Archive for the 'Drawing' Category

A bird in the paper is worth 2 pooping on the car,

I’ve had such a busy week that I’ve only just sat down to read Wednesday’s paper (and the rest!) this evening. What a nice surprise to see one of my photos being used in the paper:

cp.jpg

The original photo and story behind this OCD Sunbird and it’s pooping ways all over my car can be found by clicking here.

I’ve had a few emails asking for some “behind the scenes of the kingfisher painting. Everything I’ve learnt regarding this method has been taught to me by a wonderful bird artist, Paul Margocsy.

I’ve used Clayboard for this piece, but any illustration board (smooth or toothed), and even Matt board (for framing) is OK.

Step1 – After sketching onto my clayboard, I mask the birds and foliage. Using my airbrush, I lay down washes of background colour. I have the board tilted up at an angle, which is better for airbrushing, but not so good for wayward drips!

big-step1.jpg

Airbrushing is really forgiving, I made a heap of mistakes here. The consequence is that the background gets darker and darker. I need to adjust the pressure to a lower setting so that it’s not like a rifle going off!

big-step3.jpg

I use a finger or eraser to gently peel off the dried masking fluid. I’ve used a water soluable wash pencil for the sketch. I touched up some of the birds with the same pencil at this stage.

big-step4.jpg

Time to block in rough areas of colour with a big brush. After this step, I go over and lay in the fine details with a tiny brush. Good eyes and a steady hand an advantage – I don’t have either! I wouldn’t call this method “over-the-top-difficult”, but more “methodical”. I find the feathers/foliage gets rather tedious after a while, but a quick walk or cuppa soon revives my momentum.

And the finished peice you saw 2 posts back. No 8 in using this method, not that I’m counting!

Did anyone sit through the whole Opening Ceremony last night? I admit I flagged after 12.30, but was able to catch the replay this morning. I think of all the artists involved in so many aspects, the costumes, the calligraphy, the lighting, the props, the digital art (stupendous!) and the list goes on. Just FABULOUS!

Frustrating Feathers

So what do I have to show for a week’s intensive tuition? Raised blood pressure I’m sure! Cursing fickle feathers and my own inadequacies went hand in hand with my small successes. I completed some new pieces, as well as administering plastic surgery to 2 paintings from last year.

forest-kingfisher-final1.jpg

I used  the photo below for reference. Now that it’s Dry Season, our resident pair of Forest Kingfishers patrol our yard for breakfast.

forest-kingfisher-photo.jpg

The next painting was also from photos taken in the yard. I can’t tell male from female.

forest-kingfishers-1.jpg

I’ll going to paint in a few water droplets on the front kingfisher. Haven’t tried that before so will study up first.

28.jpg

A “28″ parrot from WA, so called for it’s screeching “28! 28!”

So where to from here? For all the agony, stress and heart palpitations painting gives me, it is a compulsion to finish once I start. Hence, over the years I have learnt not to start! 

How to swap Procrastination with Motivation? Anyone have any suggestions?

ArtEscape Exhibition Evening

Last day, Friday. What a wonderful week of observing and absorbing, learning and trying, becoming full to overflowing with inspiration and enthusiam.

Many chose to spend the better part of the day wandering through the Tanks, looking at what all the other groups have been creating.

mike4.jpg

This is Mike, he was tutoring big brush watercolours, concentrating on flowers and cyrstal.

mike.jpg

He wore the most fabulous shirts and cowboy boots each day. You could hear the “clip clop” of those Texan boots a mile off.

mike6.jpg

The beginning of his gorgeously coloured piece.

mike1.jpg

Finished demo.

mike3.jpg

Mike is also an accomplished bird and water artist. This is a full size sheet painting. Big. Scary big.

mike2.jpg

mike5.jpg

This is the wall where he and his students displayed their finished work. I think I’ll be signing up for his class next year. After straining over miniscule paintings using brushes  only a few hairs wide, I’m needing something big & loose!

naomi.jpg

This is Naomi, she is in my photography class at Uni. She is trying oil painting for thr first time. The subject matter was a still life I put together for photography last semester – my chillies, boar jawbone, cocky feathers, split nautilus shell etc.

helen.jpg

This is Helen, with her oil on paper Bromeliad painting. The photo does not do it justice.

helen1.jpg

Other beautiful broms were painted.

clares-brom.jpg

I think this was done by Clare. You can almost dip your fingers into that pooled water.

exhibition4.jpg

The exhibition was smoothed along with glasses of good wine and plenty of delicious foods.

exhibition2.jpg

exhibition1.jpg

exhibition.jpg

exhibition5.jpg

exhibition3.jpg

The following are some of Paul’s work.

pauls-falcon.jpg

He is just so quick, it’s sickening.

pauls-ducks.jpg

I asked on the last day if he could do a demo showing outstretched wings. He bashed these quackers out in next to no time at all. Maybe an hour and a half? 30 years of experience certainly makes a difference. I agonise over a single feather for hours.

pauls-kooka.jpg

A kooka appeared before our very eyes like magic. He is a true talent.

No more room in this post – I’ll sort out my paintings and put them up in another post, as far away from Paul’s painting s as possible!

ArtEscape Environment

“What a gorgeous place this is!” say all the visitors to The Tanks. I uttered the very same words last year at my first ArtEscape. As part of the Botanical Gardens complex, the old WWII Tanks serve a much more peaceful purpose than their intended use.

Set into the rainforest at the foot of Mount Whitfield, it is a tranquil getaway so conducive to creating works of beauty.

tree-fern.jpg

quandongs.jpg

A giant Quandong tree grows just outside Tank 2. Favourite food of the shy Cassowary.

heliconias1.jpg

Heliconias hang like giant necklaces.

red-gate.jpg

Red Gate Hill was once again the setting for the 100+ group photo. Hopefully photos (on DVD with soundtrack!) ready in a couple of weeks.

There was a kookaburra sitting atop the gate watching proceedings. By the time I got my camera, he’d moved on into the canopy.

kookaburra.jpg

mosaic-chair.jpg

Every seat in the parklands is not your average seat. They are all works of art in themselves.

rock.jpg

Even the rocks are decorated.

web1.jpg

This Northern Jewelled Spider was busy spinning and weaving. I could watch spiders at work for hours.

web.jpg

No time for that though. A quick stretch of the legs with the camera and then it’s back to work. There’s painting to be done!

ArtEscape Artist Adrian

We are lucky to have a fully equipped on site artshop whilst we create at ArtEscape.

Adrian Wolf kept himself out of mischief during quiet times with his wonderful painting.

artescape-adrian.jpg

Can you guess who she is?

 artescape-adrian1.jpg

Adrian was completing this piece for a commission, and someone wandered in and ordered another. A good week for Adrian! He’s also an accomplished patchworker. Look out for him in an upcoming edition of the patchwork magazine, having already been featured for his Marilyn Monroe pieces.

artescape-adrian2.jpg

With regards to how much I spent at the in-house art store? Just call me Cleopatra – Queen of DeNile.

ArtEscape 2008

Day 2, and Jez has joined me. He spun out when he realised I was being tutored by Paul Margocsy, and wasn’t at Uni. One extra school holiday certainly wouldn’t hurt, and his teacher actually said he could spend the whole week there if he wanted.

artescape-jez.jpg

Jez says Paul is “Hell Awesome”. That’s pretty much the highest accolade a teenager can give. He concentrated deeply as he watched Paul work, absorbing as much as he could. He didn’t want to stop for morning tea, lunch or afternoon tea. Paint, that’s all he wanted to do.

Today we were tackling the airbrush, which can be quite daunting. Air compressors, needles, reading gauges – a scary metal monster to some. Jez couldn’t wait!

artescape-airbrush.jpg

Paul led the way. A tip is to have your board on an angle so the inks don’t pool. Careful they don’t drip though!

artescape-airbrush1.jpg

Another tip is to start outside of your board’s edges, so that no blobby bits occur.

artescape-airbrush2.jpg

Jez lays down the first colour  (blue) in  broad sweeps.

artescape-airbrush3.jpg

Next are some ochres. A test sheet of paper alongside your board is good to get the inks flowing smoothly through the airbrush needle.

artescape-airbrush4.jpg

Foliage greens are laid over the top. The masking fluid covering the bird sketch can be removed once the inks are touch dry.

artescape-jez1.jpg

Got a problem with your painting? No problem with Paul around. He could fix the impossible with a flick of his brush.

artescape-jez2.jpg

Jez was well impressed. There were airbrush dramas going on in the background.

jez-kookas.jpg

The artist well pleased with his efforts.

There was a TV crew buzzing about in the morning. They were right “in my face” when Paul and I were discussing some aspects of one of my paintings. My “28″ from late last year needed some form of plastic surgery, and Paul was physically positioning his arms/wings so I could see where to place them on paper. The camera crew were having a great time positioning their camera to capture this hilarious pantomime from all angles. I couldn’t even look at them I was so embarrassed.

The “Meet & Greet” BBQ followed into the evening, so I was relieved not to have to watch Channel 7 news. Unfortunately other people did and let me know!

Illustration Friday – Sour

With all the work at the gallery with the exhibition installation, I completely forgot about Illustration Friday. A  really quick graphite sketch is what I’ve got this week.

sourpuss.jpg

sour.jpg

It’s inspired by the homeless Moggie that used to visit for food. (Every house we’ve had has a Ginger Tom come to visit) Took a long time before I could pick this cat up (he trusted no -one), and whenI did, he weighed less than a bird. Lots of food and cutting of knots from his coat made him feel comfortable inside, but everyone else miserable. He just did not get that he wasn’t supposed to fight with the cats, the dog, the Man….a very sour customer.

When we left the house last year, the new resident was determined that he wasn’t coming inside, but I’m not so sure…..

Wish I was back in the saddle again

I used to ride. I used to love it. I really want to ride again. 

During these school holidays we have had a whole posse of different horses riding past our house. We are surrounded by acreages here, and the local Pony Club is just down the road.

I used to ride 3 or 4 times a week at a riding school. I was going to buy my own horse, had even picked a young 3 yr old gelding from an Arabian stud in the hills of Perth. I had organised where he was going to be agisted. But I bought a car instead.

Considering the price of fuel, I should have stuck with the horse.

Over the weekend I uncovered my battered old leather riding gloves. I put them on, and that’s just made the whole “I want to ride again” thing worse.

I attended a French owned riding school for years. I had a German instructoress named Marion. Even the horses were scared of her, but man did she know her stuff! The whole methodology of this school was very European in nature, with failure not an option. You learned to ride, and ride well.

marion.jpg

Here is Marion on one of her Hanoverian Stud stallions. I think I saw her with her hair down once, at a Christmas party. Last I heard of her, she was receiving obscene amounts of money for a single stallion service.

We were lucky at the school, we had a covered indoor dressage areana with mirrors (very helpful), and several grey sand yards outside. If you rode in summer outside, you would have nostrils full of black stuff for the rest of the day.

chia2.jpg

Here is Chia, the Anglo Arab I used to ride. She was only a small horse, 15.5hh, but she could go like the wind when she put her head down.

chia.jpg

I used to ride at night a lot. Once the lesson was over, the school horses were so frisky, you could hardly hold them back from their night paddock. Chia was a spoilt horse and I returned her to a cosy stall, brushed her down, put on her blankets & hood and gave her some sweet smelling hay.

bonsoir1.jpg

Here is an old gentleman named Bonsoir. He was 30 yrs old in this picture, but he still played like a young colt. He was the consumate schoolie. When he was retired from group lessons, he really fretted. So they put him back in the lessons, but without a rider. He would complete every manoeuvre perfectly, such was his training.

bonsoir.jpg

He still loved to jump, but only little ones. I disliked jumps, so the little ones were fine by me!

And the reason I got into riding in the first place? I loved horses, as almost every little girl did. I drew them at every opportunity I got. Last night I found an old yellowed sketch from high school, shoved in with some school yearbooks.

horse.jpg

I was eventually banned from drawing horses by the art teacher. I think everyone was well and truly sick of them.

So now I’m sitting here wistfully, thinking about jodphurs, boots, and that sweaty horse smell that was truly divine to me!

Oops! Jumped the gun on Illustration Friday

Please excuse my web unworthiness! What I thought was a link to join Illustration Friday, was actually a link to submit an illustration, and one with a Theme!  No means of correcting my wayward error either.

Frantic scrabbling to put something up with FIERCE as the motive – oh no!  I originally offered the 2nd graphite work below as my sad submission. It got a comment that it wasn’t so much fierce as morose, with droopy horns.

OK, I now offer a watercolour pencil and graphite work as “fierce” (to little children & kittens). Still not happy with my inaugural offering to I.F., but better than Droopy Horns.

firece-witches.jpg

firece.jpg

I have cropped this piece just to show the Fierce side. The bottom bit was a bit cheeky!

Will do better next Friday, I promise!

Cheers,

Artoholic Cindy

Art lesson : How to draw a memory

beaumaris-beach-boardwalk-1.jpg

 beaumaris-beach-3.jpg

beaumaris-beach-1.jpg

When we lived waaaay out west on the coast of Perth, our local beach was Beaumaris. It was a tiny little pocket of sand nestled in between jutting limestone cliffs.  Every day I walked past this beach, sometimes in the morning when all was calm, or in the evening when the stiff breeze turned your cheeks bright pink with their bite. When I had to do a Tonal Analysis drawing recently, this photo provided the perfect subject.

beaumaris-beach-2.jpg

First step was to convert the image to black and white, which really helps defines the tones (darks from the lights).

I also prepared the surface of the paper with a thick layer of gesso. This provides texture, and really gives the paper some “tooth”. Once dry, the paper feels like a canvas.

beaumaris-beach-drawing-1.jpg

With the photos handy as reference, I lightly sketched in the basic shapes with a thick graphite stick. It’s like a lead pencil without the wood casing. Great for shading large areas. The “Rule of Thirds” was also in my mind whilst drawing (don’t have your horizon line exactly in the middle of the paper).

beaumaris-beach-drawing-2.jpg

Once I was happy with the basic outlines, I could start laying down the tones. Some people like to start with the light tones, but I prefer the darks, as you know what the darkest dark will be, and can work backwards from there. A 2B pencil is a good choice for getting the edges sharp.

beaumaris-beach-drawing-3.jpg

With the side of the graphite stick I could lay down the large area of the sea with a few broad strokes. The  lovely texture from the gesso was showing through the lighter tones. To prevent unnecessary smudging, I put a tissue under my right hand which keeps it clear of the paper surface.

beaumaris-beach-drawing-4.jpg

Short sharp strokes will lay down dark lines. The graphite on gesso really shows up black. The same strokes on plain paper will just leave silvery lines that gouge out the paper. I love gesso!

beaumaris-beach-drawing-5.jpg

The finished piece. Note you can edit out anything you don’t want – you don’t have to slavishly follow the photo. I got rid of the man, the rubbish bin and the sign.

gesso.jpg

Did I mention I love gesso? I also use it as a base for my watercolour paintings of birds.

But we’re not talking about birds today – the finger is decidely unusable still, after yesterday’s encounter. On a happier note, it’s my dad’s 90th birthday today, and I sent him about 200 photos of our new home and it’s local wildlife. We spent over an our today talking about the birds, the wallabies, the goanna and backyayd python. Not hard to see where I got my love of wildlife from.

« Previous Page