Monday 3 May 2010

Drawings 2010, 1.

okay, emm,

(sarc.)

as i said - paintings then drawings til we're up to date. and i decided to jump straight into the 2010 stuff rather than dilly dally around with the dregs of 2009, which i'll post at a later date.

after heavy-going visceral ink, and then lighter post-november drawings, the start of the new year marked a period of just playing around with different ways of drawing, in some cases carrying on with the sharpie-doodle-then-pencil-drawing method of working, in others drawings were a little more finnicky, more textural. but sometimes more linear than anything else, ranging from very stylised to more realistic and precise. there are lots of all of these, but at emma's suggestion, i'll only post four or five at a time. with notes, of course, as ever. . .




1.






















done within the last pages of the 'book of emma' this was one of the first things i drew in january and was mostly about trying to capture areas of shading around her neck, collarbones, shoulders, nose and eyes for a painting i was plotting - really just a means to an end, but it ended up being more finished and i love it because it captures more of emma than was intended - the crinkles between her eyebrows and the shape of her mouth - sarah polley teeth and all - especially. the latter, something i usually struggle with. . .

it's a favourite. . .




2.






















a much more stylised, sketchy drawing this, and an image that stuck and would be repeated in three or four other drawings before, finally, a painting. i'll post another of these next time, before the painting itself, but i like this one for small details - emm's hair and the birdman's untucked shirt in particular. . .



3.





















purely visceral and pretty much scratched with pen so hard into the paper it was nearly torn. i like this because it reminds me of etchings i did in art school. again, it's pushing myself, trying different things, seeing where it takes me rather than sitting doing the same old finnicky drawings. . .



4.





















and this one is again a favourite. done in a slightly more relaxed and less frenzied manner to the last drawing, but a lot more precise and with realism a lot more in mind, i enjoyed doing this stuff and went on to do a LOT more of it. to some degree these are descended from all that messy october sharpie work - there are even a few very minimal strokes of sharpie in this one in the bottom right hand corner. . .



5.






















aaaand charcoal, something i at that point hadn't used in months and which took a little getting used to again. this was a favourite of the first batch of charcoal drawings i did in january - giving those pens and pencils a rest - and i like this for what it is, as with the others.

i'd gone through a bad patch and through it, wanted something different from both the process of being creative AND what i produced, and these are all indicative of someone not wanting to put all their eggs in one basket.

they're a start. . .

6 comments:

  1. You're always going on about "struggling" with my mouth but you always get it, Mister.

    These are a good "Cross Section" but post more. Especially Charcoal.

    I love your Charcoals.

    I like how your basic idea of #2 evolved. The painting's amazing. All those board ones are. :)

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  2. I love the first and last ones best. You're always good at expressing emotions on peoples faces and the eyes in number 4 are brilliant!

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  3. thanks, you two - i wouldn't be posting this stuff publically if not for you. . .

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  4. crinkles crinkles crinkles . . . i hesitate to type that my eyes are walking all over your pants, but that's what they're doing! and something there between that the mirroring in her furrowed brow. makes me think people are losing sleep over there . . .

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  5. yes, there is much , erm, crinkling *scratches head and snuffles* - thank you andrea, i do love the way you see my work, always have. . . :)

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  6. The eyes look AMAZING in #1. So big and expressive and very nicely stylized. Bravo on the mouth, too - teeth are not easy.

    I like the same things that you like about #2, especially Emma's hair. The way it starts out bright white and then falls into shadow, with that deliberate black outline. Gives it a nice look and shape.

    I love #3 and #4. Not to go too far off topic, but as soon as you said "etchings," I could see what you meant and was instantly reminded of this awful, awful thing we used to do in high school - not really etching, more like attempting to gouge thick pieces of aluminum in precise, dangerous detail, using a very sharp tool, which almost always resulted in someone losing their grip and stabbing themselves in the hand. (Did so. Many times.) These drawings really have that look. The look of scraping and scratching and sometimes losing your grip. But in a good way. And with less blood.

    And #5. I'm tellin' you. This might be my favorite one. I just love the contrast and the thickness of the lines. I like the medium grey but very saturated quality of the shadows, too, something I've always liked about charcoal. I'm really a big fan of this one.

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