up; however, as I’ve gotten older, I’ve become more conscious of it. My generation and the generations to come will bear the burden of the mistreatment of the environment by previous generations. Water is one part of the environment that is not being properly conserved, and more attention needs to be brought to it. This catalog is a way to bring awareness to our water problems and what our future could look like through the use of environment concept art.
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Paige Chu of The Varsity, the University of Toronto’s student newspaper, provides a compelling viewpoint in her insightful essay about eco-anxiety. The climate crisis we are facing calls for more of an intersectional approach with the burden steadily falling on the younger generations. — Samantha Bendix
TABLE OF CONTENTS CONFRONTING THE RISE OF ECO-ANXIETY ESSAY
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INTRODUCTION
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SNOW
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OCEAN
18
LIFE
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DROUGHT
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DUST
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DECAY
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BIBLIOGRAPHY
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
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IMAGE CREDITS
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Confronting the rise of eco-anxiety “Who am I in the context of climate crisis?”
In 1896, Swedish scientist Svante Arrhenius first introduced the world to the possibility of global warming. His research focused on the widespread effects of coal burning. However, his research was oversimplistic. People couldn’t imagine a future of mass extinction and forest fires, so his findings did not lead to widespread fear. In 1956, a news report on long-term environmental changes from greenhouse gas emissions appeared in The New York Times. However, the article noted that as there was little risk of running out of fossil fuels, industries would likely continue consuming them. As long as it paid to consume coal and oil, and those resources were cheap and plentiful, then such practices would soldier on to generate profits. And so they did. Now, half a century later, elementary school children are seeking psychiatric care to cope with debilitating panic and anxiety over the environmental crisis. A study conducted by Caroline Hickman at the University of Bath showed that 45 percent of children suffer from depression after a natural disaster. ‘Eco-anxiety’ is a recently-coined term that encapsulates the rising emotional and psychological responses to the climate crisis. From 2008–2009, the American Psychological Association put together a task force that investigated the relationship between the climate crisis and human psychology. The results for this study revealed that people remained more or less blasé about the climate crisis. In 2018, however, a Yale University and George Mason University study group reported that 29 percent of
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Paige Chu Originally published in The Varisity - The University of Toronto’s Student Newspaper
Americans were “alarmed” about the climate, up 11 percent from 2009. The denial that was prevalent just a decade ago is dissolving, and in some cases is being replaced by paralyzing fear.
The necessity for an intersectional approach While eco-anxiety has only garnered attention in recent years, people are no strangers to our psychological states being under environmental influence. Dr. Romila Verma of U of T’s Department of Geography and Planning gave three possible reasons why the global population has seen a sharp increase in climate change-specific mental health issues. As the climate crisis persists, environmental destruction becomes more visible and more serious, as Verma wrote to The Varsity. We’re told that if we haven’t suffered an extreme climate event yet, we will, and in the meantime, we’re being “bombarded” day-in and day-out with news of devastation occurring elsewhere. Verma also mentioned social media being a contributing factor to anxiety in general, be it climate-specific or otherwise. “Before the advent of social media,” she wrote, “[a crisis] was not as visible unless you were directly hit by these issues.” According to a press release from the United Nations in March, there are only “11 Years Left to Prevent Irreversible Damage from Climate Change.” Verma believes that this has increased anxiety among young people especially. This timeline tabled an ultimatum that children are forced to confront. Much of the action and campaigning since then was born of this responsibili-
ty, a burden that children know they inherited as the byproduct of centuries of reckless economic dreams. While mainstream media tells us that eco-anxiety is a new, emerging dimension of the climate crisis, we would be ignorant to assume that this concern really is brand new for all populations. We would be just as mistaken to consider eco-anxiety an equal-impact phenomenon. Like many other crises, the climate crisis and eco-anxiety run along intersectional race, class, and gender lines. For Indigenous communities, a loss of land and disrespect for the sacredness of the non-human is not a recent occurrence, but rather part of a centuries-long history. Furthermore, for individuals with disabilities, well-intentioned but under-researched practices, such as the plastic straw ban, come at the expense of accessibility. Exposure to natural disasters such as tsunamis and earthquakes has also been shown to increase the risk of gender-based violence, as it exacerbates the already vulnerable position of women. There have been strides made in understanding the impacts of climate crisis. In recent decades, there has been recognition that gender is an important factor in the realm of developmental policy. In the 1970s, the concept of environmental refugees emerged, with particular regard to the desertification occurring in parts of Africa. These intersectional factors must influence the theory and methods of addressing the climate crisis. “There are many instances of environmental injustices which are in direct violation of [the] human rights of indigenous, disabled, minorities, immigrants, refugees,
homeless people,” wrote Verma, and not all have the 11 years to wait. “The vulnerable populations around the world are already being denied basic needs like food, water, and shelter.” The harrowing reality is that regardless of a universal trend of growing urgency, we as a society still invest in climate protection for privileged populations at the expense of the already disadvantaged. Furthermore, we still believe that the limitation of harmful corporate activities for the safety of the marginalized is transgressive. (...)
The ones bearing the brunt of it: children In an interview with Reuters, Hickman remarked that the current state of our climate leaves today’s youth with feelings of betrayal and abandonment. She further emphasized that “fear from children needs to be taken seriously by adults.”
Leaving these issues unaddressed could further compound their fears. Children are a particularly vulnerable age group, not only because the climate crisis weighs disproportionately heavy on their futures, but also because post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) following catastrophes, depression, aggression, and social withdrawal are more common for them, and their symptoms tend to be more long-term when compared to adults. Verma pointed out that many young people have not hesitated to be at the forefront of movements like
Fridays for Future, which was pioneered by 16-year-old Greta Thunberg and picked up later by equally-impassioned students such as Wiikwemkoong First Nation water protector Autumn Peltier and U of T’s own Allie Rougeot. “There is no right or wrong age to be a changemaker,” Verma wrote. “Since young people are the future adults, and they will face more severe consequences of climate change, they should become part of the solution.” Verma explained that in her personal experiences advocating for climate justice, she sees today’s youth as key voices in forcing those in power to implement and innovate accordingly. She also said that there are the mental health challenges that come with such a large undertaking. She believes that in order to adequately care for child activists it is important to examine our broken mental health systems. “There are incidents of these activists being bullied, harassed and made fun of,” wrote Verma. “In the face of adversity, it takes a lot of courage and resiliency to withstand this onslaught.”
“Climate change impacts are felt in every section of society however, the main burden of its consequences falls on marginalized and vulnerable populations,” wrote Verma. As students and faculty of this institution, we each come from one form of privilege or another. Our identities are not without the protections offered by our race, gender, class, or other identity groups. For most of us, it is important to understand our anxieties and our positions in relation to those who have been disadvantaged for much longer than media and history has allowed us to realize. For students like ourselves, our futures hang over a precipice. What is our role in this fight? What are the decisions that we’re obligated to make? In the face of mass extinctions, food strikes, and forced migration, family-building has become an unethical dream. The uncertainties linger like smog in the air. We have to look at both ourselves and each other and ask: what do we owe to our own futures in order to create a livable world for all?
“My concern is that some of these climate activists might face emotional turmoil.”
Where do we go from here? Eco-anxiety means different things for everyone. It may be necessary to take a step back from the events of the climate crisis and ask ourselves, “who am I in the context of climate crisis?”
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Coastline - Ozan Civit
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INTRODUCTION Art, especially concept art, is an important tool needed to visualize an idea. The visual development artists can use story, characters, environments, you name it to build out concepts that will be used as guidelines for a project. Concept art is not only useful for purely fictitious worlds, it can help us visual the future of our own world.
Using concept art we can visualize the world in various states of water presence. We can see landscapes with an abundance of water and life compared to environments that most reflect our own, water presence but signs of drought. We can even visualize environments that are water deficient or completely devoid off it.
Water plays such an important part in life on Earth in all the forms it takes. Water gives life and it lies at the base of our understanding of how life functions. From the clouds and oceans to our drinking water, we can’t live life without it. However, while we may think we have enough of it now, especially fresh water, that’s not the case. There is not enough worry about the current state of water concern we are facing. Water conservation efforts aren’t what they should be and eventually, once it’s too late, we’ll realize this.
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SNOW
Landscape - Heri Irawan
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Landscape - Heri Irawan
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Icy landscape - Jad Saber
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Snow Landscape - Florent Lebrun
frozen landscapes 2 - Pascal Nader
Snow cover helps regulate the temperature of Earth’s surface. Snow’s albedo, or how much sunlight it reflects back into the atmosphere, is very high, reflecting 80 to 90 percent of the incoming sunlight. The high reflectivity helps balance energy and keep the planet cool. — National Snow & Ice Data Center Traversing Frozen Tundra Wind Farm - Matthew Neururer
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OCEAN Earth’s life support system
Atlantic Ocean - Christian Reiske
Northern Coastline Study - Kyle Enochs
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Cantabria Azul - Christian Reiske
Winter Landscape 02 - Slawek Fedorczuk
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“The ocean regulates our climate, absorbs carbon dioxide, holds 97% of Earth’s water, and supports the greatest abundance of life on our planet.” — One World One Ocean
Sea Landscapes - Anton Fadeev
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Fantasy Landscape-Class Demo - Hue Teo
Last day of summer - Slawek Fedorczuk
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159/365 Coastline - Atey Ghailan
“More than 60% of the world’s population lives on or near the coast. The ocean provides a livelihood, recreation, beauty, wonder, and untapped scientific discovery, leading to new medications, foods, and advanced technologies.” — One World One Ocean
Wind - Aush Sketches - Tomas Osang Muir
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Tide Fishery (Final) - Tian Gan
Tide Fishery (Exploration 2) - Tian Gan
Tide Fishery (Exploration 1) - Tian Gan
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“The sea, the great unifier, is man’s only hope. Now, as never before, the old phrase has a literal meaning: we are all in the same boat.” — Jacques Yves Cousteau
(Right) Fantasy Landscape - Luka Mivsek
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Fantasy Landscape - Luka Mivsek
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Square landscapes - Anton Fadeev
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Square landscapes 3 - Anton Fadeev
Sunset Parallels and Aftermath Alex Tsoucas
“This painting is a crossover between landscape and the abstract. As the abstract shapes developed into architectural structures, I then began the process of elimination. The painting then took on a whole new life. A story of past, present and future. A reminder of not only what we are so fortunate enough to have, but also of what we once had, and what we could hopefully still have, at least for as long as nature and the universe intended it.�
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The Ocean Floor - Mitch Aseltine
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Shadow Isles Coastline - North Front
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Gumroad Tutorial - Designing Landscapes in Photoshop - StĂŠphane Wootha Richard
( Tropical_Rain tutorial ) Digital Painting Techniques Volume 8 - Wadim Kashin
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The Village-Nightfall - Tian Gan
Minor landscape_01 - Fred Dupere
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Coastline Remnants - Thomas Wievegg
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The rise of sea levels can infiltrate coastal freshwater aquifers with saltwater, rendering them unusable and cause problems for local water infrastructure in a process called saltwater intrusion. — Seametrics, “How Will Climate Change Affect Freshwater Resources?”
Rocky mushrooms keyframes by Rafater - Rafater (Rafael Teruel)
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LIFE
Aussie Landscape 1 - Blake Rottinger
The Giant’s Archway - Eddie Mendoza
Fantasy Landscape - Emmanuel Shiu
Spot Hunting one (August work) - Wadim Kashin
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Landscape Practice - Stefan Celic
alien landscapes - Arnaud Pheu
Coastline - Calder Moore
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Solomon Kane - Africa Landscape - Guillem H. Pongiluppi
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Solomon Kane - Africa Landscape - Guillem H. Pongiluppi
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Landscape Sketches - David Fortin
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“While the future is difficult to predict, available freshwater resources will certainly decrease in the coming years due to the increasing demand of a growing world population. Many areas of the world that are already experiencing a shortage of water resources will see their water issues worsen, causing hardships for millions.” — Seametrics, “18 Surprising Projections About the Future of Water.”
Landscape Studies - Michal Kus
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Study after a pastel piece by Kim Lordier.
Alpine landscape - Aron Kamolz
Studies - Jennifer Mills
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Mountain Landscape - Ferdinand Ladera
Cold Landscape - StĂŠphane Wootha Richard
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Cold Landscape - StĂŠphane Wootha Richard
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Cold Landscape - StĂŠphane Wootha Richard
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Redwood Forest - Ben Kelly
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Redwood Forest - Ben Kelly
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Wind’s Howling, Procedural UE4 Environment - Robert Berg
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Karakum
Ólafsvík
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Hong Kong
San Rafael
Jimenez
AP Art Concentration Jack Filgo
“This was the concentration for my high school AP Art class a couple years ago. My aim was to show glimpses of a possible future, and provide a mix of optimistic, hopeful environments as well as stark, desolate landscapes from around the world.�
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DROUGHT
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landscape test - Jan Urschel
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"Global warming is a justice issue. It's a justice issue because global warming is theft - theft from our own children and grand children, of their right to a livable future. It's a justice issue, because its victims are, and will be, disproportionately poor and of color, those least able to contend with or to flee, the storms, droughts, famines, and rising tides of global warming." — Fred Small
The long drought - Lasse Jensen
Desalinator Dawn Cityscape - Steve Corbett
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Global Warming - Paweล Gรณral
UE4 Landscapes - Forest
UE4 Landscapes - Desert
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UE4 Landscapes 400 sqkm - Willi Hammes
UE4 Landscapes - Highland
UE4 Landscapes - Steppe
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UE4 Landscapes - Canyon
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UE4 Landscapes 400 sqkm - Willi Hammes
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desert landscape sketch - Jason Scheier
Barren Landscape - Neil Burn
Coastal Rocks Study - Jannis Mayr
Landscape Study - Alex Nice
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desert landscape sketch - Jason Scheier
Landscape_01 - Thomas Dubois
Desert Environments WIP. - Alen Vejzovic
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UE4 Wasteland Lighting Study - Matthew Atkinson
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“Hydrological drought is associated with the effects of periods of precipitation (including snowfall) shortfalls on surface or subsurface water supply (i.e., streamflow, reservoir and lake levels, groundwater). The frequency and severity of hydrological drought is often defined on a watershed or river basin scale. Although all droughts originate with a deficiency of precipitation, hydrologists are more concerned with how this deficiency plays out through the
hydrologic system. Hydrological droughts are usually out of phase with or lag the occurrence of meteorological and agricultural droughts. It takes longer for precipitation deficiencies to show up in components of the hydrological system such as soil moisture, streamflow, and groundwater and reservoir levels. As a result, these impacts are out of phase with impacts in other economic sectors.” — National Drought Mitigation Center
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DUST
dust - Mark Kolobaev
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Sea of Rocks - Jukka Lehto
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Landscape - Alex Alvarez
Unreal Mars Landscapes - Tom Jacobs
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World Machine landscape - Calder Moore
[UE4] Barren Landscape - Pixel Perfect Polygons
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UE4 Desert landscape - Paolo Boissel
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Facing the great wall - Yeve Drovossekova
Drought - Jaume Mesalles
No Water. No Life. No Blue. No Green. — Sylvia Earle
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Wastelands - Daniel Dociu
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Drought Ewa Misztal
“The desert is a place of bones, where the innards are turned out, to desiccate into dust.�
wasteland - Aleksandr Chernobai (Kamaha)
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Migration Jianfeng (Allan) Li
“5 billion years later, our sun exhausted out its energy and expanded into a Red Giant. The earth is no longer a habitable planet, meanwhile, Titan, the largest moon of the Saturn, is getting warmer and more habitable. With the complexity of organic elements existed for millions of years on Titan, evolution gifted this lonely moon with complicated creatures. After a globally disastrous drought lasted for millions of years, these ancient oceanic creatures evolved into beings able to walk upright. Now they are migrating to the paradise with abundant water resource, where they may never reach.�
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“We never know the worth of water till the well is dry.” — Thomas Fuller “Drought” Concept art - Student film - Loic Bourgeois
Wrong way - Into The Bear
Twice as Bright : Pray for rain - Mat Birdie
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Drought - Najeeb Najjar
drought - Matus Garaj
DECAY
Drought - Markus Luotero
“Any party which takes credit for the rain must not be surprised if its opponents blame it for the drought.” — Dwight Morrow Landscape Sketch - Tom Lopez
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Wasteland - Dmytro Vernygor
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Wasteland - Sperasoft, a Keywords Studio
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"Drought brings out the worst in us and it's easy to hate your fellow human beings." — Luke Davies
Drought - Emilis Baltrusaitis
Wasteland bar - Pavel Vophira
Wasteland - Maxim Lingert
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DieselPunk - Joan PiquĂŠ Llorens
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DieselPunk - Joan PiquĂŠ Llorens
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Cityscape 2 - Matt Birks
Sunset - Darius Cheong
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Ruined Cityscape - David Edwards
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THE AUTHORS COLOR OF SPACE
“My grandfather told my father, who in turn told me, the resources are none. That’s why my belly stings when I wake up each morning. That’s why no tears fall when I get dust in my eyes. In every tall bubble you see around us, the authors exist. So does life. As the world as my family had known it, collapsed, a collective of the most wealthy and influential fought over the fragments of resources that still clung to existence. They were hoarding these remaining resources, and eventually found the ideal means of storage for what they took, the tall bubbles. When the majority of fresh water and resources were used up, the bubbles were left scattered across the landscape as hollow, immovable monuments to a far better and more survivable life. A halcyon. The bubbles exist in this endless landscape as a monolithic collective, odeto-ignorance, a poem meant to be sung, mocking humans day in and day out. In every tall bubble on the earth, an A.I. exists embedded within, generating the only existing resources left. Now we stand, barely. They control the resources, kept up in the tops of their bubbles. They also control when we move, and where we move. We must follow, in hopes they will continue to give. We
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Concept Image - Desert
do not know for how long. We do not know why. But the authors are imperfect, they malfunction; they die. There are others as well, in various parts of the world, across other landscapes, living near different authors. When an author dies, it causes a mass exodus of the people it once sustained. The people must roam until they find another tower, and with it, another group of people. Assimilation isn’t always easy, and sometimes this ends in chaos, destruction, and war. Other times, peaceful integration and acceptance. All I hope is tomorrow, our Author lives, and gives once again.”
Concept Image - Forest Towers
Concept Image - Desert Night Towers
Concept Image - Tundra / Arctic Towers
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Bibliography “18 Surprising Projections About the Future of Water.” Seametrics, www.seametrics.com/blog/future-water/. “Confronting the Rise of Eco-Anxiety.” The Varsity, The University of Toronto, 18 May 2020, thevarsity. ca/2019/11/17/confronting-the-rise-of-eco-anxiety/. “Education.” National Drought Mitigation Center, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, drought.unl.edu/Education/ DroughtIn-depth/TypesofDrought.aspx. “How Will Climate Change Affect Freshwater Resources?” Seametrics, www.seametrics.com/blog/climate-change/. “National Snow and Ice Data Center.” Snow and Climate | National Snow and Ice Data Center, nsidc.org/cryosphere/ snow/climate.html. “Why the Ocean?” One World One Ocean, www.oneworldoneocean.com/pages/why-the-ocean.
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Acknowledgements I want to thank Patrick and Terri Grim. Without their charity through the Elgas Grant, I would never have been able to print this book. I am immensley grateful to the amazing artists posting their works on ArtStation. Without their hard work and dedication to producing amazing concept art, this book would not exist.
A final, huge thank you to my amazing professor, Stacy Asher. Without her continually pushing for me to apply myself and my work in ways I never would have, I would not be the designer and person I am today. For that, I am eternally grateful.
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Image Credits All images from artstation.com
Coastline
snow landscape
Winter Landscapes 02
Cantabria Azul
Fantasy LandscapeClass Demo
Artist: Ozan Civit artstation.com/cgoz
Artist: Florent Lebrun artstation.com/florentlebrun
Artist: Slawek Fedorczuk artstation.com/slawekfedorczuk
Artist: Christian Reiske artstation.com/konzeptosaurus
Artist: Hue Teo artstation.com/htartist
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 1
Created: 2014
Created: 2014
Created: 2018
Created: 2020
Created: 2020
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/XBOmL
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/n2QE
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/rRznlL
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/N51QDg
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/489WOq
Landscape
Icy landscape
Northern Coastline Study
Last day of summer
Tide Fishery
Artist: Heri Irawan artstation.com/irawan
Artist: Jad Saber artstation.com/jadsabe
Artist: Kyle Enochs artstation.com/neonpolygon
Artist: Slawek Fedorczuk artstation.com/slawekfedorczuk
Artist: Tian Gan artstation.com/kuku_gan
Number of artworks used: 2
Number of artworks used: 1
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Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 3
Created: 2018
Created: 2015
Created: 2017
Created: 2017
Created: 2020
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/Govza
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/yoGyQ
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/m2y5v
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/ANXNy
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/Jlxr4n
frozen landscapes 2
Traversing Frozen Tundra Wind Farm
Atlantic Ocean
Sea Landscapes
Wind - Aush Sketches
Artist: Matthew Neururer artstation.com/matthewneururer
Artist: Christian Reiske artstation.com/konzeptosaurus
Artist: Anton Fadeev artstation.com/shant
Artist: Tomas Osang Muir artstation.com/parkurtommo
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 3
Number of artworks used: 2
Created: 2019
Created: 2017
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Created: 2017
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/1nkeOq
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/lvZBe
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/VdmKY5
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/voeE6
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/evwm6
Artist: Pascal Nader artstation.com/pacoco
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159/365 Coastline
Square landscapes 3
Shadow Isles Coastline
The Village-Nightfall
Rocky mushrooms keyframes by Rafate
Artist: Atey Ghailan artstation.com/snatti
Artist: Anton Fadeev artstation.com/shant
Artist: Florent Lebrun artstation.com/northfront
Artist: Tian Gan artstation.com/kuku_gan
Artist: Rafater (Rafael Teruel) artstation.com/rafater
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 3
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 1
Created: 2015
Created: 2019
Created: 2019
Created: 2020
Created: 2020
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/k2qVz
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/qABxmL
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/nQ1dL9
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/XB564L
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/58yx6z
Fantasy Landscape
Sunset Parallels and Aftermath
Coastline
Artist: Luka Mivsek artstation.com/lukamivsek
Artist: Alex Tsoucas artstation.com/alextsoucas
( Tropical_Rain tutorial ) Digital Minor landscape_01 Painting Techniques Volume 8 Artist: Wadim Kashin artstation.com/septicwd
Artist: Fred Dupere artstation.com/madvertex
Artist: Calder Moore artstation.com/refriedspinach
Number of artworks used: 4
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 1
Created: 2019
Created: 2018
Created: 2016
Created: 2020
Created: 2019
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/Ka41VW
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/L2E6q5
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/EOBAN
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/nQaxLK
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/lVL51J
Square landscapes
The Ocean Floor
Coastline Remnants
Artist: Anton Fadeev artstation.com/shant
Artist: Mitch Aseltine artstation.com/mitchaseltine
Gumroad Tutorial Designing Landscapes in Photoshop
Artist: StĂŠphane Wootha Richard artstation.com/wootha
Artist: Thomas Wievegg artstation.com/thomaswievegg
Solomon Kane - Africa Landscape
Number of artworks used: 6
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 2
Created: 2017
Created: 2018
Created: unknown
Created: 2016
Created: 2018
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/W0xXy
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/KXQax
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/xG6Q4
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/qYyKe
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/PLJV8
Artist: Guillem H. Pongiluppi artstation.com/guillemhp
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The Giant’s Archway
Fantasy Landscape
Landscape Sketches
Alpine landscape
Artist: David Fortin
Artist: Ferdinand Ladera
Redwood Forest
artstation.com/dafortin
artstation.com/ferdinandladera
Artist: Ben Kelly artstation.com/benkelly
Artist: Eddie Mendoza artstation.com/eddie
Artist: Emmanuel Shiu artstation.com/emanshiu
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 4
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 4
Created: 2016
Created: 2018
Created: 2018
Created: 2015
Created: 2020
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/yKg05
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/aRRLNz
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/bGrKa
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/oJQrJ
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/rRNRV2
Spot Hunting one (August work)
Landscape Practice
Landscape Studies
Mountain Landscape
Artist: Wadim Kashin artstation.com/septicwd
Artist: Stefan Celic artstation.com/stefancelic
Artist: Michal Kus artstation.com/michalkus
Artist: Luka Mivsek artstation.com/lukamivsek
Wind’s Howling, Procedural UE4 Environment
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 6
Number of artworks used: 4
Number of artworks used: 25
Created: 2015
Created: 2015
Created: 2018
Created: 2019
Created: 2020
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/4NNKY
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/4XKzY
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/nrNw1
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/Ka41VW
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/L2nmaA
Aussie Landscape 1
alien landscapes
Studies
Cold Landscape
AP Art Concentration
Artist: Blake Rottinger artstation.com/blakerottinger
Artist: Arnaud Pheu artstation.com/arnaud_pheu
Artist: Jennifer Mills artstation.com/jennifermills
Artist: Stéphane Wootha Richard artstation.com/wootha
Artist: Jack Filgo artstation.com/jackfilgo
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 3
Number of artworks used: 5
Number of artworks used: 5
Created: 2016
Created: 2014
Created: 2016
Created: unknown
Created: 2017
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/Kvm8X
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/8lz5q
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/ol6bm
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/5zwZw
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/bNrKk
98
artstation.com/pixelgoat Artist: Robert Berg
The long drought
UE4 Landscapes 400 sqkm
Landscape Study
desert landscape sketch
UE4 Wasteland Lighting Study
Artist: Lasse Jensen artstation.com/maybejensen
Artist: Willi Hammes artstation.com/whammes
Artist: Alex Nice artstation.com/alexnice
Artist: Jason Scheier artstation.com/d3cap
Artist: Matthew Atkinson artstation.com/matt_atkinson
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 5
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 7
Created: 2017
Created: 2018
Created: 2015
Created: 2018
Created: 2020
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/8gXJw
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/P9d54
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/QXPWx
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/L2ZDbA
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/184O92
Desalinator Dawn Cityscape
Global Warming
Barren Landscape
Landscape_01
dust
Artist: Steve Corbett artstation.com/stevecorbett
Artist: Paweł Góral artstation.com/badfineliner
Artist: Neil Burn artstation.com/neilburn
Artist: Thomas Dubois artstation.com/thomas_dubois
Artist: Mark Kolobaev artstation.com/mous
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 2
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 1
Created: 2017
Created: 2019
Created: 2020
Created: 2017
Created: 2014
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/4QzYl
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/W2V6g3
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/xzlJ3X
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/qy9AL
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/EO2N
landscape test
Coastal Rocks Study
desert landscape sketch
Desert Environments WIP
Sea of Rocks
Artist: Jan Urschel artstation.com/janurschel
Artist: Jannis Mayr artstation.com/joblyn
Artist: jason scheier artstation.com/d3cap
Artist: Alen Vejzovic artstation.com/vejza
artstation.com/versaali Artist: Jukka Lehto
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 8
Number of artworks used: 6
Created: 2015
Created: 2019
Created: 2017
Created: 2018
Created: 2020
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/wrwXZ
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/Jl3e00
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/bWXNr
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/q8vXn
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/A9bDOX
99
Unreal Mars Landscapes
[UE4] Barren Landscape
Wastelands
Drought
Wrong way
Artist: Tom Jacobs artstation.com/tomjacobs101
Artist: Pixel Perfect Polygons artstation.com/pixelperfectpolygons
Artist: Daniel Dociu artstation.com/daniel_dociu
Artist: Ewa Misztal artstation.com/extraterrestrialentity
Artist: Into The Bear artstation.com/intothebear
Number of artworks used: 4
Number of artworks used: 4
Number of artworks used: 5
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used:
Created: 2016
Created: 2018
Created: 2016
Created: 2020
Created: 2020
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/q6JlL
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/P9NB8
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/9z4Lv
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/q90xYN
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/oOvXLm
Landscape
UE4 Desert landscape
Drought
Migration
Twice as Bright : Pray for rain
Artist: Alex Alvarez artstation.com/alexalvarez
Artist: Paolo Boissel artstation.com/paoloboissel
Artist: Jaume Mesalles artstation.com/jaumemesalles
Artist: Jianfeng (Allan) Li artstation.com/allanalbert
Artist: Mat Birdie artstation.com/matbirdie
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 5
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 1
Created: 2014
Created: 2018
Created: 2018
Created: 2019
Created: 2019
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/kKbA
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/N5xY0q
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/oOxLPW
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/aRZmD2
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/Kadg5R
wasteland
“Drought� Concept art - Student film
Drought
World Machine landscape Facing the great wall Artist: Calder Moore artstation.com/refriedspinach
Artist: Yeve Drovossekova artstation.com/yeve
artstation.com/kamahqezzky
Artist: Aleksandr Chernobai (Kamaha) Artist: Loic Bourgeois
artstation.com/loicbourgeois
Artist: Najeeb Najjar artstation.com/najeeb
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 1
Created: 2016
Created: 2018
Created: 2020
Created: 2020
Created: 2016
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/E4ldA
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/A9w1XV
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/WKlGDX
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/nQ9224
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/m0KAa
100
Landscape Study
Wasteland
Wasteland
DieselPunk
Ruined Cityscape
Artist: Alex Nice artstation.com/alexnice
Artist: Dmytro Vernygor artstation.com/vernygor
Artist: Maxim Lingert artstation.com/maximlingert
Artist: Joan PiquĂŠ Llorens artstation.com/joanpiquellorens
Artist: David Edwards artstation.com/everlite
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 2
Number of artworks used: 1
Created: 2015
Created: 2017
Created: 2019
Created: 2020
Created: 2015
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/QXPWx
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/D1mmR
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/oORlzO
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/mqkGvd
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/1xQkG
drought
Landscape Sketch
Drought
Sunset
THE AUTHORS
Artist: Matus Garaj artstation.com/cheorche
Artist: Tom Lopez artstation.com/tomlopez
Artist: Emilis Baltrusaitis artstation.com/emilisb
Artist: Darius Cheong artstation.com/dariusdraws
Artist: Color of Space artstation.com/colorofspace
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 5
Created: 2016
Created: 2016
Created: 2018
Created: 2015
Created: 2020
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/N2xk5
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/k1Ev
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/XrdJn
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/6Nz90
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/3dbqnm
Drought
Wasteland bar
Wasteland
Cityscape 2
Artist: Markus Luotero artstation.com/markusl
Artist: Pavel Vophira artstation.com/vophira
Artist: Sperasoft, a Keywords Studio Artist: Matt Birks artstation.com/sperasoft artstation.com/mattbirks
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 1
Number of artworks used: 1
Created: 2018
Created: 2018
Created: 2016
Created: 2020
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/oOZmDB
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/qaamP
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/8104m
Link to piece: artstation.com/artwork/bawm1k
101