Thursday, May 2, 2013

Color Studies

After spending the past two weeks sketching with a felt tip pen, painting with color seems more like a treat than usual. Here are a couple of digital paintings based on photos I took while in London.

Every morning we went to Le Pain Quotidien for coffee. I grabbed a photo of three women sitting next to the window. This is a detail of the image that I’m working on.  

Two Women from Kew.
On the train back to central London, after a day-trip to Kew Gardens, the different ages, fashion styles, and demeanors of two women across the isle caught my attention. 



Saturday, April 27, 2013

London Sketchbook

We just returned from a 12-day trip to London, and while there wasn’t a lot of time for drawing,  I did manage to average a drawing per day. 



The Black Friar pub, built in 1905, is an art nouveau masterpiece.




Jimmy’s reaction to taking our food order.




A large 1500s marble sculpture in the British Museum. Lely, an artist and collector, acquired the statue from the King Charles estate when Charles was executed and the Commonwealth put in place.



Sketching in the park. Grovesnor Square is surrounded by embassies, including the US Embassy.





The Thames River and Millennium Bridge, from the 6th floor coffee shop of the Tate Modern.



A sketch inspired by a visit to the Lichtenstein Retrospective exhibit at the Tate Modern.




Robin reading on the flight home.




A colossal bronze statue in the St. Pancras international train station.



St. Paul’s Cathedral, from the Tate Modern coffee shop.


Another sketch in the park.





The cellar bar in Ye Olde Cheshire Cheese, near Fleet Street. Rebuilt in 1667.



Curtains in our hotel room, The Academy.




Self portrait. 


Thursday, April 4, 2013

Freddie Sketch

This blog focuses on drawing and art, but I also occasionally post articles to jtChatter.blogspot.com
especially when traveling, such as the trip to London that happens in about a week.



Freddie Mercury, late/great lead singer of Queen
Pencil on watercolor paper
Shading added in Photoshop


Life Drawing of Jesus

That’s the Santa Fe model, Jesus, not the Jesus whose father created the universe and has a really big church in Rome. Although, now that I think about it, this guy could be Hollywood casting for the part. Might have to lose the pierced-ear look though.








Thursday, March 28, 2013

Drawing Loma

Tuesday night model in a variety of poses and styles.






Sunday, March 24, 2013

Digital Oil

Experimenting with a charcoal drawing. Digital oil painting is starting to freak me out.



Saturday, March 23, 2013

New Hairdo

I feel like a slob when the model goes to the trouble to have her hair done and wears a nice necklace. I mean, when a nude model is better dressed than you are, you're hopeless. Or an artist. Maybe both.



New Hairdo

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Once Again

Once again, my warmup drawings at the start of the drawing session are better than the longer poses over the next several hours. That tells me something, but what?





Sunday, March 10, 2013

Wispy Hair

A quasi-portrait of last Tuesday’s model.


Wispy Hair
Giclée print on canvas
40 x 40 inches

Saturday, March 9, 2013

Classical Mode

The image in the previous post used one part of this drawing. When a drawing is too large to put in the scanner, I usually photograph it. However, that usually includes exposure and focus problems. So now I scan the drawing in 4 to 6 sections, then use Photoshop to merge the scans into one image.


Classical Mode


Model with hair down. 
In a Shakespearean play, if a woman's hair is down 
it pretty much means the woman has gone crazy. 
Not really the case in life drawing.

Thursday, March 7, 2013

Hannah's Knee

After scanning one of last Tuesday night's drawings in several pieces, I liked the unusual cropping and decided to experiment with the partial image.  


Hannah's Knee
Stretched Canvas
20 x 28

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Charcoal to Color

Two drawings that started as charcoal on newsprint. 









Two-Minute Drawings

The usual two-minute warmup drawings don't give me enough time to even come close to finishing a drawing. I usually just barely get a suggestion of the figure, without any shading. The other day, as I flipped through my newsprint pad to a clean sheet, I decided to add some shading, detail, and bolder lines to the warmup drawings from the previous week’s drawing session.




Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Juliet

A glooming peace this morning with it brings; 
The sun, for sorrow, will not show his head: 
Go hence, to have more talk of these sad things; 
Some shall be pardon’d, and some punished: 
For never was a tale of more woe 
than this of Juliet and her Romeo. 

Below, an homage to perhaps the most brilliant last lines of a play ever written. As you can see, my vision of the costuming probably wouldn’t have worked that well on the Elizabethan stage. However, I think the author would have surely and almost certainly, beyond a reasonable doubt, and almost without question, loved it.

Because she was amazing.

But that's just me.



Juliet
40 x30








Monday, February 18, 2013

Model with Pillows

I like the monotone look of charcoal drawings. Sometimes I add a sepia tone to the final print. Lately I’ve been experimenting with adding more color to drawings. The technique shown in the drawing below keeps the character of the original drawing and charcoal strokes.

Model with Pillows
28 x 36

Sunday, February 17, 2013

Color Chalks

Robin found a small case of unused color chalks in her art supply cabinet so I decided to experiment with them. I'd just bought a new newsprint pad so I thought this would be a good way to break it in. I scanned the chalk drawing, opened it in Photoshop, and applied several filters to duplicate layers, experimented with different blend modes and opacities for the various layers, then added an ancient parchment texture to the background.


Experimental chalk drawing print.
30 x 40


Detail, before adding lots of layers, filters, and stuff.


Detail close up of final image.





Saturday, February 16, 2013

CafePress Curtain

As mentioned in a previous post, I ordered a curtain from CafePress.com, printed with a drawing from the Tuesday night drawing group. When it arrived, it was the wrong size. It was supposed to be a chenile privacy curtain, but instead it was a smaller, polyester shower curtain. I emailed CafePress and they had the perfect response: Sorry, our fault, we'll ship the correct product to you, no need to return the shower curtain.

I was already a big fan of CafePress. Now I'm even more impressed.

You can't tell from the poor lighting, but the image quality is really good,
considering the image resolution is 72 pixels per inch.

Rosetta is more into red rubber balls than art, but I don't take it personally.
You can tell it's high-class art because it includes a Shakespeare quote from King Lear.



Ancient Processes

Ancient processes: Calligraphy (10th century manuscript), fertility, drawing, and Photoshop.


Ancient Processes
26 x 36

Thursday, February 14, 2013

Drawing From Memory

After posting some drawings from last Tuesday's drawing group (the February 13 post), I decided to redraw the model from memory, using a more stylized, less stressful drawing approach. With Photoshop I added a parchment texture (from an ancient manuscript in the British Library) and then added a few highlights.

Month Eight
Giclée print on watercolor paper
26 x 36


Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Baby and Puppy

One of our favorite models (8 months pregnant now) posed for our drawing group last night. We may get one more session with her in early March before her baby arrives.

We also had three drawing group newcomers join us for the first time, and we all got to meet the new Argos Gallery puppy (bottom of page).

Detail from a 45-minute pose.

Yep, she's definitely preggers.


Above and below: two-minute warmup poses. 



Beebee (not sure I'm spelling it right), the new Argos Gallery puppy, gets some attention.