Tuesday, September 23, 2014

Covered Bridge - watercolor study

This is a watercolor study of a Covered Bridge.  Like most paintings, you like some parts and don't like other.  That is why you practice and experiment.  I used this as a stepping stone for a better and more original artwork with pens.

Sunday, September 21, 2014

Carolina Wren - and I am back

I am back from a two week Digital vacation and real vacation.  I went out west and visited some family and some scenery.  I will bring some of those things to the blog as I develop them.  Above is a Carolina Wren on a cat tail done in oil a few years back.

Sunday, September 7, 2014

Happy Sunday



To finish the meeting thread of the last two posts, these are co-workers during presentations.   They mostly stayed still which is always helpful in the complete of a micro-sketch.  These are all pretty small and were about ten minutes to completion.  The mechanical pencil is brilliant for this type of sketching.

Saturday, September 6, 2014

300th post and Meeting Madness continued





This is my 300th post.  I started this blog because my son died and it was a way to keep busy and to be disciplined about doing artwork everyday.  I guess you could call it post traumatic growth.  His passing was a wake-up call to the shortness of everything and a kick in the butt for me to do something with the images in my head and on the paper.  These are more fragments of my co-workers.  (Note the blank meeting stares, hehe)

Friday, September 5, 2014

Meeting Madness


I have reached a cycle at work were the meetings are starting to stretch and go one seemingly endlessly.  I have been resorting to the sketch/doodle to stay awake and in tune with the meeting.  I will doodle the weird sculpture from Africa in the room or the very still co-worker.  The mechanical pencil works better than the gel pen but, I will use what ever is at hand.

Thursday, September 4, 2014

Canyon De Chelly - Maynard Dixon

Maynard Dixon is a Western Artist God.  He spent his entire life doing art and his oil paintings sell for hundreds of thousands of dollars.  His sketches are the often overlooked gems.  If you have ever traveled out to the southwestern U.S. then you get how great the above sketch is.  If you have not traveled out there go soon or now.  Dixon would travel and sketch and paint.  Oh, how I cannot wait to emulate him and do the same.

Wednesday, September 3, 2014

Cloudy Valley - Franklin Booth style

Franklin Booth is an illustrator/artist from about 100 years ago.  He did these amazing ink drawings which are almost like engravings.  He did them free hand because he did not realize most were made on metal plates or were done craved into wood.  Since he was self-taught on his initial techniques he became very well known for this style.  This was my attempt at capturing the things he would do with a pen and ink.  I did this a few years back and I have improved but still I am not up to the Master, yet.