Monday, May 18, 2015

Muscle Beach Venice Hall of Fame

 I designed and sculpted the first Muscle Beach Venice Hall of Fame plaque in 2006.
I’ve been making a few of these bronze plaques every year since then.
They honor bodybuilders that have set historic standards and advanced the sport of health & fitness.
  Sculpting and casting these things is time consuming and labor intensive.
 Once I finish them with a final patina they look pretty darn good.
 After a season of sand, sea, salt air, dogs, tourists, and  beach denizens, they don’t look nearly as good.
 I’ve been trying to get the city Department of Parks & Recreation to stay on top of the upkeep but so far no one is listening.
 Here's a few I just finished.
Anyway, they should look good for the summer season.

Muscle Beach Plaques




Assistants
Muscle Beach Denizens

Monday, August 4, 2014

Life Drawing - Portraits


 Most schools are off for the summer, not this one.
We keep them working year round.
A short break in So Cal and now back to teaching the digital age how to move a pencil.
One of the many problems students face in life drawing is placing facial features and establishing character.
I have found it useful to start beginners out with drawing a profile.
 It helps them to understand that the face is not set on a flat plane.
Single source lighting allows you to see the edges and contours more clearly than in the front and 3/4 views.
  A couple of new models. Becky and Inky,  came in to pose this week.

These are a few quick demos done in class, about 20 minutes each.

Becky -  14" x 12"



Inky - 14"x 12"

 


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Koyote Joe aka Joe Segrest - 14" x 12"
The last drawing I did of Koyote Joe before his untimely passing. R.I.P.

Sunday, June 22, 2014

Mary Queen of Scots & Sarah Bernhardt

  I took the Design class to the art museum the other day to expose them to some “real art.”
After I give them a  tour and lecture I let them loose to draw some of the art.
While I’m there I generally knock out a few sketches as well.
I’ll walk around until something pulls me in.
This time it was a couple of women…

Mary Queen of Scots by the French sculptor, Albert-Ernest Carrier-Belleuse.




Sarah Bernhardt by Jules Bastien-Lepage

 Sometime later I discovered that Sarah Bernhardt had 
portrayed Queen Elizabeth in a 1912 silent film.
Queen Elizabeth had her cousin, Mary Queen of Scots,
 beheaded at Fotheringay Castle on February 8th, 1587 for involvement
 in a plot to kill her.



























Friday, March 7, 2014

Zoo/Animal Drawings.

 Today was warm and sunny so I took the drawing class out to the Zoo to study and draw the animals.
It’s the only place where you can go to experience non-indigenous creatures up close and personal.
 It’s also kind of "cool” to see the little kids get excited seeing the animals for the first time.
I knocked out a couple of quick sketches while I was there.

Some individual Aldabra giant tortoises are thought to be over 200 years of age.
This is difficult to verify because they tend to outlive their human observers.

Common Elands form herds of up to 500 animals, but are not territorial.
This Eland was banished by a territorial giraffe before I had a chance to finish the drawing...















Saturday, January 4, 2014

Rodin - The Three Shades

 I take my Design class to the Art Museum every term and I always knock out a few sketches while I'm there.
 Often the museum is crowded so I find somewhere unobtrusive to stand and draw.
The Legion of Honor in San Francisco has a huge Rodin sculpture collection ( thanks to Alma de Bretteville Spreckels ) including the full size Three Shades sculpted for The Gates of Hell.
Generally the museum visitors are looking at the front of the sculptures so there is no one around on the backside.
I've stood around back on a few separate occasions and done some sketches.
The last time I was there I was approached by a museum guard.
 I assumed he wanted to look at my drawing.
 Instead he admonished me for inadvertently dropping a pencil.
 He said it could possibly cause injury to a guest.
 So, I picked it up.

Here are some sketches - The Three Shades by Aguste Rodin.








Thursday, October 17, 2013

Star Wars Episode 1

 I came across this video while checking on some of my students work.
I sort of remember a student asking me some questions about the work I did at ILM on this old film.
Anyway, here's a picture and a link.

Episode 1 trailer/interview
Star Wars Episode 1 - Sculpting "Beggars Canyon"

Saturday, October 12, 2013

Concept Art Doodles.

 A concept artist is someone who generates ideas and communicates them visually.
Concept art can be expressive and abstract, not just realistic.
Studying the "real" enables you to create believable designs with the added ingredient of your imagination.
In the world of Pre-Production for any creative project ( films, games, etc.) concept art is where it all begins.
I'm teaching concept art this term at the college.
When I get a spare moment I scribble out random ideas and character sketches.
Commonly known as "phone doodles" in times past.
 Let them out swift, refine them later...
"Quick and dirty - Fast and loose."