Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Final Post

This semester was a good one. In life drawing, I learned how to do a proper gesture drawing, I learned how to do a proper cross contour drawing, I learned how to do an ink wash, and I learned about all of the main muscles and bones in the human body. This class was very focused, and tightly scheduled. In the beginning I had trouble with the rib cage, and I thought I wanted more time to work on it, however, I feel that as I did more and more advanced drawings, I was still able to practice the ribs. because of this, I would have liked to see the class move faster. We were unable to do the self portrait because of timing issues, and we only spent one day on the skull, and no time at all on the face. this was a major disappointment for me because I would really like to get better at these things. If I were to take the class again, I would have liked less in class time to work on the mannequins, and more in class time to do gestures, and face/skull studies.

to see my work please go here:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/imhumble/

Now I will discuss the successes and failures of my last shell drawing (Shell 4, Sorry about the poor quality pic.) I approached this drawing with a lot of confidence. I had done three successful cross contours of this shell before, and I now had some experience with the ink. My line work turned out really good. I was very pleased with how the contours described the shell without getting too crowded. When I went to ink it, I got cocky, and because of this it did not turn out the way I had hoped. Although there are some elements that I am pleased with (Leaving some white hi-lights, getting the curve of the shell rendered nicely, and a softer background) I am sorry that I was not able to get the same mood from this drawing. In the middle area, I got lost, and was unable to make the correct shades of pink and white, which gave the shell a very flat and ambiguous feel. If I could take  off the ink, I would.

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Ink

(pictures to come)

So today the first inked shell drawing was due. I had started my shell drawing during class one day because I was unwilling to cut up my $7.60 piece of paper. I had done a very careful and light contour drawing to start with, and I was pleased with the way it had turned out so I decided to move onto ink. I started to ink on Saturday. I started by wetting my whole page with clean water. Then I got two cups of water, and very slowly add just a few drops of ink to each one keeping the colors (black and sepia) separate. I began to add very light colors to the drawing, and was very careful not to go to dark too soon (later I wish I would have gone faster). As the ink began to sink into the paper, the fact that the whole page was wet really made the first dozen coats of ink became very soft. The water allowed the ink to spread, and flow and when I stood back to take a look, the ink looked like a very soft cloth. I liked this for the first coat, but I decided to let it dry and so when I had another go at it, it would look stronger and sharper.

I let it sit for a day actually, and resumed inking on Monday night. I tried to move a little more decisively, and make a stronger contrast in my piece. I learned many techniques very specific to ink wash during this process:

1. Once you start inking, its not that hard to lighten wet ink with clean water.
2. If there is a drip of water on your page, you can remove it with a dry brush.
3. Watering down your ink is sometimes unnecessary.
4. You can control the flow of ink on the page with how you wet the page prior to inking.
5. if you apply straight ink to the page, it will spread to the wet places.

also I must note,  that because my charcoal was so light on my first time arround, I waited till it was dry again, and darkened my lines after the ink.

I also used the color ink on the shell, and the black ink on the background, but I also used black ink on the underside or more shadowy pars of the shell to add weight and shadow.

I regret loosing the white of the paper on the highlights but it was not working well with the painting I had.

The next one will be better.

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Everyone left early today.

So I was just starting to get overwhelmed by the amount of work that is building up near the end of the semester, and today we just get slammed! It was a cold walk to class today but I decided that because it has been so long since we have had a normal class, I would only bring only my drawing stuff, and leave my clay stuff at home. This was the wrong choice. When I got to class it was immediately announced that we would be working on our mannequins, after some lecture on the shoulder. Then it took about an hour for Amy to dish out the latest muscles that we had to sculpt.

This was daunting because there are about a billion muscles that we have yet to apply. On the other hand, we get more time for our inked shell drawing, and we have 2 weeks to do this sculpting.

Well after all of this we had the rest of the time to work on the muscles. Because no one knew that we were going to be working on them, pretty much everyone left.

I left to get my mannequin, and drop off my drawing business. When I got back only a few people were still there, and we had only about an hour to work now. Amy was kind enough to critique our sculpt jobs thus far, which was helpful. A few of my muscles were to small, and a few of them were not going in the right place. Then I went back to my small work station, and got through two whole muscles before class time was up and I had to move on, how frustrating.

I think that it would have been nice if we could get a quick email before class telling us what to expect, and what to bring.

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

The Walker


Today we went to the Walker museum of art, and the Bell museum of natural history in Minneapolis MN. We went to the Walker to look at some contemporary art, and we went to the Bell to look at stuffed animals, most of which are indigenous to Minnesota, and we each drew at least one or possibly more of the animals. I'll talk more about that in my next post, but for this one I'm going to focus mainly on the Walker.

There were a couple of interesting things at the Walker including photos, sculptures, kinetic pieces, videos, and even a live performance installation piece.

The live performance was interesting. It challenged the viewer to concentrate and contemplate the body as a system of small pieces, but recognize it as one large powerful whole. That moves ever so gracefully. As I was observing, I thought about how many muscles there are in the body. This has really been on my mind since we have started putting more and more clay on the mannequins. Working with the mannequins has affected my understanding of the muscle system greatly. Realizing that there are so many different muscles that are similar in size shape and placement but they are all responsible for their own movements. It is very obvious that it is a combination of all these muscles that make each movement, flex, extension, and restrictions possible.

The piece that I liked the most was a kinetic sculpture that used a mirror to reflect light through a plastic cup, and on to a wall. What made this piece interesting was that the cup was on its side on a small rotating platter that was slanted at an angle. The result was a large moving shadow/light. Some of the plastic created shadow, and some of the plastic focused the light into odd and interesting patterns. I liked this because the cup would never roll in exactly the same way. It would always bounce around, or slow differently with each rotation, and this made the piece eternal. Also the fact that it was not only a shadow being cast but also light being focused added a huge amount of interest letting the viewer discover both sides of light at the same time, and even survey how they intereact.

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Class went well today. Even though i had a raging headache through most of it, I was able to take advantage of the in class time and get a head start on my third shell drawing. This happened because we were supposed to be practicing ink wash on our hot pressed water color paper, and before we did that we had to start by drawing our shell. I decided to go full scale with my drawing because I was not going to cut up or make small scale practice drawings on a piece of paper that cost me $7.60.  As the class progressed my shell began to take shape, and it turned out pretty good. I spent so much time working on getting my large scale drawing nice, that i ran out of time, and couldn't spend any time working with the ink. This concerns me a little because I am not very confident in myself when it comes to my skills in ink wash or water color for that matter. I have tried it in the past on a small scale however the results were less than satisfactory. Although it is important for me to note, that I did take time out of my drawing fever to pay attention to the things that Amy was telling some of the other students mostly with regards to how to improve their ink wash abilities. I am committing to memory the advice she gave so not to fall on my face during this experiment. (I hope the quality of my paper helps) She said: make sure your brush strokes follow the lines that you draw, let the darkness of your lines reflect how dark you want your ink to be as to not get lost, start very light and work your way to dark, determine a light source.

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Class was Canceled

Class was canceled today, which is kind of frustrating for me.

Last week I went to Penco to pick up some of the materials that I would need for the ink wash day. This went well and the Penco staff were very helpful, however, they were all out of 90lb. hot pressed water color paper. This is a problem because the next step up in quality of paper was available, however, it was about $4.00 more expensive. I waited all weekend in hopes that they would receive a new shipment of cheaper paper, alas, they did not and I was forced to purchase the expensive paper. The problem is, if I had known earlier that class was going to be canceled, I could have waited until the cheaper paper was in stock. I just spent an hours worth of work on one piece of paper that I'm not even going to use today.

Looking forward, I am very excited to try the ink wash. I have always been mystified by the images and dreamlike quality some talented artists are able to produce. I have always had trouble handling ink, and watercolor. With some instruction I hope to discover the techniques and possibilities that ink has to offer.

I did purchase the sepia toned ink because I hold hope that during the application process the colors of the ink will separate, and I will be able to access more than just one tone with the ink.

I am also anxious to use the bamboo brush that I bought. I can tell right away that it will be tricky to command such a tool, however, I have been practicing holding my drawing tool (primarily charcoal pencil) near the back end. This is how I expect to handle the bamboo brush.

Monday, November 15, 2010

3D

I was cruising the net the other day and came across this gem:

http://www.mymodernmet.com/profiles/blogs/unbelievable-3d-drawings-16

 As an artist who considers himself one who thinks outside the box, I came to really like these. Although the technique is not quite yet mastered, the artist has obviously developed his own style. I would really like to see what he has to offer in other mediums. It is also interesting that the artist uses props and other objects in his work. Notice the watch in the 6th drawing, and the wine glass in the 3rd.

It is also great to see such passion and talent in someone so young. It will be really interesting to see what he can do after some formal training. I am also curious to see in what direction he would take his talent. Would he go with a studio major? or perhaps a multimedia design major.

I think it is fair to note that this technique is very similar to the chalk drawings done in perspective that have gotten quite popular over the past year or more.

Even though his drawings are very good, I get the feeling that the works are not really planned out. It looks like some of them are just thrown together in order to achieve the three dimensionality. For instance the first drawing is composed of three pieces of paper that have been haphazardly positioned and looks as if the artist ran out of space.

I am also thinking about how this artist would handle a wall, or even a room.

Thursday, November 11, 2010

I should probably have a picture of myself...

As I'm trying to catch up on the "easy stuff" in this class I noticed that everyone else has a nice picture of their face to represent their blog. I'll get one up after this post so everyone knows who I am.

As life goes on, I am constantly reminded that humans are at the very center of the future. What I mean by that is as time moves on, things are getting more and more easy for humans to use. Technology is becoming obsessed with making their products perfect for human use, whether its a car with heated hand grips and voice activated GPS, ore just a simple hiking backpack that fits comfortably to the shape of someones back.

With this in mind, I am reminded of how we all drew pictures as children. When we were very young and we drew a person, it usually came out as a large face that filled up the whole page with large eyes, and often small legs and arms coming right from the head. This is because as a child, the most important thing to us was the face. It is how we recognized people.

As social networks get more and more advanced, they often include images of faces next to names, posts, etc..... I should really get a profile pic up.

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

falling behind

So I have been falling behind on these posts, and I have also been falling behind in my works. Today we were supposed to have the thigh muscles done on our mannequins and I have yet to even crack open the book. This is because of a job interview that I had last Tuesday that forced me to cut class, and then again missing class on Thursday because of poor time management. I am struggling to catch up and this is the first step:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/imhumble/

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Cross Contour

Last week (Sept. 30th) the class worked on a cross contour drawing of the model. I really feel like I hit a stride that day. my lines were crisp, and controlled. And even though my drawing was not very proportional, I was able to show strong receding diagonals, and depth of field with simple curvy lines that flowed through light and dark moments. This gives me hope that perhaps the future cross contour drawings I will do wont be as awful as I had originally thought.

Saturday, September 25, 2010

Sculpting Muscles.

Today I started putting clay muscles on my mannequin. At first I found it hard to read the books instructions, however, after my first few muscles I got into the swing of things. Also I found it odd that the book does not tell you to model each muscle in a specific order. Often it would show only one muscle without any others. This was a challenge because I would have to remove some muscles in order to put new ones on, or I had to squeeze muscles into places where the almost did not fit with the other muscles already in place. I wish that the skeleton and the clay were flexible so that I could really see what muscles were being used in each movement.

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Entry Number Two

Today in life drawing we did a study on the spine using the skeleton models. I liked this because it allowed vision to the spine through the stomach. This made it easy to draw the curves of the spine from any angle. I think that this practice session will be very helpful when it comes time to draw a live model. Seeing the spine without flesh and muscle etc. gave me a better understanding of how to shape the spine from the front, back and side angles, and this knowledge will definitely be applied to my drawings from here on out.

Friday, September 10, 2010

First Post

Hello,

My name is Peter J. VanDusartz IV. I have always been interested in creation. At a young age, while most of my friends wanted to be videogame testers, I wanted to be a videogame maker. The first game that allowed me a glimps into that world was Tony Hawk Pro Skater 2. It had a very functional level designer, and I would spend hours developing complex skateparks for my friends to skate.

I am in the multimedia concentration, and hope to double major in the new videogame design program.

Over the summer I developed my online portfolio which you can find here.

The portfolio itself is probably my most accomplished work.

So far my favorite course at Stout has been Digital Narrative 1, because it taught me a lot about writing screenplays and scripts, and the story structure.

I am taking Life Drawing because I like to draw, and character design is something that I would like to get very good at. Life Drawing will help me develop the skills necessary for suck tasks.

When I graduate, I would like to ether work as a freelance designer of interactive medias including the web, or work for a very large game developer creating games that tell incredible stories while allowing the user to make their own choices.