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Tag: painting

2010.02.07 13:05:09
*AJ

You know I finally figured out what this part 3 of our course is all about. The whole shape and form thing...I just didn't get it. It is why I have not made many blog postings: I honestly did not know what to write about. I did not understand what was happening and could not explain what we had done or what our homework was.

Anyway, I realize that we had a 3D part for learning about 3d aspects of art. Then we had a 2D part for learning skills and being exposed to many different styles, techniques, types of 2d, etc. This part here is about literally exploring shape and texture and rhythm and colour. She doesn't want anything she can recognize, it's not the point. The point of part 3 is to improve our techniques with developing texture, combining colour, and using non-distinguishable shapes. The goal is to learn to combine these so that we can solicit emotion, that is why we were asked to do word association exercises and then making artwork that is representative of the words. And that is also what she means by cliche.

In the end it is a misunderstanding, she is not really using the word cliche right. When she says cliche she actually is meaning the pre-determined visual associations we have. So, painting blue with white to represent the sky is a cliche in her words because it is an association that already exists. Instead she would want us to pick out characteristics of the sky and use shape, colour, texture, rhythm, etc to translate those characteristics onto paper (or sculpture or whatever). I look at the sky right now and it is bright blue with little clouds everywhere so how do I translate that? Sure it's blue, but it's beautiful too and godlike. Maybe I paint yellow because to me yellow is happy and add white stripes to draw the eye the same way the clouds do.. Then to represent the rhythym of those clouds, which by the way look playful and are dancing around the sky, maybe I take a bunch of colourful childrens buttons and glue them all over the place with a rhythmic but not repetitious pattern.

The reason we are doing this is so that we can learn how to be creative in a way we didn't know how before and bring more maturity to our art-making processes. It's not about the thing I always joke about "this is representative of the struggles of....blah blah". It is not about making artwork using weird colours or materials that represent something. Instead it is about learning how to find inspiration to create our own artwork without taking the inspiration we are using literally. So maybe the sky was my inspiration for that piece of art but in the end it does not represent the sky, it is a brand new piece of art which started because I looked at the sky. Part 3 of our course is about freeing ourselves from associations we have and about seeing the world through the eyes of a child's make believe where nothing is set in stone and nothing means anything because we are making up the game as we go.

I realized all this when I showed her an apple painting that I did in response to a word association exercise using Eden. She made a comment about cupping my hands on the painting, making a tiny square and maybe that is all that is needed: Just a splash of green and a red. She was showing me one technique to free myself from that "cliche" of an apple representing Eden and instead to say maybe this extra shiny bumpy patch of bright red with a smooth white square (the shiny part) is a way of translating that inspiration (Eden) into your own art -- your own totally new art.

The exercise last week was misunderstood a bit I think by almost everyone. I will be making a post detailing the last 3 weeks now that I understand what went on but essentially we were told to make a picture. Then we attached another picture to it and did it over and over again until we had a large piece of artwork. Most people just put their papers together and treated it like one big painting. Rather than adding piece to piece they just used a bigger canvas in total. I actually misunderstood in the opposite way as I made one painting and then progressed through a series of 6 paintings into the painting at the end of the series. Mine were related in progression but did not make up a large image when placed together.

But what we were supposed to learn from that was how to compartmentalize to make things which hold their own and also which are so related to one another that they become a large picture when moved together. I think the reason they tried to teach that to us was to try to hone our exploration skills while remaining within a very tight frame of reference. Anyone can make a big painting and anyone can change their shapes into recognizable things like faces but you need great interpretation and analytical skill to make a big picture which is make up of individual parts and does not cheat by using the ability of the human psyche to recognize things we know (like faces, or animal shapes) made up from those parts inside that big picture.

Anyway, this is what I have figured out and now everything makes a lot more sense to me and I wish I could go back to the first day and redo it! (or that I had time to redo it all at home).





2010.01.21 11:07:41
*AJ

As promised here is the rest of the artwork which I have not posted yet. Like I said in my previous post I got a near perfect score and I was shocked by this. Other students, their artwork to me looks so much better. So much more creative. But they asked what I was interested in doing and I think they take this into account when they decide on the scores. If I had said illustration I probably would not have been graded as well but the group I will go into on Saturday will be focussed on Theatre Design, Fashion Design, Interior Architecture...and one other I can't remember right now. Essentially on observing our environment and it's characteristics and designing/creating things that fit with it. So my eye for proportion, line, colour etc is very valuable whereas someone who can paint a near perfect landscape may not have the qualities to be as successful in this course (just as I would not be as successful in the fine art group they will be going into).

I am disappointed with these photos but I do not have time to retake them. They are all at a strong angle which means the proportion looks a bit wacky. Oh well.

I am posting the good as well as the not good and even the really really bad. You can see the list of what we were supposed to do in this post. These are in the order that I did them.

IMG_2579
pencil, 2.5hrs Btw the angle that this and the photo below are taken at is very very bad. In the drawings, the top of the bottle and the bottom of the bottle are both the same width. They are not as they appear in these photos -- I just don't have time to pull everything out and retake the photos unfortunately :(

IMG_2579
ink and pen with brush in background and for solid colouring, 2hrs

Click readmore for the rest! (23 photos total)





2009.11.17 20:10:46
*AJ

The first two classes of the 2D portion of my foundation course were Model Drawing and I never really told you what the homework was. There is a reason for this, I didn't understand myself. I finally got it figured out and got most of it done. I think these are good exercises to help teach your mind to apply creativity in a different way.

Exercise 1(after first class) :

Pick one of your model drawings (large size paper) and make a better version of it on the same sized paper. It could be traced using tracing paper to ensure it was the same scale but study what you did and see how you can improve it. I have not done this yet.

Exercise 2 (after first class):

Take a piece of paper and give it a grey wash (make the entire paper grey), then using only black and white paint another one of your model drawings. You can re-interpret it by making it abstract or do whatever you want. One of the examples she showed us had the model holding her head in her hands. I did this twice, both of them sucked. I'm embarrassed but I'll post them anyway so you never feel alone. She actually made only one comment for the mainly white-lined one below and that was "This one I do not like" lol Later I got her to explain that she thought I could do better, that the line thicknesses are out of proportion, the hair doesn't work and is too small, and the lines are not tidy enough. She did like the background of the weird black one but said the figure was way too much of a contrast.





2009.10.29 22:32:12

Today I thought I would show you a few different illustration media that you can choose from. Each medium gives your drawing a different feeling. They all have their own complexities, disadvantages, and advantages. And, they all take a lot of time and patience!

First is colored pencil. We didn't do a lot with colored pencil. It was covered briefly during my freshman year fine art drawing class, and was used to draw fruit and cylinders. In my experience, you have to put down lots of light layers of color to get the best results. This takes a long time and a lot of pencils! But when done well, the final drawing is beautiful and smooth, incorporating several different shades of color to make one greater color. Here's a recent collection of colored pencil drawings (with some marker mixed in). These were done really quickly and don't at all look like a final drawing should, but it's the only example I have at the moment.
Design6-2

Click below to read more!





2009.10.22 19:16:57

While preparing some of my drawing/CFDA project to show you guys, I remembered a project I did in the spring quarter last year. We spent the quarter focusing on watercolor fashion illustration, working with a paint palette that was apparently exactly what Monet used.

Our palette included: cadmium red, permanent rose, cadmium yellow, winsor green, winsor blue, ultramarine, burnt sienna, and raw umber. We also used white mixed with the cadmium yellow and an orange to create skin tone. We bought black, but only used it in the smallest amount possible mixed with other colors. I eventually bought a few additional colors - I don't remember what they were, but I tried to keep it basic so that they would mix well with the soft Monet colors.

Anyway, here is my final project for the quarter. We put together a collection of paintings that we had done all quarter, paintings that would group together well. We then fixed them as needed and ordered them up, creating a cohesive presentation for the season we chose. It's hard to see detail, but it's a pretty long file - We scanned in all our drawings to rearrange them and put them together, then had that file printed 11x17".

I'd love to see some of your work, whether it's watercolor, pencil sketches, marker, whatever works for you! Feel free to post images of it in our Showcase Forum

Love, Elizabeth






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