This ultra-talented artist can draw EIGHT photo-realistic portraits at the same time - using both hands and her feet.<br /><br />Rajacenna, 30, creates the illustrations at the same time with all four limbs holding paintbrushes working independently. <br /><br />The artist, who prefers to keep her surname confidential, taught herself to draw with all limbs to increase her productivity and stop herself from getting bored.<br /><br />Rajacenna started drawing at the age of 16 and began making multiple pieces at the same time in 2018.<br /><br />She was previously able to draw four and six portraits at the same time but has now graduated to drawing eight for the first time.<br /><br />Rajacenna, from Rotterdam, Netherlands, said: "Drawing and painting eight portraits doesn’t really differ from six or four. <br /><br />"The amount of time and energy which I put in them is relevant here.<br /><br />"The more I focus on one artwork, the more details I can do. If I have to divide this focal point to eight different pieces the realism aspect is going to suffer.<br /><br />"I use a glass table so I can see what I am painting with my feet. <br /><br />"Examples of the images are in front of me on a screen and between my sessions, I study those images."<br /><br />The eight portraits shown in the video took three weeks to complete, with daily drawing sessions lasting up to five hours. <br /><br />Each portrait is different but it can take up to 40 hours to complete a single one.<br /><br />Rajacenna uses acrylic paint for her portraits, and places erasers on the brushes she holds with her toes so as to control them better.<br /><br />She added: "Each person I portrayed I either admire or am inspired by. The people I chose for the project are all interesting and creative icons.<br /><br />"They all inspire me in a different way and also because they are different in their looks it is more of a challenge to me."<br /><br />Rajacenna took an EEG scan for the German TV show, Galileo, that appeared to reveal extraordinary brain performance while drawing.<br /><br />She said: "The connectivity between the left and right brain are totally connected and three times higher than normal. <br /><br />"So they exchange information at a very fast speed."<br /><br />The process of making pieces like these is incredibly technical. <br /><br />Rajacenna added: "It's constantly multitasking between all the drawing that I'm working on. I switch my focus back and forth.<br /><br />"The latest pieces I created with pencils and paint. I don't really think about the techniques I use.<br /><br /> "I just try to make it look as accurate as possible which is much harder of course when you work on so many simultaneously."