HI
Did you know that using a callus remover( the on that has a plastic handle w/metal on one side and file like surface on the opposite side) is a good tool for cleaning erasers and blinders.
I remember telling some but meant to tell all.
Terry Sager
This is an experimental drawing course, utilizing the figure, providing further concentration on basic drawing concepts. Emphasis is placed on descriptive and perceptual drawing, using both wet and dry media, and color. Students learn basic anatomy and will begin to develop an understanding of the way a figure inhabits space; thus able to successfully reproduce this space in two dimensions and later developing a personal style within the confines of academic figurative art.
Thursday, May 22, 2014
Wednesday, May 21, 2014
Thank you
Just a small now to thank you all for a wonderful class and many new techniques. Don't be a stranger I'd you see me on campus and it was a gift to learn from such gifted artists.
Saturday, May 17, 2014
Joeanna Martinez
Scratch Board Eyes
This is my make the same drawing for an hour drawing.
When I did this it wasn't how to do it but what to do. So I got a stamp ink pad and the eraser end of a pencil that was a little chewed up and just started to make shapes. All of a sudden this started to come out. And before I knew it the hour was up and I couldn't finish. I think it is better to have a plan before I started but for what I got it was ok.
This is my make an image that has strong emotional
This is a piece I did with oil painting it is taken from a photo I had taken of my daughter. She is the reason why I do anything and for me she makes my life brighter, granted there are days that she gives me a run for my money but at the end of the day I wouldn't want to be anywhere else but at home with her watching the same cartoon for the billionth time. My daughter is the one who brought me back from the dark road I was going down and she is the one who saved me. I am extremely proud of this work and of course there are a few things I would like to add so in the future I will do that as well .
Friday, May 16, 2014
Sullivan - Experimental Drawings and Writeups
Scratchboard eyes.
Ugliest Drawing
For this image, I used Yupo paper, three colors of Conte crayon, watercolor paints, pencil, cookie crumbs, and Hot Cheetos crumbs.
I began by drawing a poorly thought-out, poorly executed image. With my left hand, I drew a stick figure, a dog, and a house. The style I used was childish, and I tried hard to create a poor composition. Then I dipped my fingers in watercolors and left fingerprints all over my drawing. Next, I took advantage of the nature of the Yupo paper by aggressively smearing everything. Last, I desecrated my finished image by grinding part of a cookie into it. I finished it off with fixative, which hopefully made some of the crumbs stick.
I wanted to create ugliness through a bad concept, a lack of skill, and disrespectful treatment of the finished image. This image, however, has ended up meaning something more like fun or playfulness—I really enjoyed the process of making this. I think the drawing might be more like an homage to childhood now.
The finished image just isn’t as ugly as I wanted it to be. I think I could make it uglier by perhaps crumpling or distorting the paper, turning it into 3d art of sorts. But then, that might be too interesting to be really ugly.
Spirit of a Food/Color
This drawing was made with Arches watercolor paper and watercolor paints.
I wanted to convey the spirit of one of my favorite foods, Cornish pasties. My initial focus was color. I chose a palette of colors that represent how I feel when I eat pasties, and began painting without much forethought. My idea was that the pastie would be represented by a colorful circle in the middle of a blue, sky-like ground. The circle was intended to show the coziness and self-contained nature of the pastie. I used a combination of washes, wet brush, and dry brush techniques to create the image.
I hoped that this piece would mean “pasties” to me, but when I look at it now, it just evokes a sense of dissatisfaction. This is not what I wanted the piece to look like, and what’s more, I don’t think it conveys the cozy, satisfied, homelike and happy feelings that I had in mind as I painted.
My main problem with this drawing is that it looks like a pizza. Wrong food! If I were to make any changes to this piece, I would scrap it and start over, using the same colors and same overall layout. This time, I would approach the central circle differently, allowing more white space to let the rough edges of dry brushstrokes be seen, and using less foodlike colors. I would also try hard to create more contrast, since the current piece is all midtones.
Draw the sound of a jet engine.
I began by contemplating the sound of a jet engine and thinking about its characteristics. It’s loud, overwhelming, rumbling, and visceral—I needed to create an image that reflected that. I imagined the sound as being like a wall, blocking out all other sounds, while its roaring or rumbling quality created jagged circles. With that in mind, I sketched out a rough grid that I planned to fill in with details. I left the center of the page blank to represent the listener, who would feel small and blanked out because of the intensity of the noise.
After blocking out the basic shapes of the design, I laid in my overall shapes and tones with charcoal and my blending tools, and then went back and filled in lines and details with charcoal, white charcoal and pen. I finished by taking my plastic eraser and carving out the lightest areas in the design.
This piece feels, to me, like a fairly successful effort to abstractly represent something. I showed it to a friend, telling him that it was supposed to be the sound of a jet engine, and he said that he could see that. It also looks more or less how I’d imagined it, so it is successful on multiple counts.
If I were to expand upon this work, I would treat my existing drawing as a rough sketch or thumbnail for a much bigger image—maybe a wall-size one. I’d probably have to switch materials, unless I found a stick of compressed charcoal large enough to look the same.) I think I could convey a much more accurate idea of what a jet engine sounds like with a larger work.
Cut a shape from 8.5 x 11 paper; create a drawing that seems to belong to that shape.
For this piece, I used black Stonehenge paper, white Conte crayon, black Conte crayon, sepia and sanguine Conte pencils, and smudging tools. Of course, I also used scissors to cut out my shape.
I began working on this piece by cutting a shape out of my black paper. I tried to preserve as much of the original dimensions of the paper as I could—that is, my shape was still about 8.5 by 11—but otherwise simply cut as I felt like. I then put my cut-out shape away for later.
When I returned to work on this piece again, I laid several different layers of dots and stripes down on the shape, trying to feel out the bones of the image. Originally, I had planned to make it seem three-dimensional, but as I laid down and blended out layers of marks, I changed my mind. Using my previous work as a background, I sketched and fleshed out a human figure in a pose that the shape suggested to me. Of course, the shape of the paper isn’t completely human, so I deliberately omitted the head.
Now that it is finished, this piece has a sort of dark, weird energy. I’m not sure what to make of it, but I think it’s interesting. To me, it suggests tall tales, rituals, and folklore through the colors and markmaking.
If I were to change one thing about this piece, I would have continued to use dots and short strokes as my sole markmaking technique while I drew the figure—initially, that was an important part of the concept, but I gave up on it once I added the figure. If I were to expand on this piece, I would make it part of a series of paper shapes with headless figures inside. Each figure’s pose would be dictated by the paper.
Make repetitive, continuous marks on the paper for an hour.
For this drawing, I chose to use white, black, and sanguine Conte crayons and some off-white drawing paper—Stonehenge, I think, although I’m not entirely certain about the paper’s provenance.
I chose to make my marks in three different colors, since I knew that if I simply worked in black the entire time, my page would become a solid wall of black by the end. I thought I would have a more interesting result if I split up the hour of drawing time by color. I spent the first 20 minutes working in black, the second in sanguine, and the third in white. During each segment of time, I drew continuous lines in geometric patterns, varying them according to my whims. I frequently copied or responded to the patterns I had drawn before. While I was making my marks with white Conte crayon, I was using a very small stub. It had a very broad surface, and between that and the amount of pigment already on the paper, most of the preceding patterns and textures were wiped out.
Creating this piece was a very meditative experience. I felt hypnotized by the way the crayon glided across the paper, and the small friction sounds it made seemed very loud to me. Excess crayon heaped up in small, powdery dunes where my tool had been, and I thought it added a really cool dimensional effect. I wanted to preserve those small ridges, but wasn’t able to. Based on the experience of drawing this (and to some extent the actual image), this piece means the passage of time to me, and also peace.
I would certainly use this technique again if I wanted to create subtle textures with little variation in value. I would also like to take the drawing as it stands now and find a way to add the three-dimensional texture I liked so much back in.
Draw with office supplies!
For this work, I used post-it notes and post-it flags, stamps, staples, a folder, an industrial size Sharpie, clear tape, packing tape, and a paperclip.
First, I cut my folder to size, and then used the paperclip (unfolded) to scratch my initial sketch into the surface. I then began to use my post-its and stamps to fill in value and color, tearing them to size and stapling or taping them down as needed. The teal folder provided a midtone; the stamps and post-its were all lighter values. In order to get darks back into the image, I relied on the Sharpie. Certain details—the highlights in my model’s hair and the earbud cords—were created with staples. Once I had finished collaging the image, drawing in my darkest values, and adding highlights with pieces of stamps, I used packing tape to seal the entire image and hold down any loose edges.
This image was frustrating to create—my work felt extremely clumsy, since I’m not used to working in collage—but the end result is interesting. It’s a fairly successful portrait of my friend / model, capturing his focus and his nerdy essence, even if his features aren’t entirely accurate. The color palette is not one I would have chosen if I’d had more options, but I think it’s good that I had to branch out.
If I were to alter this piece, I would try working in a limited palette—I realized about halfway through that instead of trying to (semi-) accurately represent the colors I was seeing, I ought to be using colors that would all look good together. I’d use all my cool-toned post-its for a more unified look. Alternately, I think getting a more accurate initial sketch would have been an improvement—I wish I had actually asked my friend to sit still, rather than trying to draw him as he went about his business.
Photocopy three-dimensional objects, then draw on the photocopy.
I used printer paper and oil pastels to create this drawing. While printer paper was not an ideal material, I used it because my printer couldn’t handle any other type of paper that I had on hand. It ended up providing an interesting challenge, as did the oil pastels—I am not experienced in using them.
My process in making this piece was as follows: I chose several interesting small objects and photocopied them. I made one color copy and one black and white copy. Inspired by that, I thought it would be interesting to add color to the black and white copy, so I traced over the objects and filled them in with color, attempting to render them as accurately as possible. (I changed the color of the tentacle, since I felt it would be more interesting to not have two red items.) I then filled in the background, using colors that complemented the colors of the object (blue for the brown/ orange-ish wooden triangle; green for the red rose; orange for the blue tentacle). I made extensive use of my blending tools throughout.
I intended this piece to be a surreal, dreamlike takeoff on a still life, since that was what the original scan looked like. However, now that it is complete, I have found an additional meaning in it—namely, that I need to learn how to work with oil pastels more effectively. The rainbow palette that I ended up using makes this work look more childish than I had intended, as well.
An interesting way to re-use this work would be to cut it up and combine it with the color scan to create a collage. Alternately, I could incorporate it into some sort of three-dimensional work, probably by cutting out the rose, tentacle, and wooden triangle and attaching them to their real-life counterparts.
Shirey-Experimental Drawings and Eyes
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