Saturday, February 13, 2010

Heh heh . . .

G

ood grief, I'm terrible. I suppose it's hard to get back into doing something when you haven't done it for awhile and your brain feels like mush a good deal of the time. At any rate, the least I can do is update with some images from my illustration class last semester as well as some new images from my most recent project, a reworking of the book I made a year or so ago, The Sheep Child, based on a poem by James Dickey. Given formatting issues I have when I try to put strange spaces in things in blogger, I won't even try to type it up, but you can read the full text here. I will more than likely go more into the challenges of illustrating such a thematically rich piece when I've finished, and the book will be available for purchase on Lulu, though I don't think I'm allowed to make any profit off it because I don't have rights to the poem.

Anyway, here is an illustration assignment from last semester. I was supposed to do a pencil drawing of a hand holding an object:



This piece was basically the first serious pencil drawing I'd done in a LONG time. It was nice to remember how to handle the medium, and that I can get some pretty rich results from it, though I think general use in future will be in mixed media pieces. I also got some water soluble pencils, so I'm a bit excited to experiment with those.

Next is a ink drawing of some mushrooms. the assignment was to do a full value drawing in ink of vegetables. Now, I discovered last semester that intricate full value pen and ink drawings are not my cup of tea, but I am glad that I know how to use them, I suppose. Again, such a technique will also probably only be used in a mixed media piece, but I quite like this piece because it only took a couple of hours and though it is full value pen and ink, it is a full value pen and ink that is true to my way of working, which is messy and fairly expressive but also given to moments of specificity and intricacy and detail. Or, at least, that is what I hope I achieve.



I have a few more, of course, but the size of the assignments is just outside the range of my scanner, and I have to piece them together, which is fecking annoying. I've been coveting a larger scanner for not a terrible price on Amazon, but I'll wait until I move to purchase most likely.

Here are the new pages for the book, though I'm posting the at the moment as is and without text because I'm still messing about with that stuff. I think they're both terrifying, but generally people I show them too disagree. Perhaps I've been spending to much time with the text as well as staring at them in the early hours of the morning. They are both a mixture of watercolor and gouache.





I'm only reworking 6 of the pages, and some are collages with old photos, and some are simply abstract paintings, so for the ones I was reworking I wanted to find a place in between the concrete imagery of the photos and the abstract backgrounds. That place is in these slightly stylized lambs and sheep in atmospheric settings.

If anyone randomly would like a high quality giclee print of any of these or any of my other images, please email me (spittingair@gmail.com) so we can chat!

Now I've got to finish one more page, and then its off to the publishers.