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Sunday, October 23, 2011
Landscape
It's been awhile since I did a landscape without any figures. Brings me back to that assignment with Mark about color and how things go back and come forward. It was a very frustrating project because I had never though about color that way, but fortunately I learned a lot from it (though I will never fully understand his souped-up color wheel and theories about it). I was worried that I broke the space too evenly (1/3 1/3 1/3 from top to bottom), but I actually ended up liking it that way.
Here's the piece I did for Mark junior year. It's funny how I was trying to solve the problem of perspective in such a mathematical way back then. Now that I work digitally, it's more of a gut feeling.
Labels:
aurora,
Children's book,
clouds,
digital,
graphite,
Illustration,
landscape,
miguel co,
tall grass
Wednesday, October 19, 2011
Flyin Deerz
An interior piece for the children’s book I’m working on. I needed some reference for how to make the sparks, so I checked out my old teacher’s painting of an uppercut. http://www.drawger.com/tonka/?article_id=10090
Labels:
Children's book,
Flying Deer,
Illustration,
miguel co
Sunday, October 16, 2011
Savant
Drew a face, drew a brain, then I came up with an idea... talk about working backwards.
"Savant-like skills may be latent in everyone and have been stimulated in people by directing low-frequency magnetic pulses into the brain's left hemisphere, which is thought to deactivate this dominant region (in at least 90% of right-handed people) and allow the less dominant right hemisphere to take over, allowing for processing of savant-like tasks"-wikipedia!
"Savant-like skills may be latent in everyone and have been stimulated in people by directing low-frequency magnetic pulses into the brain's left hemisphere, which is thought to deactivate this dominant region (in at least 90% of right-handed people) and allow the less dominant right hemisphere to take over, allowing for processing of savant-like tasks"-wikipedia!
Tuesday, October 11, 2011
Wednesday, October 5, 2011
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