This year, 2024, I focused on practicing the techniques taught by Chris Koeppen to make progress on Distant Era’s Gods and Heroes of the Aegean project we conceived in 2021, planned in 2022, and photographed in 2023. I’ve also had to focus on practicing patience. The time it’s taken to complete even one image I’ve been satisfied with has seemed tortuously long. And yet, that artwork fulfills not only the vision for the project but that initial inspiration for what Distant Era could do and be. So by that metric, the time has been worth it. As we near the end of 2024, the second in the series awaits completion as much needed client work fills my time.
Practicing Patience
When we were small children in the late ’70s and early ’80s, my siblings and I took road trips with our parents in a series of big brown or green station wagons with wood-grain designs running along the sides of the car. There wasn’t much to distract us then—no movies or iPads or phones. The Walkman was just coming on the scene, but we didn’t own one then. Sometimes we had activity books, or we’d play “I Spy” or other verbal games. Most of the time, we spent those trips staring out the windows, watching the mile markers and telephone poles pass by, or trying to name the states and their capitals. At night, we pretended we were on board the Millennium Falcon, gunning down pursuing Tie Fighters as represented by the headlights and tail lights of the cars on the highway.
“Are we there yet?” we’d ask our parents. “How much longer before we get there?”
“We’ll be there when we get there” was a common response. And so it is with this project.
Subjects and Verbs
As I’ve practiced compositing basics, masking subjects and matching them to environments has become smoother. But Gods and Heroes of the Aegean‘s narrative goals demand that the work be more detailed and specific. By contrast, no stories are shown in Distant Era’s previous fantasy portraiture project, The People of Light and Shadow. The portraits have a mood and a point of view, but no action. They are subjects without verbs. Making those verbs clear, which is to say, showing concrete, identifiable action, has been the true challenge of this project.
Anti-Stagnation
There’s a significant amount of trial and error in Gods and Heroes of the Aegean. When a promising direction leads to a dead end after a week or two, it can be disheartening, as such things can stall the project for a time.
In 2025, I’d like to make more personal work than in 2023 and 2024. Personal projects are the way we get better. The plan for focusing on Gods and Heroes of the Aegean as my sole personal project seemed like a good idea at the time, but sometimes I need to exercise different muscles that aren’t getting any stronger with a solitary focus. So the goal for 2025 is to make new and different work that’s easy to execute while continuing my very favorite, very laborious, passion project. We’ll see how that works.
Realizing the Art
Absolutely gorgeous artworks of Pandora arrived last week, and they are breathtaking to behold. Worlds beyond the silly selfie above.
While I’ve talked about nothing but Distant Era’s personal projects in this post, I’d be remiss not to mention the client work that arrived with Pandora. Check out this beautiful matted art print of storyteller Megan Wells as Clara Barton, one of Megan’s series of historical women that she plays.
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