Epic Doom II Sculpture Will Cost You $6,000

StewShearerOld

Geekdad News Writer
Jan 5, 2013
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Epic Doom II Sculpture Will Cost You $6,000


Artist Jason Hite has created a sculpture based on Doom II's Icon of Sin stage.

On any list of all-time great shooters chances are there's going to be some spot reserved <a href=http://www.escapistmagazine.com/videos/view/uncivil-war/9587-Doom-II-King-of-Hell>Doom II. One of the genre's undeniable classics, it's a game that dug its claws into countless players and, for many, never let go. Case in point, artist Jason Hite recently finished work on a <a href=http://www.escapistmagazine.com/tag/view/doom+2>Doom II sculpture based on the game's <a href=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fPn1qBubb-0>Icon of Sin level.

Hite's sculpture was inspired by "those fun nights playing Doom with my roommate." Made over the course of several years, it began with a single Cyberdemon miniature which quickly expanded into an all out quest on Hite's part to craft an entire "environment for the evil little cyborg." Over the course of several years, Hite then pieced together his creation using pieces he built from scratch as well as things he found. Several chunks, for instance, are made from circuit boards recycled from old computers. He also integrated guns from Quake action figures and modified HeroClix figures.

The end result is a sculpture that remains faithful to the style and visuals of its source game while also taking some appropriate liberties for the sake of art. For instance, Hite had originally intended to rebuild a totally accurate version of the game's HUD but eventually decided to make some changes when he realized that it might not translate into something as visually interesting as he wanted it to be. In turn, he exchanged the numbers and percentages employed by the game itself for hearts inspired by the game Splatterhouse. These hearts were built in Super Sculpey. Additional custom pieces (including John Romero's decapitated head) were created using Monster Clay and Magic Stick. The sculpture also has built in 27 LED light fixtures.

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Gamers interested in checking out Hite's work for themselves will be able to see it on display at the Copro Nason Gallery in Santa Monica, California until November 8th. Fans interested in giving it a more permanent home meanwhile, can purchase it for $6,000.

Source: Hite Studios


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Kenjitsuka

New member
Sep 10, 2009
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"Additional custom pieces (including John Romero's decapitated head)". I didn't know he'd died! Har, har... :p

Anyway, I don't read what size this is in your article?
Too bad the video doesn't really show how the lighting and sound effects work, or if those appear only in the video.
 

Vigormortis

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Nov 21, 2007
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"Hite had originally intended to rebuild a totally accurate version of the game's HUD but eventually decided to make some changes when he realized that it might not translate into something as visually interesting as he wanted it to be."
I'm curious, did he actually try a test build of his concept for the original HUD first or did he just think about it and decide it wouldn't look right?

I ask this because, as it is, I honestly don't like the look of his 're-imagined' HUD. It feels jarringly out of place with the overall look and accuracy of the rest of the piece.

That aside, this is an incredible sculpture. The detail is amazing and the clever use of view-point and 3-dimensional spacing brought a smile to my face. It definitely elicits a strong sense of nostalgia for someone like myself, harkening back to long nights of LAN games with friends.

Can't say I'd blow six grand on it, but I'd certainly love to see it in person.
 

Hairless Mammoth

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Jan 23, 2013
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What a lovely addition to any room's decór.

Cyberdemons in that map? That's worse than 3 Pain Elementals spawning everyone's favorite shotgun fodder behind their back.
 

Nurb

Cynical bastard
Dec 9, 2008
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The quality isn't even anywhere near 6,000 bucks. I'd expect everything to be custom made, not reused PC motherboards.

The massive head is impressive though,
 

dalek sec

Leader of the Cult of Skaro
Jul 20, 2008
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Nurb said:
The quality isn't even anywhere near 6,000 bucks. I'd expect everything to be custom made, not reused PC motherboards.

The massive head is impressive though,
Pretty much this.

It's nice but it's no where near $6,000 worth of nice. Part of it looks like they used building set's from Warhammer 40K in it's building as well.