Showing posts with label paint. Show all posts
Showing posts with label paint. Show all posts
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Queen Emma

Perspective Project

Brainstorming and Experimenting

I absolutely abhor perspective drawings where you take the ruler and spend ten days drawing the same stupid details on the same stupid buildings. I'm downright terrible at it. Perspective drawings are the only art projects I've ever failed. And perhaps in the future when I have room for error and stop avoiding my problems, I will fix my aversion to perspective drawings. But for now, I will simply hunt for a different interpretation of the word "perspective". I briefly considered doing a forced perspective photo, but I have done quite a bit of photography throughout Art III and I wanted to do a bit of painting, since it's been a while since I've worked with a canvas. I started thinking of my different perspectives/views on things, like philosophies and such, but I liked the simple "how do I see the world"? I see the world through my friends. They make my whole world light up and I feel worth something when I'm with them. Like I'm needed. It's a very codependent relationship, my friends and I. So I began sketching out a bunch of my friends, thinking I would do a conglomeration thing of a bunch of my friends grinning, because that's when I think they look the most beautiful, and that's when they make me the happiest, by being happy. But I really don't have all the time in the world to paint several of my friends, let alone five, with my perfectionist self. In the end, it came down to a promise to my mother. I promised I would paint her a new painting for each of my elementary school paintings if I truly wanted them off the wall in the sitting room. One of the paintings, done in fourth or fifth grade, is a classic brunette princess in a castle. I decided to do a repaint of that, but put my friend Emma (previously mentioned in the Fly to Paradise project) in place of the princess, as a queen. Because she's queen of my song. However, once I started the project (and after I wrote everything above this), I completely changed part of my idea and decided to do just a portrait, surrounded by shadow, but lit up because that's how friends affect my world. *throws a bunch of emotional, sentimental things*

Arrangement





Presentation



My final product. Or the final-ish product. I'm still unhappy about some of it. I also think the painting looks ten times better in person. I will probably go back and work her face some more- something off about it is making it so it doesn't quite look like Emma- perhaps something about her cheeks isn't right...those things are some of the most ridiculously difficult things I've ever had the pleasure to draw. Love you, Emma. Had lots of issues over shading because her picture is so ridiculously white that I had near to no shading to do. And the shadows of the picture were gray. So it kind of resembles a zombie painting now. Lovely. Still love you, Emma.

Q. How did you demonstrate Perspective in your work?
A. Explained above.

Q. Why did you choose this solution over the others?
A. Explained above.

Q. What techniques did you use to create this work?
A. Believe it or not, this is the second time I've ever painted a portrait. The experimentation with Zoe seen in the first picture of this post was my first. Yay for firsts. But I tried to use some of my vast drawing experience in it. Looked for contrast, shading, tried to get all the angles right. Color in my drawings still makes me uncomfortable. But I didn't do too bad. I'll probably draw Emma a million more times and maybe eventually get her face right. But you know what they say- if you love someone, it'll be harder to draw them. I've found this to be completely true.

Q. Did you take any risks with this project or were you trying to perfect a previously learned skill? Why did you decide to take this path?
A. Kinda already talked about this above. But, yeah. Super risky doing this from ten to two last night when normally I need more time than that for drawings, let alone paintings. Despite it being my second portrait, you could say that I was trying to perfect a previously learned skill as well as the risks because I have painted people a couple times before. One of these days I'll get it right.

Jan 13, 2014
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Xmas NAHS Ornaments

For National Art Honors Society, artist inspired Christmas ornaments!

I had a bunch of ideas involving the beads, but I never ended up using them.

I made this before I realized they had to be artist-inspired, actually. Let's say this was inspired by Emily!

Starry Night- Van Gogh


I'm quite proud of my addition to Starry Night. Merry Christmas!


I adore Kae's ornaments! (this pic is not my art! see apex-2014-kae.blogspot.com)

November 19, 2013

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We are time's subjects, and time bids be gone

Time as an Element

Brainstorming

<insert pic>

My first thoughts went to Doctor Who's Gallifreyan circle art-writing. The theme of that television show is basically time, and the circle art is beautiful. I also considered the clock reoccurring in the television show Hannibal, and the concept of emptiness. My mind also went to the play I was in, Rimers of Eldritch, which has several time themes throughout it. But I've also been wanting to do body art. While I'm very experienced in face paint, I haven't yet dabbled in more complicated art forms on skin. But body art has a certain charm to it; the movement and dynamic of a human canvas is beautiful. Denise was very accommodating as my model for this project.

Experimentation

I have many ideas of how the concept of time may be conveyed. I took three different days, about three hours each, and painted. Time occurs to me as something involving feathers, wings. Time is fleeting and light and, well, it just comes across as a feather to me. I looked to tattoo art for inspiration. For the third painting, I got tired of the mundane, cluttered background of my dining room and placed Denise in front of a painting on the wall. I quite liked that result.







Denise decided it was her turn to hold the paintbrush.












Arrangement

I went to OfficeMax and printed six of the photos I took. After realizing that my initial plan of displaying the art on a tri-fold poster board would look too much like a project, rather than art, I grabbed string and hung it from the ceiling. Thanks to Robbie for doing that for me- I was too short. This arrangement didn't work because the cluttered background once again took away from the art. Setting a roll of black paper didn't align properly, but hanging the paper from the wooden dowel as well worked. 




Presentation

Worked again with my photography skills for this blog post. Taking away the clips helped a lot with the presentation. I liked the effect of the string, tying together the variations of the theme. Risk-wise, there was the new element of acrylic on a human canvas. Denise was also new to the modeling job. It was a fairly big project. But the technique wasn't difficult- I'm familiar and talented with acrylics. Of the "five characteristics of great art" (technique, concept, emotion, new, medium) I've pretty much got 'em all. As I've said above, the medium was new and the concept and themes were original, and my technique is fairly good.

The title comes from Shakespeare's Henry IV and, well. As he prepares to lead a rebellion against King Henry, Hastings remarks that the rebellion is "time's [subject]." In order for the rebels to be successful, they must act quickly and waste no time. The phrase also references the other characters helpless against the passage of time: Henry, on his death bed for the majority of the play; Falstaff, full of youthful zest and yet old and falling apart on the outside. Time is fleeting. Blink and you'll miss the chance of a lifetime. Blink and you'll miss the beauty of life. Blink and you'll miss the shy smile of someone who could have been your best friend. Time is beautiful in it's limiting way, painful and constricting and, at the same time, willing and free. 

I enjoy period films and I often wish I could have a chance to enjoy time as they do. They take turns around the gardens, compose thought-out letters, take a day's ride in the carriage...Take four hours to walk to their friend's house...In today's society, things are so pressure-filled and stressful and time time time  mustn't be late for this mustn't waste time life is short cram cram cram. Fill as many AP classes as one can handle into one's schedule. Add voice lessons, guitar lessons, karate, baseball, art class. People in this era can't slow down to think. If we live longer now, why can we not take time slower, if those in period films- with short life expectancy- can afford leisure?

Time is full of contradictions and overlapping themes. Perhaps its best for one to interpret what they will from my art, rather than listen to me ramble and rant, as I could, for paragraphs upon paragraphs.





November 16, 2013
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Cup Warm-up

Cup O' Dirt
Pencil and Oil Pastel
Chalk Pastel and Watercolor

Spray Paint
Stencil for Spray Paint

 Week of 9/9/2013. I'm actually pretty happy with the watercolor one, which is interesting, because I normally hate watercolor. The spray painting was a new experience. Let's not talk about the oil pastel.
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Mini Canvas



Christmas gifts from December 2012/January 2013. I adore miniature things. Experimented with a landscape, which took a few hours because of the multiple drying layers. The flowers, I finger painted, waited to dry, and then drew with a marker, so that took nearly no time at all and it still looks awesome. The bird took a couple hours, and it was pretty much finger painted. It took a while to get it to look the way I wanted it to. I sold a couple of these at Relay for Life, as well. Basically, they're really great gifts if you're in a hurry!
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War


 Model: Denise. I loved the natural color balance to her paint splatters! Pretty happy with these four photos, though I may have liked a bit more back light to the third one and more balance to the fourth. Cropping might help the fourth, actually.


 Model: Nova. As a dancer, she had a grace about her that just made me want to photograph her. Unfortunately, I could only get these two pics to look even kinda close to what I was going for.


August 24, 2013. Paint wars and photography: light focus. Last two photos- long story. Let's just say I have no fantasy of being arrested and therefore was more than happy to stay behind the camera.