Separated At Birth: Abigail Harding & Astro Inferno
Abigail Harding’s Parliament Of Rooks artwork from three years ago looks a little like Astro Inferno RPG artwork. What do you tyhink?
British comic book creator Abigail Harding is currently working on a comic book called Parliament Of Rooks, to be released from Comixology Originals later this year. Three years ago, she released this piece of work-in-progress.
She recently was surprised to come across something very similar promoting a Kickstarter appear for the role playing table top game Astro Inferno, very much not by her.
Let’s zoom in a little and turn up the contrast.
The artist working for Haxan Studios, putting this game together. With the original piece on the artist’s portfolio website with the caption “The unlight Creature & Undying”. Elsewhere on the site, they state that “The unlight Creature & Undying was the first sketch for Astro inferno and was done with ‘Photobashing'” Photobashing is defined as “a technique that consists of using multiple digital assets like pictures, textures, and 3D models to create realistic-looking artwork.”
All this can be dismissed as coincidence of course. But what is even odder that the Facebook page for Astro Inferno, had a Twitter contact detail for Abigail Hardy rather than anyone involved with the game.
After trying to contact them, Abigail Hardy tell us received no reply but tells the Twitter contact to her was removed. Their actual Twitter account (no longer mentioned at all on their Facebook page now) had been following Abigail Harding – but it no longer is. Funny that.
Separated At Birth used to be called Swipe File, in which we present two or more images that resemble each other to some degree. They may be homages, parodies, ironic appropriations, coincidences, or works of the lightbox. We trust you, the reader, to make that judgment yourself. If you are unable to do so, we ask that you please return your eyes to their maker before any further damage is done. Separated At Borth doesn’t judge; it is interested more in the process of creation, how work influences other work, how new work comes from old, and sometimes how the same ideas emerge simultaneously as if their time has just come. The Swipe File was named after the advertising industry habit where writers and artists collect images and lines they admire to inspire them in their work. It was swiped from the Comic Journal, who originally ran a similar column and the now-defunct Swipe Of The Week website, but Separated At Birth is considered a less antagonistic title.
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