Showing posts with label Drawing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Drawing. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 14, 2020

Pastel returns...again




⁣⁣These are some recent experiments with color and pastel. There is something incredibly arresting and radiant about pastel—it's brilliance. And in a season that seems so incredibly dark at times; a little color and brilliance feels like an unarticulated necessity.⁣⁣


Monday, January 27, 2020

Daily Figure 1-27-2020


Using a multitude of various charcoals and tools here. Of particular usefulness as of late: Prismacolor Art Stix for upper-tier halftones and incredibly light values. It doesn't play with other media so well due to the strong wax content and a heavy application really puts this into high relief; but strategically used—it's perfect for gentle, light, and subtle gradations of value. Especially on really light or bright white surfaces where subtle slight value shifts can be difficult to keep tamed.   

Tuesday, November 5, 2019

Not filling in the shadows





In having spent so much time drawing from life—you are continuously forced to make editing choices due to the time limit of the pose. What to include, what to exclude. Over time, I've come to appreciate that this creates it's own aesthetic. As in life, sometimes the things left unsaid are more beautiful than anything manifestly expressed. 

Tuesday, October 22, 2019

The forever moving target


A recent exercise in drawing the figure from reference with a bit of experimentation in tools—using one brand of compressed charcoal for the core shadows and another to fill in the shadowed sections. Whereas one of the brands (Cretacolor) is much more loosely bound and softer, and the other (Conté à Paris) is much harder. I used the softer of the two for the core shadows and the harder for the fill shadows and mid-tones.

 The advantage with this approach was that a dark registration of the shadow cores was quick and easy with the softer charcoal, and then I could more easily control the structural reveal of the forms in the half-tones and fill shadows by using a slower application process with the harder charcoal. Using the harder charcoal was particularly useful in taming the level of reflected light bounced into the shadow fills—so that the nuances of the anatomical construction were retained with subtle fidelity.

There's a tendency for many to use the same tool or approach in their work over and over, as it's how they were taught. I did this myself—often. For years in fact. Although as I've learned, and come to enjoy—the application of specific tools and techniques for specific circumstances is so much more effective in terms of speed, control, and/or effect. It just takes some time to work through where, when, and how to go about it. And it seems that this process is never complete nor is there an approach that is 100% applicable to every circumstance or subject. Failure is a constant. Every work it seems, in some manner or another, requires a kind of special consideration—if you're really paying attention. Even a 5-minute drawing.   

Monday, August 7, 2017

Pushing it further—Mark Session Back Pose 08/05/2017


For the curious—I went to the trouble to make a animated gif (it may take a bit to load) which illustrates the progress of this life drawing that has been furthered beyond the time with the model. The original is what was achieved with the model posing for 25 min. The image with the additions was completed in about 40 extra minuets. So about an hour in all.
Although I still use Newsprint for 2-15 minutes poses, I've moved on to using a higher quality paper for most of my short pose work in the range of 20-25 minutes. Because of this, I've felt compelled to take these a bit further with additional work. As many may know, Newsprint doesn't take reworking very well at all. So it's a pursuit I've never really gotten into with short pose drawings. But it's a lot of fun to push the notation inherent to short pose work into something more fleshed out so to speak. It really allows you to think a bit more about what you want to emphasize and what you want to play down while still attempting to keep it all tethered to reality somehow. Oftentimes I wind up liking the original better, but as always—there is progress in the destruction.


Mark Session Back Pose 08/05/2017 - 25 Min. Pose (image 1) - 25 Min. Pose with additional work (image 2) - 18" X 24" - Carbon Pencils, Vine Charcoal, and White Pastel Pencil on Charcoal Paper

Sunday, March 12, 2017

A collection of Sara Streeter Works


Sara Streeter Session 1/16/2016
25 Min. from Life
24" X 36"
Charcoal on Paper


Sara Streeter Session 1/23/2016
2 Hrs. from Life
24" X 36"
Charcoal on Paper


Sara Streeter Session 9/6/2016
25 Min. from Life
24" X 36"
Charcoal on Paper


Sara Streeter Session 1/14/2017
2 Hrs. from Life
18" X 24"
Charcoal on Paper


Sara Streeter Session 1/24/2017
5 Min. from Life
18" X 24"
Charcoal on Paper


Sara Streeter Session 2/08/2017
2 Hrs. from Life
13" X 15"
Oil on Canvas


Sara Streeter Session 11/03/2016
20 Min. from Life
24" X 36"
Charcoal on Paper


Sara Streeter is a quite a legendary figure model in the L.A. area. She is the standard candle of art models, in my humble opinion. Collected here are various works completed over the last year or so. 

Thursday, April 23, 2015

Earth Day Cowgirl


Earth Day Cowgirl
24" X 36"
Charcoal on Paper
2015

Cowgirl, my cat of 15 years, was kind enough to pose like a french girl for Earth Day. ; )

Sunday, March 15, 2015

44th President


44th President Sketch
18" X 24"
Charcoal on Paper
2015

This 45 min. sketch of President Obama is from an image that just seemed to catch my interest the other day. It's always remarkable to witness the ageing of Presidents in office over time as I imagine they endure an exhaustive work schedule and inordinate amounts of stress. There was a kind of 1,000 yard stare in his eyes that was absolutely gripping.



Sunday, March 8, 2015

Cactus Study


Cactus Study
24" X 36"
Charcoal on Paper
2012

One of the aspects that I most enjoy in drawing is the linearity in form description. Although working in mass can also be easily achieved as well through various methods, to me drawing is very much about working in line. I feel it is one of the definitive differences between how I approach a drawing and painting.

This difference is especially true of working at larger scales. It is uncommon to see artists drawing at a larger scale than 18" X 24" and whenever I show up to a workshop with a  24" X 36" drawing board I am typically the only individual working at that scale. One thing this scale brings out in drawing is the relatively small proportion of the tool to the working area. So in this way many small scale strokes have to be laid down to achieve tonal differences. An advantage of this is that you can emphasize directions of form in each stroke that build up to larger overall compositional patterns as I've done in this study.



Thursday, January 29, 2015

Untitled #37


Untitled #37
24" X 36"
Pastel on Matboard
2013

This large pastel work from life was created with Pan Pastels. As I've mentioned in a previous post; they make it fairly simple to cover large areas of your working surface in a really short amount of time. So they make it possible to work much larger when working with a model. 

This pastel is also a good example of my working style. Especially in how the hair is handled. Due to the time constraints in working from life and the tendency of hair to be a complex juxtaposition of values and shapes - it is where a lot of artists develop their shorthand.  



Monday, January 12, 2015

Untitled #14


Untitled #14
22" X 30"
Charcoal on Paper
2012

Around 2010 or so I began to use some of the Pan Pastel Sofft Tools when working in charcoal from life. While they do have their limitations with respect to getting a tight hard edge; nothing comes close to the way they leave a mark. Another idiosyncratic distinction is that it often takes a bit of work to fill the tooth of a paper with them, which is a good thing. 

The Sofft tools are very much like sponges or make-up applicators. This softness makes them the perfect tool on a delicate surface like Stonehenge paper. Also, when working larger, you can cover a substantial amount of area in very little time without a lot of vigorous effort. Which is a real virtue when working within the time constraints of a posed model.



Saturday, January 10, 2015

Untitled #110


Untitled #110
22" X 30"
Charcoal on Paper
2013

Models aren't always into being naked in front of a room of strangers, as one can imagine. Although, there was an opportunity in this pose to add some emotional depth by way of how the shading was handled. So I used the charcoal edge to give emphasis to the main force of the forms. Vertical in the torso, radial in the legs. This brings the focal point to the collection of shapes at the center of her pelvis, which tells the story of the model's mood just as much as the expression on her face. 



Tuesday, December 23, 2014

Mt. San Jacinto Study


Mt. San Jacinto Study
22" X 30"
Charcoal on Paper
2013

If you have ever been to the Palm Springs area in California it's hard not to be impressed by Mt. San Jacinto. It's an imposing mountainous jut of earth. It is the sheerest mountain face in America according to some sources. Which means it's steep and tall like no other. 

It's a constant visual influence living in this area, and has no doubt had more than a little to do with the way I approach my work - whether overtly or subversively. Living here, it's difficult  not to be infected by it's dynamics.

I've had the good fortune to live in a house once occupied by the (now) famous artist Agnes Pelton, and as she once wrote, “Hail San Jacinto!”.