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Old man sketches Talking Heads (not the band)

March 24, 2013

Here is a link to a short article  from the NPR website about an old man that watches C-SPAN and sketches the talking heads. I think the drawings are great. I often (attempt to) sketch faces while I watch TV as well, but they usually turn out pretty lousy because it’s so rare that the camera is on the same shot for more than a couple seconds at a time. That’s why this guy watches C-SPAN, not because he’s into politics, but because it’s the only place where you can see a talking head long enough to sketch it out. Now that’s one smart old man!

HC

You can see more drawings on the man’s website. According to the article, he’s had no formal art training. Pretty dang impressive.

There is a more extensive article about him here.

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Life Drawing Class

February 15, 2013

lifedrawing class

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From Rough Sketch to Final Draft 3

February 7, 2013

Currently at Space 55 we are running a puppet show about recycling called Of Plastic Things and Butterfly Wings. I made the poster for the show. I started by reading the script and getting an idea of the main characters and their personalities and the setting of the story.

Then I sat down and made this rough sketch and sent it to the director, who sent me some notes on things to change and move around, etc.

orig sketch

Once I got the go ahead to move forward I drew a cleaned up version of the two characters, scanned them in, and worked with them in Illustrator. I also created the beach, background, fonts and sizes, and came up with this image.

PTposter early draft

From here I started showing the image to some friends, who gave a lot of great feedback on things to tweak. I got some really enlightening advice from my friend and children’s book illustrator Molly Idle.

I went back in and changed the title font to look more like it’s made of plastic, added in the butterfly, and also added the shadow of the birds over the pile of trash in the background to try to give a hint of something a bit sinister. I also roughed up the Space 55 logo and the tagline at the bottom so that they blended with the sandy beach a little more. Here is the final result.

PTpostcard

When I initially started working on this project I was a little worried that I would not find as much motivation to make this postcard as I do when I make the ones for my own plays. But I actually got really into it and had a blast making it. Thanks to everyone who took the time to look at it and give me their thoughts. All the advice I got really helped.

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Kickin’ it in the Backyard

February 1, 2013

 

L and C backyard

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Take that, bucket list!

January 30, 2013

I did a quick sketch of this lighthouse in Buffalo, and then colored it digitally once we got back to AZ, thus fulfilling my lifelong dream of drawing a lighthouse.
lighthouse

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Lincoln

January 28, 2013

With that Lincoln movie up for an Oscar this year, it got me thinking about all the sketches I’ve done of Lincoln over the years. He was kind of an odd looking guy with that long gaunt face and weird beard, which makes him very fun to draw.  Lucky for me, there seems to be more statues of him around than anyone else in history. So whenever I come across one, I sketch it.

bust of lincoln

Disneyland art gallery, 2011

Rushmore 2

Mount Rushmore, 2003

 

 

Abe Mem 1

Lincoln Memorial, 2009

 

Abe Mem 2

Lincoln Memorial, 2nd attempt, 2009

Mount Rushmore, 2012

abe statue

A park in Portland, 2004

Great Moments with Abe

Great Moments with Mr. Lincoln, Disneyland, 2012 (I did this one in the dark)

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Not that you asked…

January 25, 2013

I was on an airplane last year and an older woman was sitting next to me, looking over my shoulder as I worked in my sketchbook. After a while she told me that her granddaughter, who was in kindergarten, was exhibiting a talent for drawing. (By the way, EVERYONE’S grandchild exhibits a talent for drawing). The woman asked me if I had any advice for how to nurture the child’s talent.

I was very flattered to be asked this. I thought about it for a while and realized I have no idea how one should go about nurturing a child’s talent. My mom wanted me to get into medicine, and it was her disbelief in my ability to make a living in the arts that first pushed me to buckle down and start developing some skills. (By the way, my mom was right. I am not making a living from my creative pursuits, but I’m a better artist and writer than I would have been had she believed that I could.)

In the end I told the woman not to worry about nurturing her granddaughter’s talent. If the girl is meant to be an artist, she will be, whether her family encourages it or not.

As for the aspiring artists themselves, I do have a few things to share. For anyone who wants to learn to draw (no matter what your age) here is my advice:

1) Copy copy copy! Get out the newspaper and copy the characters on the comics page. Copy them over and over again until your drawings looks exactly like the ones in the paper. Then move onto some more complicated drawings and copy those. Then go into art museums and copy the masters. This is not cheating. This is how you learn to see. The masters became masters by copying the masters. Some of my favorites to copy are Heinrich Kley, Robert Henri, Rembrandt, and Van Gogh.

My copy of “Madonna With the Long Neck” by Parmigianino

madonna w long neck

2) Get a sketchbook and take it everywhere you go. Draw trees, chairs, buildings, flowers, statues, your friends, your family, and total strangers. Learn to be inconspicuous about it. Actually forget that. Learn not to care if people notice that you’re drawing. So what if you are? You’re trying to develop a skill. What are they doing? Sitting there drinking a beer? You’re working to improve yourself. Own it. Be proud. Let people look over your shoulder. Let them see if they ask to see. Even if what you’ve drawn sucks. And believe me, those first few years, it will suck.

My pal Mike Petry, who taught me to always bring a sketchbook

IM000508

3) Be okay with sucking. It’s going to take a lot of sucking at drawing before you get good at drawing. Just accept that fact and start drawing. You are going to do some 100 thousand crappy drawings in your life. You might as well get them out of the way as soon as possible so you get get onto the good ones.

On the left is Delacroix’s “Pieta”. On the right is Van Gogh’s copy of Delacroix’s “Pieta”.

pieta

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Graphic Illustrations

January 20, 2013

I have been teaching myself to use Illustrator, Painter, and have been brushing up my Photoshop skillz. Here are some characters I’ve made recently.

“Rapacious” the evil bunny. This was one of the first things I made in illustrator. I found a tutorial on how to make a cute pink bunny, and changed it up a bit. Unlike most of my work (which I usually draw by hand, then scan and manipulate digitally) I made this completely in Illustrator by drawing shapes and connecting them. I have since discovered that this is a very slow way to work.
psycho bunny

Here is another Illustrator exercise. I found tutorial online for how to make a cartoony pirate guy, and basically followed those instructions to make “Ambrosia” a frankenstein-like character from one of my plays. Then I made the background in Photoshop. Ambrosia is crazy for sausages and diet Coke, and has a leg made of a vacuum.

ambrosia

This is Katrina, a character from some plays I wrote called The Phoenix 3.0 Trilogy. She’s a bad-ass chick that lives in a post-Apocalyptic world with her boyfriend ZJ. Her outfit is pretty steampunk inspired because I’m kind of into that these days. I drew this original sketch on paper, scanned, traced, and colored in Illustrator. 
KatColor

Here is a zombie that eventually became the central figure of the Monsters, Mutants, and Other Tales of Love poster. I drew this on paper, then scanned and traced in Illustrator using a wacom tablet, and then colored in Illustrator. This took FOREVER because I didn’t know what I was doing and just sort of fumbled through it. I am still not exactly sure how I did it.

ZombieAvatar

This is ZJ and Katrina, star-crossed lovers from the post-apocalypse. For this one I did the original sketch by hand, then scanned into Illustrator and colored using the Live Trace and Live Paint tools. These a great tools for doing a quick and dirty color illustration.

ZJ-and-Kat-

Here is ZJ, our favorite post-apocalyptic doofus. I drew this on paper, then scanned into Illustrator where I used the live trace and live paint tools for the base colors. Then I took it into Corel Painter and added some more shadows and highlights.

Z

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Sitters

January 16, 2013

From an old sketchbook, circa 2003-04. A bunch of people sitting at tables…

Wonder what became of these two.
couple flirting at bar

Philosophizing
man at table gesture

A cougar looking to pounce
cougar on the prowl

A serious artist. A sad artist.
moustache man drawing

Kickin’ it at Macayos
girls at macayos

Day dreamer
boy writing and looking up

Sad, sleepy, or drunk?sleeping at table

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Quality

January 16, 2013

This is my grandmother-in-law. A wonderful woman with some great stories. I did this last summer in Buffalo. At the time of this drawing I was trying to focus on varying the line quality.
grandma mckirchy