Monday, February 10, 2014

Love isn't the only thing that's blind...



I think my mind is still on how we grow as artists.  This week I’m thinking about the role critique plays because I know next week I’m going to be getting some feedback from my illustration critique group on the latest storyboard* and characters I submitted to them.   You’d think I was dreading hearing a long list of things that are wrong with my images, but I’m not.  I’m dancing impatiently on my toes because I can’t wait for their feedback.  You see, love isn’t the only thing that’s blind.

Art is blind too.  Specifically, artists are blind.  We get so involved in the artwork that we are working on, that we quit noticing things.  A line is a little crooked or the colors are too dark and we can’t tell because the image in our heads blends with the image our paintbrush created.   Or, sometimes it’s the opposite that happens.  We are so involved in the artwork that we can’t see it as anything other than our very imperfect creation.  Like when you have a speck of dust in your eye—it doesn’t matter what beautiful vision is in front of you.  All you pay attention to is that-which-is-wrong. 

If there were a magical pair of glasses that solved this problem, they would sell like hotcakes in every single art store and online.  But glasses don’t help.  Luckily there are other things that do!

Setting the painting or artwork aside for several hours or several days helps. 
I have a tendency to hate the artworks I create when I first create them.  After a few days, however, I kind of “forget” that they are mine and start appreciating them just as artworks.   I start noticing the bright colors or the lovely composition and the wonky lines and flaws just become stylistic choices.  Alternatively, sometimes I set a picture that’s in progress aside and when I come back to it I see immediately the solution when before all I had was the nagging feeling that something was wrong. 

Using a mirror to “flip” the image helps.



I was chatting on Skype with overseas family while I worked on this tree image.  To their confusion, I kept excusing myself so I could run the painting into the other room.  Why?  Because the other room had a large mirror where I could easily see the mirror image of the tree branches.  My eyes wouldn’t tell me where the balance was off or which branches were too thin, but the mirror would.  I’m learning how to use some digital art tools, and the program I’m using the most will flip an image in just two stylus clicks.  No mirror required for the high-tech!

External feedback from other people (critiques and helpful comments).
A lot of people will look at your artwork and say things like, “Oh, that’s beautiful” or “You’re so talented.”  Those people are good fuel to keep you going…but sometimes you need someone who, when you ask them to, will just tell you like it is in a specific, helpful way:  “The face is too round,” “Don’t you think that looks too light?”,  “Have you considered making her hand bigger?”, or “She looks a bit angry, don’t you think?”  I treasure the people who I know will be honest with me when I request it, because they let me “see” my artwork when I’m blind to what’s going on—of course, that doesn’t mean I always act on what they say!

Squinting or using one eye.
There are a lot of artists who do this.  I don’t really.  It doesn’t tend to help me.   But it should be on the list because sometimes you don’t have time, a mirror, or other people…when that happens, you’ve got to have something in your tool-bag to fall back on!

When you see "talent", look behind it for some of these techniques for avoiding art-blindness.  They’ll be there.  And, to watch the process in action, check out this video about a first grader drawing a butterfly.  There’s a metamorphosis so dramatic you might as well be watching the caterpillar itself change.  If you have friends who think they can’t draw or you yourself think you can’t draw, watch it thinking, “That could be me.”  Go ahead.  It’s only six minutes.  

It's called Austin's Butterfly:  Building Excellence in Student Work and is by Expeditionary Learning. Watch it on YouTube or, if you prefer, here's the same video on Vimeo.  

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*If you‘ve ever watched the special features of an animated film, you might have seen a storyboard there since they are used extensively in animation to plan out the movie.  Since mine are for picture books, I just do one sketch per page (although I will group two pages together when they share an illustration and you can see both pages at the same time…this is called a “spread” because the illustration spreads across the pages).  It lets me see the whole book at once so I can make sure the illustrations have variety.   Here's an example of one I posted on my Facebook page a while back.  

Tuesday, February 4, 2014

How To Draw A Cat


Right now I'm working on illustrating a children's book.  One of the characters appearing on every page is a cat.  Now I can draw a cat.  Circle for the head, triangles for the ears, a cute little upside down triangle for the nose, three little whiskers on each side of the cat's little chiny-chin-chin.  But my standard little cat wasn't cutting it...and unfortunately for me, at the time I didn't have a cat around to draw from. Not that it would have helped. Have you ever tried to pose a cat?  Here, kitty-kitty, stand with one leg here and one leg there.  Angle your head to the side.  Just a little bit more.  No, don't run away.  No, I don't want you to twine around my legs, I want you to pose!  Look, cat, if you aren't going to pose you definitely can't lay on top of my work.

Do you have a cat around?  Go ahead.  Try getting it to pose.  I dare you.

So I muddled through drawing my cats in the storyboard and immediately after finishing, I set about drawing cats as part of an art-warm up.  Twenty cats before breakfast?  No problem...those Facebook, YouTube, and Pinterest "cute cat" videos and images actually counted as work!

But it made me think about all those moments where I've drawn a cat and people have said, "Wow! You're so talented!  I wish I could draw like that."

They didn't see me as a kid practicing diligently from "How to Draw" books.


They didn't see me redrawing lines and erasing wrong lines.

They didn't see me studying cats for the shape their bodies make standing, walking, stretching.

They didn't see the pictures of dogs, bears, and furry creatures that help me make it look easy when it comes to drawing cat fur.

They didn't see the frustration caused by my expectations for my own cat-drawing abilities rising parallel to my skills so that even as I improved, my perception of my abilities stayed the same.

They didn't see the cats that, despite all my best efforts, didn't quite turn out as expected.


They didn't see the twenty cats before breakfast.


Wednesday, January 8, 2014

Artworks At Every Stage

Today was a bit unusual because I...
a.) spent all day painting (well, most of the day)
b.) worked on pretty much every stage of a painting

8 AM found me collecting reference photos of pukekos (purple swamp hens) for a large project I started earlier this week.  The highlight wasn't the long-legged pukekos; it was the four little babies being carefully guarded by the long-necked swans.  Sooooo cute!  When you get done reading, pop by my Facebook page* to see the pencil sketch I did of them with their parents.



11 AM (and a good amount of time before and after) found me working on finishing up the Spanish-English idiomatic expression painting I started many moons ago.  I'd been holding off because I wasn't sure about how to do the lettering.  In the end, I went with reds, greens, and yellows.  I love the additional chaotic energy the lettering adds.  The end result is crowded, but it's a happy crowded feeling. The last step is outlining the letters in black, but that requires a steady hand so I worked on it in spurts.  



1 PM:  Lunch!  I tried out a nice recipe* from a blog called Bacon, Butter, Cheese, and Garlic.  Mushroom and creamed spinach smothered chicken. That says it all.  Yum!  I only made a few alterations.  Okay, maybe more than a few, but mostly just because I didn't have any seasoned salt and I don't like to measure!  (For those of you just getting to know me, following recipes precisely...well, let's just say it's extremely rare for it to happen.)

3 PM (or some other time which I don't really remember) found me putting the last coat of finishing spray on Kaikoura Sunrise, a Christmas gift.  Yup, the painting is bigger than the Christmas tree! (Note: this is an old photo taken when it was still part of the 12 days of Christmas.)


4:30 PM and, later, 11 PM found me having fun with my inner geek while making a birthday card for a family friend.  Dr. Who fans, note the mug filled with New Zealand Earl Grey and the faraway television featuring a Dr. Who episode....









MENTIONINGS:
  • www.facebook.com/RebeccaTrembulaArtist
  • The lunch recipe:  http://baconbuttercheesegarlic.blogspot.com.au/2013/02/a-special-meal-for-my-valentine.html  (and in case you too don't have any seasoned salt, here's the recipe I very loosely followed for that:  http://low-cholesterol.food.com/recipe/copycat-lawrys-seasoned-salt-17051) 


Sunday, December 15, 2013

A new year is coming! What do you want to bring?



I’ve been thinking about the things I want to bring with me into the new year—and the things I want to leave behind.  For example, I don’t want to bring my pile of shoes that need gluing with me into 2014.  Would you believe that I’ve had three pairs of shoes waiting at home for MONTHS for me to glue them back together?  



Something like that, cluttering up my to do list for another year?  No, thank you.  No matter how safely ensconced in my to do list they’ve become, some things just aren’t meant to stay there, no matter how hard they try to blend in. 



While I'm leaving shoes-to-be-glued behind, I'm bringing organization with me.  Over the past half-year I’ve been working off and on to build logical homes for all of the regularly occurring papers, project types, and materials in my studio.  It’s not where I want it to be yet, but there are some things that are solidly working well.  My whiteboard/corkboard row is excellent for holding and displaying artwork and projects in progress.   Seeing the rows of colorful artwork always makes me want to create more!  



Plus, in Japan, I got some plastic zip pouches for collecting papers together in and they are fantastic for keeping projects together—including while on the road.  I started using them while we were still in Japan and I truly tested them while on the road trip to Sydney and the Blue Mountains.  An added bonus?  Until they get super-full, I can use magnets to hang them from the whiteboard.  (I like my in-progress projects visible). 



This doesn’t mean I’ve cleared out all my clutter, dealt with all my papers, organized all my projects-in-perpetual-state-of-pause, or figured out how to approach every type of large project.  It does mean that I made a dent--and consistently making a dent in something can get it done.  

Those papers I threw out?  I’ll be dancing with glee, paper free.  They’ll be at the recycling center.   All the papers I filed?  They’ll be right where I need them, right when I need them.  The craft supplies I put away?  They’ll be right where I need them too.   



The (now empty) laundry basket?  Already filling with materials for a papier-mâché giraffe’s armature*!   In my studio, organization doesn’t mean a lack of “stuff.”  It means having space and energy to use my stuff without being frustrated or distracted.  

In addition to do list items and clutter, I’ve also been thinking about art and art supplies that won’t be coming with me.  

This funky orange painting won’t be coming into 2014…at least not in its current unfinished state!   Nor will my current jar of gesso be coming with me as the last of it was used up today.  (Note that I will be restocking at the art store tomorrow, so a almost-brand new jar will be on the shelf as we enter January!)  There’s a framed poster that’s been waiting for almost the whole year for me to replace the image and find it a home on the wall.  As 2013 rolls into 2014, it won’t be leaning against the wall neglected.  It will (hopefully) be on the wall…or if not on, then at least letting the last layers of paint dry so it can go up soon!  The first layer is drying as I type.  The paper that’s been languishing on my plywood, waiting for me to use it?  It is also painted and drying.  Those canvases that I’ve been saving?  Some of them will be getting used between now and Christmas too. 



*Armature:  a base framework for a sculpture…the current plan is that my giraffe will have a cardboard, milk jug, and plastic grocery bag armature and the papier-mâché will go over it. 

Saturday, September 28, 2013

Color Spectrum

If you are looking for something fun to do, check out the color test that x-rite is offering on their website.  Can you arrange the colors by hue?  Add some challenge by seeing how long it took you.  I won't lie to you...it took me longer than I thought it would, but it didn't occur to me to time myself.  A lower score is better...zero is perfect and I think the worst score you can get is something around 2000 (100 hues and all the infinite possible wrong wrong combinations of them).  I got 14--you can see the color hues I missed, they are the little white bars.  It doesn't surprise me a bit that I'm pretty good with those purples!  :-)


Go here to try it yourself:  http://www.xrite.com/custom_page.aspx?pageid=77&lang=en