Homo erectus

A little less than two million years ago, a female Homo erectus walks across a grassy field with a stone handaxe in her grip. Handaxes, also known as bifaces, were primitive stone tools that human ancestors such as H. erectus would have used for chopping and cutting substances such as meat, tubers, wood, and bark. They would have been the progenitors to our knives, axes, and bladed weaponry.

8 Replies to “Homo erectus”

  1. Good drawing. The setting is good and this Homo Erectus female look stunning and sexy. Though if I was gonna give criticism I would say you should erase that hair she has in her genital area. Remember that members of the Homo genus are characterized for having less hair than other apes, with the females having less hair than the males. So there is no way a female Homo Erectus would have that chunk of hair in her genital area. If you want to censor that then I would recommend you to either cover it with a leaf or primitive clothing or make her leg cover that area while she is walking. I say you do the drawing again this time without that chunk of hair in her genital area. Furthermore, nice art.

    1. Thank you for the feedback, but women actually do have pubic hair like men. A lot of women today do shave it off for cultural reasons though.

  2. She is beautiful, absolutely beautiful. But could you take the “Brandon S. Pilcher” name off? It ruins the drawing.

    1. Unfortunately, I’ve had people stealing my art to print it on unauthorized merch, so I’ve needed to watermark it. But I can place the watermark in a less obtrusive area.

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