Showing posts with label master studies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label master studies. Show all posts

Saturday, October 18, 2014

Dean Cornwell Master Study


Side-by-Side comparison.
Dean Cornwell on left, Mine on right.

Title: Dean Cornwell Master Study
Date: October 9 - 16, 2014
Medium: Photoshop CS6
Scale: Original is 6134px x 7400px

Notes: My color master study. It's kind of awesome and odd to look back at this one from awhile ago... You can see the first time I attempted this study in 2013, below.
I still think that one isn't too bad of an attempt, but it was supremely grayed out... I think my color vision has increased ten-fold from then, and I also think that my accuracy is quite a bit better. But all-in-all, wasn't too bad of an attempt, even then...

Check this out: July 16, 2013 (see below)


---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Sargent Master Study


Side-by-Side comparison.
Sargent top. Mine bottom.

Title: Sargent Master Study
Date: October 9 - 16, 2014
Medium: Photoshop CS6
Scale: Original is 3750px x 3096px

Notes: Gray scale master study. This one is a drastic improvement. Granted the study below isn't finished, but even from the get-go this one is completely superior in every aspect.
Sargent is amazing! 
Improvement is awesome to see and I can't wait to check back next year!

Check this out: December 31, 2013 (see below)

Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Applied Studies


Title: Applied Studies
Date: January 19 & 20, 2013
Medium: Photoshop CS3

Notes: So... I was attempting something new: a master painting, and then immediately afterwards I would jump in and try to paint one using the techniques I just learned.
The portrait on the left is a Sorolla.
Using the strokes and brush work from the left, I tried jumping in and painting a portrait that was in a similar vein using the same brushes and strokes that I just used. This of course proved harder than expected. I think I will try more of this soon (as you can see from the half-started piece on the bottom left).

Environment Speeds


Title: Environment Speeds
Date: January 20, 2013
Medium: Photoshop CS3

Notes: Studying environments to +1 on them. Actually got this idea entirely from Lee Parks here. His are quite a bit better, but then I can honestly say that he studies environments far more than I do. Something that I should try and play catch-up on sometime soon.
It might not only help my characters from just floating in a space, but will most likely help my colors get closer to a more realistic palette instead of being quite off.

Here's Pinky, where's the Brain?


Title: Here's Pinky, where's the Brain?
Date: January 19, 2013
Medium: Photoshop CS3
Scale: Original is 1200px x 2000px

Notes: Yet again, more of those photostudies while listening to my madam read books. She's already on the third book of The Strain, and I highly recommend that people read it. It's AWESOME! :)

Edit: BONUS TUTORIAL!


  • Step 1: Render Background some, this will help you to define your 'character space'.
  • Step 2: Sketch out the character in it's entirety (or at least what you plan to paint in later.
  • Step 3: Wash layer. Basically throw a quick wash over what your want the basic backdrop colors to be.
  • Step 4 & 5: Render, render, and more rendering.
  • Step 6: Because I was a little unsure of all the crazy jewelry and add-on stuff this girl had, I made a new layer and just popped it up there.


As always, any questions, ask 'em in the comments!


Anatomy (from Imagination)


Title: Anatomy (from Imagination)
Medium: Pencil

Notes: So, from the last time you saw some pencils, I have tried that mouth technique using no reference at all and have discovered that I can draw a mouth in pretty much any way using that technique. So I tried continuing on with the full head and even some body, and discovered that I need to go back to the drawing board even more before I can just spit these things out from imagination. More studies of shape design for sure.

Saturday, December 21, 2013

Larriva Study


Title: Larriva Study
Date: December 21, 2013
Medium: Photoshop CS3
Scale: Original is 1000px x 1400px

Notes: John Larriva is pretty damn good at simplifying the form. I think it might be a good practice to either try and manipulate the paint in a similar manner, or try and do a bunch of studies using the technique. Regardless, this guy is definitely pro! Time to keep catching up.

Wired Scars


Title: Wired Scars
Date: December 21, 2013
Medium: Photoshop CS3
Scale: Original is 1366px x 2058px

Notes: Tried out something new here by using photo filters to start the color (on top of a grey painting) and then sample from that to paint the final. It came out not so bad, and this image is the result. It's kinda creepy to me, but was a fun and new way to paint even faster. I might try this again just to see how far it can be pushed.

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Cornwell is a Rascal


Title: Cornwell is a Rascal
Date: July 15 & 16, 2013
Medium: Photoshop
Scale: Same as Above.

Notes: So, I was trying out a master study. I've been told that they are useful, and honestly... I can't agree more after trying it out now that I feel a little comfortable with my painting skills. Of course, this is not comfort in the fact that I'm good at it by far, but comfort in the fact that I don't get discouraged after five minutes of painting.
Here's the source image: $2000 Reward
I think after painting for like an hour or so and really getting a feeling of the paint, I then realized that not only was the figure too wide, but the actual image itself was like half an inch to the left.
This was really my second exploration into the whole 'flipping the canvas' every like fifteen minutes. It seemed to really help.
Either way, I think my colors are a little more accurate than they've been in awhile. No color sampling for me. As I think that's flat out cheating.

Wednesday, June 26, 2013


"Glitch Mob - Drink the Sea (Full Album)"


Couple of productive days have gone by!
Most of which I can't really share with anyone. Most of which is pretty exciting as I've been making leaps and bounds in the digital painting department and the face anatomy department.

Either way, I'm getting super pumped and somehow I wonder if the correlation between working out, reading and just drawing my ass off have officially kicked up the art into high gear.
Either way, it's been an awesome (and enlightening) past couple of days.

Anatomy Study: Bodies in Motion - Combined


Title: Anatomy Study: Bodies in Motion - Combined
Date: June 20-23, 2013
Medium: Photoshop

Notes: I think these turned out well and actually look pretty good all combined together. I've kind of turned onto a new type of study for this week, but will resume the next poses as we go. All-in-all, these are turning out alright, but I think having them out of context or maybe having them more drawn is really dragging the process down. I'm not really sure, but either way, the point is... I want to do more of them, but I also want to do them as accurate as possible, so I'll have to continue them next week.
Master Study - 1 - Grey scale (Composition Study)



Title: Master Study - 1 - Grey Scale (Composition Study)
Date: June 24, 2013
Medium: Photoshop

Notes: Okay, so... this is really the meat and potatoes of this update. I have recently discovered (again) how useful master studies can be. ESPECIALLY for composition and color study. Not only will they enhance your composition know-how ten-fold in a short time, but they just plain look cool (even in black and white). I have a ton of these to do this week -- the goal is fifty gray, fifty color -- to really get my chops up. I think that I have to level up now instead of just wasting time doing study upon study and not learning enough. But yeah, this is just a small sampling of what I've been up to.

Jurassic Park Girl



Title: Jurassic Park Girl
Date: June 26, 2013
Medium: Photoshop
Scale: Same as Above.

Notes: THIS is the culmination of all the studies that I've been doing this week. I think the thing that makes this one a wonder in my eyes is not only the detail, but the speed! I finished this one (as far as I wanted anyway) in about thirty minutes. Honestly, this one feels like a major breakthrough in terms of my digital painting skills. Now only like one-hundred more to go...........

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Man Butt


Title: Man Butt
Medium: Photoshop

Notes:  Just making an attempt to start learning not only anatomy, but more practice on digital painting.

Model-esque


Title: Model-esque
Date: June 18-19, 2013
Medium: Photoshop

Notes:  This mainly was just a material test... but I have to really focus on the material. As always I have a tendancy to want to do the face first, but I need to get the ear correct. Then comes the meticulous rendering of the leather 'biker' coat. More work on this one soon.

Master Study: Rembrandt -- 1


Title: Master Study: Rembrandt -- 1
Date: June 19, 2013
Medium: Photoshop

Notes:  Rembrandt's color palette was incredible. I have a ton of work to go on this one before I can even consider it done. There are textures to deal with, material tests, skin tone tests... This is going to be an epic one, and hopefully I can get it to look good. I'll have to paint the whole thing and then compare closely and probably color correct at the very end. Wish me luck!

Sunday, May 5, 2013

Silverspun Pickups - The Royal We

Welcome back... sheesh, that was a whirlwind of crazy to get from the last update to here. I've been cranking out like crazy. I actually have quite a few pieces to update this go around plus some writing.

One more day to go (Monday) then I'm free for the summer! OH MAN! THE PLANS!

Can't start dwelling on that yet, must finish out this last day... thus I need to get my sketchbook in order.

Speaking of sketchbooks, I have sooo many pages to get onto here. 

But yeah, before all that, let me catch up my pieces thus far in the digital realm. I'll have the next couple of months to play catch-up on my sketchbooks...

Here was my final essay for contemporary novel by the way:


An Insignificant Cart 
When someone generally thinks of a cart, they tend to just think about the physical description of a cart: four wheels, metal, maybe some plastic, quite possibly an area to set a child into. In a post-apocalyptic world such as the world in The Road by Cormac McCarthy, it can become so much more than that. It was a home and an unflinching friend on top of being what it was initially: A mobile storage container. This essay is an in-depth exploration as to what the cart itself represented, the personification of the cart, and even the emotional responses gathered from the characters themselves, all while tying back into the idea that the cart could arguably be one of the most influential ‘characters’ of the book.

The cart was initially introduced as a seemingly inconspicuous grocery cart with no real description given besides that. When it was first introduced it seemed so minute, so insignificant because even this page in the story had already built up the story up with such epic grandiose. It could be argued though, that without this cart, the father and boy might not have survived very long. In a way, it was the glue that bound them to survival. Without the cart they would not have had a method of carrying the larger amounts of supplies that they had throughout the story. Quite a few times the cart seemed to come to their rescue with promises of supplies and potentially shelter. If things would have been dire enough, the man could have probably even tipped the cart over and covered it with a tarp and they would have had a makeshift shelter for at least the boy to get by in. The cart itself seemed to almost represent their very floor of survival.

The author alluded to the importance of the cart, even though it could not talk, when he wrote: “Clamped to the handle of the cart was a chrome motorcycle mirror that he used to watch the road behind them” (McCarthy, 6). The story didn't explicitly state that the cart had any other specific modifications done to it to make it more appealing to anyone else save for the supplies themselves that were burdened upon it. The second cart got stolen once but it didn't seem to complain, it was just content doing what it did best, move objects from one spot to another. Luckily each time they found a cart it was a four-wheeled cart and not a three-wheeled one (like a wheelbarrow), because the sense of stability offered by a four-wheeled cart is much better and wouldn't fall over if stopped when they had to pull the gun on the cart thief later in the story. Each time they stopped, the cart would wait there like a very well trained dog, sitting with it’s tail wagging constantly just wanting nothing more than attention.

The boy seemed to feel a sense of abandonment (more so than the father) when he and his father had to leave the cart behind and “took a last look through the basket but that was it. Let’s go, he said. The boy took one last look back at the cart and then followed him out to the road” (McCarthy, 100). In a way the cart could - at this point - be compared to a used up prostitute being left in an alley way with nothing but her panties around her ankles. It was a sad state of affairs when the cart had to be abandoned. It could be argued that in a way the father and son found this cart on the road in the same way that a person might find a drifter on the side of a long dusty desert road. They both picked it up, rode along with them, then proceeded to turn on the cart and dump it when it had used up all it’s usefulness. To add even further insult to the original cart, they find one later in the story. “There was a market at the end of the street and in one of the aisles piled with empty boxes there were three metal grocery carts. He looked them over and pulled one of them free and squatted and turned the wheels and then stood and pushed it up the aisle and back again.”(McCarthy, 150) This could be argued as the treatment of man vs. man. The personified cart is a reflection of the selfishness of mankind’s nature. They will literally use something until it is completely used up and then toss it aside without so much as a reflective thought before moving on.

Throughout this essay there was an exploration into the ‘character’ of the cart, treatment of that character throughout, and the responses that the other characters show to this cart. All-in-all Cormac’s story in The Road is a very bleak outlook on a hypothetical near future, but somehow through man’s perseverance alone, it is actually more of a story of survival and struggle. The cart in the story is not explicitly given a minor character role, but throughout the entire journey it is always there, unflinching in the face of danger. For god’s sake  if someone were to be trapped in this hypothetical future completely alone without so much as a backpack or even a pair of pants with a bunch of pockets, at the very least hope for a cart without a squeaky wheel.

Oh, right ... art!

Wood Carving: Additive Sculpture


Title:  Wood Carving: Additive Sculpture
Medium: Wood Sculpture

Notes: This piece changed so many times from conception to completion. It initially started much different, but as the process went on, the puzzle pieces kept radically changing. While I enjoy the result (sort of retro robot feel), it looks nothing like the plan.
Overall, the piece deserves merit in terms of flow. I tried to make a great attempt at trying to play with the angularity as well as using the negative spaces to push the eye back into the piece.
As with the previous piece, I tried to use the patterning of the wood grain to move the eye around the piece. I almost think that having some object placed off-kilter or on the top would make for a nice break-up of the symmetry so that the piece wouldn't be so similar on each side.


Wood Carving: Subtractive Sculpture


Title:  Wood Carving: Subtractive Sculpture
Medium: Wood Sculpture

Notes: My initial thought process was to create an even more, slightly asymmetrical, organic piece. It was originally supposed to look more like a squid-like tentacle, but it ended up being more of a bird-like skull sculpture.
I decided midway through that it would be more interesting to turn the piece on it’s side and mount it slightly off-center to the wood block. I made as many attempts to follow the wood grain patterning as much as possible. I think by doing so I managed to make it even more organic. 
The problem areas seem to stem from the fact that it wasn't as smooth as I would have like it to be (especially around the “neck” area). There are so many nicks and bruises in the wood that it seems more like the piece still has a ton of work in terms of smoothing it out. Hilariously enough, I naturally threw my arm and wrist out while working on this piece

20/40 Planed Shapes


Title:  20/40 Planed Shapes
Medium: Shaped Paper

Notes:  The overall craftsmanship began moderately well, but I have since discovered that working larger tends to make things a bit clearer. I began with a much simpler design, and then realized that there weren't enough shapes to make up the overall design. I then began to place more objects in a circular pattern to mimic the exterior shape of the icosahedrons and then expanding that form at the bottom of the piece. I then took that a step further by opening the bottom of the shape to include smaller cube shapes in the interior. Since a triangular shape is the most stable shape, I decided that this would help to create a good sense of balance throughout. The shape breakup had to happen with the cubes being echoed on the outside as well.
I wish I had made the external shape at the top more load bearing because it would have helped to create a more solid viewpoint from the bottom. Also I would have liked much better craftsmanship overall, but as I stated initially, working smaller tends to be a detriment. So for next time, bigger IS better.


Dynamic Wire Sculpture


Title:  Dynamic Wire Sculpture
Medium: Shaped Wood, Wire

Notes:  For the majority of the gesture drawings, I had a tendency to draw prone animals (let’s face it, most of the animals in the zoo have become slightly apathetic). So I decided it would be ideal to find the largest animal I could find and draw it in the prone position as many times as I could before it stood up. Which led to my gesture wire frame as the bear.
My wire sculpting techniques seem to err on the slightly more gesture side instead of directly figurative. I tried to think about each of the sculpts as though I was going to 3D model the wire frame, but the output did not look as interesting as I would have liked. I tried to my best to loosen up the wire.
I could literally draw poses for days. I went to a website (www.characterdesigns.com) and attempted to gesture draw a ton of action poses. The pose that I chose was like a pre-leap pose because it gives an implied motion rather than an “in-motion” which I think might have been a bit more interesting perhaps.
For each base I tried to give a bit more dynamics to the piece by sort of tying the base to the piece. For example, with the bear piece I tried to give a sort of shale or rock texture. And for the leaping piece, I harkened back to the childish game of “don’t step on the crack or you’ll break your mother’s back” that I used to play as a kid.


Illustration II - Digital Portfolio


Title:  Illustration II - Digital Portfolio
Date: January - May 2013
Medium: Varies
Scale: Varies

Notes:  See each piece for more on the notes of each. As a whole though, this is the entirety of my illustration II class. For the most part each piece has all the work involved next to it, the only difference is that I had to truncate the amount of sketches that were with each piece.


WIP: Face that Could have been a Painting up Front


Title:  WIP: Face that Could have been a Painting up Front
Date: May 3, 2013
Medium: Photoshop

Notes:  While looking for a good reference to paint from, I stumbled upon this girl's deviant art page. She actually looks like she's painted up front, which is kind of strange, but I decided to try my hand at painting her. Unfortunately, it's still extremely stylized and the colors are kind of strange, BUT I was actually staring at Caravaggio's palette while painting this piece and tried a new technique of building up the layers. Hopefully it's starting to show some improvement, but I think I still have quite a ways to go.

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

I don't have a ton of time at the moment, in a bit of a rush. But I didn't want to leave anyone hanging (if they were even watching in the first place).
Here's a series I've worked on this weekend... the homework, it's endless.

True Blood Portrait Series: Bill


Title:  True Blood Portrait Series: Bill
Date: February 3, 2013
Medium: Photoshop
Scale: Original is 1500px x 1950px

Notes:  The series of portraits did not start off with Bill, but he got lucky and placed in the front. Honestly, out of all the portraits, he seems to be the most anatomically correct. I hope that the slight contrast works well.


True Blood Portrait Series: Alcide


Title:  True Blood Portrait Series: Alcide
Date: February 1, 2013
Medium: Photoshop
Scale: Original is 1500px x 1950px

Notes:  Alcide I believe was the second of the portraits I did. I tried my best to make him as contrasty as possible, but I think the tones are still a little too subtle. He is up there with one of my favorite characters from the show though...


True Blood Portrait Series: Jessica


Title:  True Blood Portrait Series: Jessica
Date: February 2, 2013
Medium: Photoshop
Scale: Original is 1500px x 1950px

Notes:  She was a bit of a difficult character to render, because she is so pale there are only subtle variations in her skin tone.


True Blood Portrait Series: Jason


Title:  True Blood Portrait Series: Jason
Date: February 2, 2013
Medium: Photoshop
Scale: Original is 1500px x 1950px

Notes:  I think I went a bit overboard for Jason's hair, but he was actually pretty fun to paint. I think I could still go back in (as with all of them) and noodle for a bit to make the tones more smooth, but either way, it was exciting.


True Blood Portrait Series: Lafyette


Title:  True Blood Portrait Series: Lafyette
Date: February 1, 2013
Medium: Photoshop
Scale: Original is 1500px x 1950px

Notes:  I actually started with Lafyette. I made him look slightly younger than he actually is, but he was fun to do. I think I have a good time painting African Americans because they tend to have a nice middle to dark tone overall and it makes for an easier time to bring out the hard highlights. 


True Blood Portrait Series: Sam


Title:  True Blood Portrait Series: Sam
Date: February 4, 2013
Medium: Photoshop
Scale: Original is 1500px x 1950px

Notes:  This was the last one of the bunch, so it kind of had a rushed feeling to it. I was just ready to be done at that point. I powered through the bunch and just kept on truckin'. I've been told this one has the most emotion in his face of the bunch...


True Blood Portrait Series: Sookie


Title:  True Blood Portrait Series: Sookie
Date: February 4, 2013
Medium: Photoshop
Scale: Original is 1500px x 1950px

Notes:  This (in my opinion) looks the least of the original people of the bunch. I couldn't quite figure it out while I was painting... Sookie has some difference in the anatomy or something... <shrug>


True Blood Portrait Series: Tara


Title:  True Blood Portrait Series: Tara
Date: February 3, 2013
Medium: Photoshop
Scale: Original is 1500px x 1950px

Notes:  She looks a bit younger than she actually is. But the exciting thing was, this was my first time ever doing braids, so the texture was completely different than normal hair.


True Blood Portrait Series: "Normals"


Title:  True Blood Portrait Series: "Normals"
Date: February 1 - 4, 2013
Medium: Photoshop


True Blood Portrait Series: "Supes"


Title:  True Blood Portrait Series: "Supes"
Date: February 1 - 4, 2013
Medium: Photoshop


Digital Face Studies


Title:  Digital Face Studies
Date: January 31, 2013
Medium: Photoshop
Scale: Original is 3000px x 3000px

Notes:  Doing these studies is actually what started the whole crazy mess above. I was just doing face studies la-de-da, when suddenly I was like... "FACE FEST 2013!" And off I went on a tangent...


Wednesday, December 12, 2012


Continuing on from the last post...

Drawing Composition Class!

Reduction from Reference


Title:  Reduction from Reference
Date: September 10, 2012
Medium: Collage, Conte, Charcoal
Scale: 30" x 22"

Notes:  I worked from a representation master and reduced the painting to no more than four values. The tried to really emphasize the composition throught the design of the entire piece.


Reduction from Life


Title:  Reduction from Life
Date: September 17, 2012
Medium: Collage, Conte, Charcoal, Ink Wash, Acrylic
Scale: 30" x 22"

Notes:  Using the same techniques as before, I needed to work from observation using a complex subject. In this case a still life. I made sure to emphasize the overall design of the objects and the finished result.


Compositional "Architecture"


Title:  Compositional "Architecture"
Date: September 24, 2012
Medium: Vine Charcoal, Chalk
Scale: 30" x 22"

Notes:  While working from observation, I was to do a drawing using a single focal point. The point was to focus on one object and make the entire composition serve that single focal point.


"Building" Composition


Title:  "Building" Composition
Date: October 1, 2012
Medium: Vine Charcoal, White Chalk, White Acrylic
Scale: 22" x 30"

Notes:  This piece was entirely based on blocking in the composition using a push-and-pull method while working. I was to push the media around with the white and black meeting in the middle creating a huge variety of grays throughout the piece. This was also worked in from a still life during class.

 
Interior / Exterior Space


Title:  Interior / Exterior Space
Date: October 8, 2012
Medium: Ink Wash, Conte, White Chalk, Charcoal
Scale: 30" x 22"

Notes:  The point of this piece was to focus on an interior looking out into an exterior. You had to make sure that the entire composition was based solely around this fact. The piece was to be a push into the outside.


Expanding Picture Plane


Title:  Expanding Picture Plane
Date: October 8, 2012
Medium: Charcoal
Scale: Each piece is 15" x 15"

Notes:  While working from a still life I was supposed to try and create three different pieces that were each a composition of there own. The point was to make each one use the rule of thirds and create a good focal point in each piece. Then I was to join them together to create one solid composition.


Extreme Viewpoint


Title:  Extreme Viewpoint
Date: October 15, 2012
Medium: Ink Wash, Conte, Charcoal
Scale: 30" x 22"

Notes:  Working from observation I did a drawing which presented the subject from an extreme angle. In this case, that angle was a worm's eye view. 


Grid and Rule of Thirds


Title:  Grid and Rule of Thirds
Date: October 29, 2012
Medium: Ink Wash, Charcoal, White Acrylic, White Chalk
Scale: 30" x 22"

Notes:  Working from observation, I used a landscape to make a grid-like armature that also implemented the rule of thirds.


Decorative Space


Title:  Decorative Space
Date: November 5, 2012
Medium: Oil Pastel
Scale: 30" x 22"

Notes:  Working from observation, I did a full color drawing that transformed the three-dimensional objects into flat surfaces. The point of this was to reference pop-art of the '60's to create a piece using those non-realistic and non-traditional color scheming. 


Grid Reproduction


Title:  Grid Reproduction
Date: November 12 - 19, 2012
Medium: Black Ink and Stick, White Acrylic
Scale: 22" x 30"

Notes:  Firstly, we had to create one mark (in my case it was that cross pattern) and then lay in highlights and low-lights according that that single mark. Secondly, we had to use a master (in this case William Whitaker) and try to reproduce it according to a grid. It is extremely difficult at times to FORCE a piece to work on a grid, but this was my finished result.


Applied Cezanne Study


Title:  Applied Cezanne Study
Date: December 3, 2012
Medium: Charcoal, Chalk, White Acrylic
Scale: 22" x 30"

Notes:  Working from observation, I was to create a piece that emphasized the light and shadow according to how Cezanne would have. Very loose gestural line-marks, large strokes, and paying close attention to the structure were of the greatest import during this piece. I am glad that my subject was so willing to sit there during the creation of this (Thank you madam!!!).


Repetition / Movement


Title:  Repetition / Movement
Date: December 10, 2012
Medium: White Chalk, White Acrylic, Vine Charcoal
Scale: 22" x 30"

Notes:  Using referenece, we were to simulate a movement in space. The image was to make it look like a sort-of 'ghosted' image throughout. We were meant to attempt to show movement throughout the piece. I think I bit off a bit more than I could chew, but I sure tried! (Reference image from: http://tasastock.deviantart.com/ - Thanks!!)


Follow Mat @artofmatk

Follow Ash @ashley.storyteller