Monday, March 26, 2012

Au Courant Orchestra Series



Here they are ready to hang for the Governor's School for the Arts Faculty Show at the Hermitage Museum in Norfolk, VA. The show will run from May-June and will feature the faculty's work responding to the student's show "Tools of the Creative Mind". These were a blast to work on, a great break from working digitally...I got to knock the rust off of my traditional skills again. Enjoy!

Sunday, March 25, 2012

Au Courant Orchestra II (Breakdown)


Step 4: Final image. Went back and forth between graphite, acrylic washes, and popping highlights with white gouache. The final step was to cover the image with clear acrylic gloss medium because some areas were matte and some were glossy, doing this unifies the sheen of the image and helps, in my opinion, to punch up some of the lost contrast.



Step 3: Layout of background elements, and continuing to tweak the figure's values.



Step 2: Basic portrait and hands. Used graphite and charcoal to keep the rendering soft on the skin.



Step 1: Blocking in basic proportions and values of the figure. Used black acrylic for darkest dark value, ink wash, and graphite for mid tone values.

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

CMYK# 52


Here's a tear sheet featuring a piece of mine that made it into CMYK# 52. This issue features a lot of really great work, so do yourself a favor and grab a copy.

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Figure Drawing in sketchbook



Did this last night at my figure drawing group. I had planned on painting on canvas for the 3 hour pose, but my painting materials were in my car...and my car is in the shop. So, I ended up using my toned sketchbook and various drawing/painting tools. I drew the figure in with charcoal and white chalk (using the tone of the paper to my advantage). Then I used a red prismacolor colored pencil to put some warmth back into the figure. I cut into the silhouette of the figure with acrylic paint and some ink. Then, I popped some highlights with white gouache. Had a lot of fun working on this.