Saturday, January 30, 2010

Camels

I have been messing around with drawing camels to figure out my characters for hymn of the pearl. These are some sketches from Lawrence of Arabia.
I did these sketches on Friday from the extinct camel skeleton at the Page Museum.
This is a study from some anatomical reference.

Joe Weatherly said we should practice every week what we are going to work on in class. I am going to work some more on the camel skeletons tomorrow so I thought I'd get a jump start on it and go to the Page on Friday. I also just wanted to see it before class so I could be more comfortable there on Sunday.


Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Gaspar's Bedroom

Got some research together and started doing some thumbnails about what I want Gaspar's bedroom to look like in my story. Hymn of the Pearl.


Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Ophelia - the Drawing Club

I went to The Drawing Club on Sunday for the three hour Preraphaelite pose. I did some thumbnails and decided to make the composition vertical.
After I finished the oil pastel drawing I thought it would have been better if I had her getting in the water to kill herself and I recomposed in watercolor. In the final drawing there is just green grass (you can see it below). But I didn't think of it until the end. She really became Ophelia for me by the end that's why I remembered clearly the scene where she drowns herself.

This is my long oil pastel drawing perhaps 2 hours of drawing here. I didn't have too many colors. I borrowed a pink soft pastel from Linda Bull because my set didn't have any. I like how the composition came out. I think I draw better if I have something thick in my hand. I can't explain why. Maybe I get lost in the details when I have something with a point. Her face is very white. I didn't really have anything to use as flesh tones but I think it's ok. I changed the couch into the log.




Saturday, January 16, 2010

Rembrandt Prints at the Hammer

I saw an exhibit of Rembrandt prints at the Hammer last Sunday. Oh how beautiful they were. Marshall had showed a lot of Rembrandt drawings in his composition workshop. So I was really happy to see some real prints in the flesh. What I love is how his line work is so dynamic and sculptural. To draw like Rembrandt - I would choose that over the beautiful pen and ink of Bernie Wrightson which are so controlled - I love how out of control but still in control Rembrandt is.

When we walked in the exhibit the guard handed us magnifying glasses - How cute!











R Crumb - Genesis - Hammer Museum

Last Sunday I saw the R. Crumb exhibit of his panels from his new book Genesis at the Hammer Museum. They were amazing but I only wish they had showed more of his process.











Death Valley/Lone Pine













Gardener Pose - Kline Academy















Saturday, January 9, 2010

Composition Workshop - Marshall

ABSTRACTION vs FEELING

People were asked which shape is named Kiki and which shape is named Buba? Everyone seemed to have the same answer. The one with pointed shapes in named Kiki and the one with rounded shapes in Buba. All pictures including realist pictures are abstractions. Abstractions evoke feelings. Human beings are the only animals that gasp at a sunset. Spirals have certain feelings. Life is like a spiral . There are no phobias for guns only spiders. We respond on a gut level. A green room is different from a red room. Do a page for of abstractions. Think of a word and work on an abstraction of it. Examples to look at are Daumier and Matt Frantz.

Don't start working with literal things - just start scribbling. A drawing will be stiff and contrived if you start with anatomy.

We call this painting "Whistler's Mother" but the real name is "Arrangement in Grey and Black." This painting is a wonderful combination of concrete and lace. It is the color scheme of an old woman.

If you study the masters and rehearse successes - it heightens your sensitivity. Great masters are inspired by nature.

Don't start off by critiquing your work.

He put up a slide of Magritte's - "Ceci n'est pas une pipe" He said how every picture is abstract even if it's a realistic painting/ even before it is a thing that lay people can name. Flat surface with colors assembled in a specific order. Everyone has a different type of abstracting.

Even Andrew Wyeth who is a realist said a painting needs to be good without a likeness. So we must design an abstract piece even if it's "realistic." We need to ask ourselves - How does it work as an abstract design? We find through our personality what will work best. Knowing what our niche will be through our temperment.

Some people are more a painter and some people are more a drawer. Few people are both. If you tend toward tone you are a painter if you tend toward line you are a drawer. Verisimilitude takes skill to do. On thing can help you is if you can see it as something other than what it is. Be aware of negative shapes. See it fresh. He mentioned the book by Dondes - "Primer of Visual Literacy."

The 1st question can be - How does it work as an abstract?

Design your picture as an abstaction. Think of stativ vs. dynamic.

The 2nd Question can be - What feeling am I going for? What emotion? What do I want it to feel like?

Marshall put up this slide of Cotman's "Storm at Yarmouth Beach" 1831 to begin a discussion about comp studies.
He says that it should take 3 to 5 minutes to do a comp study. He said NC Wyeth said that "Composition is the thing that haunts." The composition is the design. Again he said when you do a comp study you are rehearsing successes. If you rehears enough successes you will succeed. He talked about a little about how we are trained not to see composition but I am not clear on my notes here.




Marshall talked about Kathe Kollwitz and how she evokes mood. My grandmother and dad always loved her.

Marshall talked about evoking mood. He showed works by Fuseli, Blacke, Hillingsford and Edward Hopper. He talked about how Hopper plays right angles against straight lines and obliques.

Marshall talked about tenebrism as a style of composing. He said it's about separating lights and darks and can be seen in the works of Rembrandt and Caravaggio. He also said it's about dramatic lights and darks.

This is what wikipedia says:

Tenebrism, from the Italian tenebroso ("murky"), (also called dramatic illumination) is a style of painting where chiaroscuro, or using violent contrasts of light and dark, becomes a dominating feature. The term is less used by art historians in recent decades, and lacks a clear definition; it is most often applied to Spanish painters, especially of the 17th century, when it is capitalised by some art historians, and not by others.

Marshall likes Howard Pyle a lot. He talked about how Van Gogh praised Howard Pyle's work "Old Time Life in a Quaker Town."

Marshall went over this painting by Norman Rockwell - "The Problem We All live with" (1963) and showed his different placement of the girl and the different variations of use of color. He suggested reading "Rockwell on Rockwell" or "How I make a Picture"


When studying composition it's good to look at Bernie Wrightson, N.C. Wyeth and Justin Sweet they aren't as subtle as Degas and Rembrandt.

N.C. Wyeth says composition is the thing that haunts. Some N.C. Wyeth examples




This workshop is an abreviated version of Marshall's course at Cal State Fullerton called "Drawing from the Masters."

Formulas are helpful but of course a great cook doesn't follow a recipe. There is a such thing as talent - talent is raw material - you have it or not.

Teaching is like sharing fire - some students are like paperr and some are like a solid lof that burns for a long time - some students are like rocket fuel.

You need to get in shape as an artist which means a lot of work without seeing results.
You can't rush puberty - we just do what we can fo. Exercise is necessary and hard. If you try to apply the principles or composition it helps a lot. If you explain it to someone else it also can help/


ROLE OF COMPOSITION

There are three areas of mastery for picture makers
1. TECHNIQUE (way of doing, manner or style) it is the way we apply the medium. For example - washes, cross hatching. It's the tactile thing on the surface.

- technique is important but it's not enough.

2. DRAFTSMANSHIP (correct drawing). Perspective is either correct or not correct. Anatomy is either correct or not correct. It's like grammar. Draftsmanship encompasses a. perspective b. anatomy and c. rendering. It is like knowing the scales in music. It is the creating the illusion of a 3D world on a 2D surface. But draftsmanship is not enough. Correctness can be boring.

3. COMPOSITION (it's about making choices. Design in synonymous with composition. Designers make choices. Composition is organization from/for feeling. WE study it from a number of different people who are great and then we extract a principle. The beauty of drawing lies in composition.


LIKENING MAKING ART TO CHESS

1. the TECHNIQUE is the board and the pieces
2. the DRAFTSMANSHIP is the rules
3. the COMPOSITION is the strategy

HOW TO COMPOSE
- never compose analytically first
- you have to just start, remember that you can't steer a car that isn't moving
- compositions come out best when they come out as a kind of improv
- an illustration must be made by inspiration


COMP STUDIES
- Bernie Wrightson never went to art school
- He does thumbnails that are the size of playing cards
- You solve big parts of composition by working small
- You should have no room to solve little problems
- Work the size of a postage stamp, business card or playing card.


THUMBNAILS
- artists use to do thumbnail drawings on their thumbnails.

- Professional jargon includes - comp studies, comprehensive studies, and roughs - traditional people also make line drawings and add color later.

PROSAIC vs. POETIC

COUNTERCHANGE

Good People for looking at Compositiona are Bernie Wrightson, Justin Sweer and N.C. Wyeth their compositions are subtle so the are easier to look at. They are not subtle like Rembrandt and Degas.

Marshall mentioned how Vincent Van Gogh praised Howard Pyle in a letter to Theo - he praised his picture "Old Time Life in a Quaker Town". Howard Pyle was a student of Loomis. N C Wyeth was a student of Pyle.


"Do you know an American magazine called Harper's Monthly? There are things in it which strike me dumb with admiration, including sketches of a Quaker town in the olden days by Howard Pyle."


Marshall talked about Tenebrism which is a style of composing using lights and darks

Evoking Mood

- Look at the works of Fuseli, Blake, Hillingsford and Hopper, Kathe Kollwitz.

We study the masters because we are rehearsing successes. If we rehearse successes enough we will have successes.

Friday, January 8, 2010

Melendez at LACMA




I saw the Melendez exhibit at LACMA a couple of weeks ago. These were my favorites. I don't remember ever seeing such dramatic still lives or still lives that were placed in a landscape. It made me want to paint still lives again. The colors are amazing and the still lives almost seem architectural like a cityscape in the landscape. I am so happy I went.