
s u p p o r t
Traveling? Showing the world to my little daughter and visiting paleontological sites with her. Filming YouTube content in the form of a visual diary.
Painting images of extinct animals as if a National Geographic photographer had taken their portraits.
Filming and editing videos from excavation sites where million-year-old fossils are being unearthed, and from the process of painting artworks that take up to 400 hours to complete.
Creating animations that tell the stories behind the discovery of the most iconic fossils.
Visiting museums.


Yes — none of this is simple. It takes time, and sharing this knowledge also requires significant financial effort. That’s why I’ve decided to set up a Patreon and Patronite.
Supporting me is one thing. But besides (apparently!) being a hardworking guy, I’m also known for one more quality… gratitude.
By supporting my work and helping grow paleoart on a European scale, you gain:
From Sketch to Time Travel

Discover the sometimes exhausting process of sketching and designing a 2-meter painting on the iPad.
Unused Sketches

(Someday I might finish them!)
Plus works-in-progress.
What are they for? Why? For whom?
Photo for Your Wallet?

Free prints up to 30x15 cm every month?
Prints, Prints!

Get a 20% discount or a free option to choose framed prints, ready to hang on your wall. One print every six months. Max size: 100x50 cm.
Discounts

Discounts on commissioned work for publications, books, or magazines. Free PNG versions of animals with transparent backgrounds.
Publication?

Use some of my finished artworks for your own purposes. Best resolution. Which ones? Whichever you want. They’re yours.
Excavation Sites

Exclusive footage from excavation sites with paleontologists.
These are raw, uncut materials — only short fragments of which end up in my films. English subtitles.
Nobody’s Perfect

Take a look behind the scenes — the edits, lost hours, and bloopers from my YouTube videos.

By joining me, you support the development of paleoart and help share knowledge about the history of life on Earth in an engaging, artistic way.
Together, we can travel back to times we will never see again — but which, thanks to science and art, can live once more.
And I mean that — in the most realistic way you can imagine.
There are still plenty of free seats in my time machine.