The materials displayed on this site are NOT public domain under US
Copyright law.
The unauthorized reproduction or
distribution in any form of the copyrighted works on this site is illegal.
Criminal copyright infringement, including infringement without monetary
(cash) gain, is investigated by the FBI and is punishable by 5 years in
federal prison PLUS a fine of up to $250,000 per offense. ANY unauthorized
use is prosecutable in any country in which the
Berne Convention
applies. If you have questions regarding
US Copyright law, please go here:
The OFFICIAL Government
Copyright site.
Please DO NOT steal my bandwidth by hotlinking. This can be tracked and you
WILL be
reported for the theft. This can result in
termination of your web hosting, ISP contract and other services used to
commit the crime and, possibly, further prosecution.
I
have been creating art as far back as I can remember. It began with crayons,
finger paints and a love of animals. Then, when I discovered mythology at an
early age, the artwork evolved to contain more and more fantastic images.
Some were my interpretations of old myths. Others came to life on their own
through my very active imagination. Over time, I began experimenting with
many forms of media: graphite, colored pencil, charcoal, pastels, chalk,
watercolor, ink, scratchboard, clay, acrylic paints and even photography. What you will find in these galleries is by no
means the full body of my work. Some pieces have been lost to the storms of
the Texas coast and some have been given as gifts, sold or donated to
charities before images of them could be taken.
Please note
that my galleries are arranged in chronological order for the most part,
with older stuff first so you can see the progression of the art as you
go. If you want to keep the thumbnail galleries open while you browse
images, just right click an image link and choose "Open Link in New
Window". Each image page has a "previous" and "next" button so you can
move forward and backward through each gallery from the new window. Note that "Gallery
C: The Future" is not set up this way because as works are completed, the
WIP page gets linked onto the page of the finished image and it's too much
work to have to keep reorganizing it when I finish a piece. In that section,
you may simply use your back button or open the pages up in a new window as
you browse.