30 December 2009

Figure Painting




Today I'm going to post some figure paintings.
The first nude study is a 30x 40 oil monochrome on an acrylic stained surface. I added a bit of a glaze with burnt sienna, and the red around the figure is in oil.
The second figure is also in oil on a stained 30x 40 surface. This one was odd. We had to use a limited palette from a list that the teacher gave us and I chose red, green, white, and black which gave the painting a weird effect. Also, just the position of the pose was a challenge along with my point of view. I remember this model though, he was a pretty interesting guy, a writer. I think his name was Phlip.
The last one is done in acrylic on paper. It is about 5' tall and I'm not really sure how wide it is. This was a 3 week pose, the others were done in two weeks. Each week we get about 3 hours to work on the figure. This was also done in a limited palette of red, yellow, white, and black. But I used blue as the ground to work on as well as the sheet that covered the chair. This one was kind of fun to do and was very different from working on the other poses. I was able to do a lot of layering with paint because it dried so quickly.

27 December 2009

Studies










I'm going to post up some studies I made for my figure drawing and painting classes from first semester.
The first are some hand studies on coloured paper done with charcoal and conte.
The second is a skull done with oil on stained paper.
Then there is an 8x 10 monochromatic self portrait that was glazed over with burnt sienna.
16x 20 copy of a master, "Meditation on the History of Italy" by Francesco Hayez.
There is another self portrait done on paper with chalk pastels. The face didn't turn out badly, the hair and background really was an afterthought.
The next is a class study of a plaster cast and skull. It was on of the first things we drew in that class. It's done on craft paper with charcoal.
The last two are just some studies of hands and feet. They are done with acrylic on canvas on top of a coloured ground.
Although these are not really finished works, I think its interesting to post some of this stuff since I learned so much from doing them.

17 December 2009

Figure Drawing




Well I havn't posted anything up here in a while. I've just been busy with school, but it's Christmas break, so I can post some more stuff up here. I think just for now I'm going to post some stuff from school. These are just some live models from a figure drawing class.
I havn't had time to make any art for myself, so unfortunately most of the stuff I put on here are things I've made for school.
So these pictures are actually in reverse order. The first one was a three week pose that was created after the first two and is about 5' using chalk pastels on a stained ground. The other two are also done on a stained ground but only took two weeks. The second one is using the three colour technique and i used charcoal and conte. The last (which was the first to be made) is a black and white charcoal monochrome.

02 November 2009

Figuration









I've always been interested in people, even at a young age. So going to an art school where I'm able to draw the nude is quite satisfying. I think in rendering the human form you appreciate the body in a new way. Although my interest with people started with how people think, I'm starting to take interest in people's relationship with their bodies. I'm not sure what kind of work I can make from this, but we'll see. Until I figure it out (no pun intended) I'm content in learning. So if Blogger will let me upload some photos, I can show you some older work. I'm going to post some gestures, short poses, and some sustained paintings. The paintings were some of the first I created, but I like them.

21 October 2009

RAWR!

You know that feeling when you see someone's art and you're totally in love with it? I think I've been bombarded with art in the last two weeks. Between a visit to the AGO, falling in love with Alexander Calder's work after not looking at any of it in a couple of years, critiques at school, and watching "Where the Wild Things Are" (which was fantastic!), I feel like I'm buzzing inside. I'm afraid I'm going to attack my new canvas that I built (with a lot of help from the school technician) with something totally obscure and random. We'll see where it goes.
I think all creative people are total slackers. It must be a part of being creative. Almost everyone I know who is creative slacks off and procrastinates. Okay, maybe not EVERYONE, but close to it. I must be like creative person of the year because I'm too laid back sometimes. LOL! I carried a 3x 4 foot canvas from Toronto to Brampton on foot, a train, and two buses and did I work on it at all yet. NO. Why? I don't know, I must be all kinds of awesome....
Buuutttt listening to Matt Good is keeping me in a good mood right now :)

12 October 2009

Lambs, lambs, lambs




So I absolutely LOVE lambs, no idea why. I just think they are adorable I guess. Well I use them in a lot of my work. So I think I'm going to post some of the work that I've done with the sheep as the subject matter. :D
The first image a sketch I did in my second year of that stuffed lamb (Lullaby). I was just doing it to practice a more architectural way of drawing, seperating the subject matter into different planes. It was mostly a study to help me with my figure drawing.

The second image is another project for school where we had to do a collage and paint from that collage on a large wooden panel that we had to make ourselves. Basically I took some scrap fabric and made them into three simplified lambs. The first white lamb in the painting has a funny right eye because water got on the original collage and made the ink run. I like this piece just because I wasn't really used to painting this realistically before. Obviously the subject matter isn't realistic, but I wanted to make the paint look like the fabric I was drawing from. It's not exact, but I like being able to interpret things in different ways.

And finally the third is is a painting I did for my second year abstract class where we had to abstract from observation. So I used my stuffed lamb, Lullaby, as the source. You can see the outline of the shape of the source. I found this to be pretty challenging actually just because of the ground colour I was working with- bright yellow. It was hard to balance all of the other shapes and colours around it. Actually, I was working in the open studio at my school and someone in their fourth year I guess gave me the idea of placing flat shapes on top which I think worked out well because it gave the painting some depth.
I think I have some photographs I took of my lamb for a photography class in highschool. If I find it, I'll post it up here. Anyways, Happy Thanksgiving!

06 October 2009

New Work, Old Source



Hello!

So for my figure drawing class, we had to choose two master drawings and copy/ interpret them. So I chose a painting from Grueze called "The Broken Jug", 1785 and a Drawing from Leonardo daVinci titled "Virgin and Saint Anne with the Christ Child and the Young John the Baptist", c. 1500. I just finished these today, I'm not really sure if I like them all that much. I think they're interesting, but it's always frustrating when you're working from a source and you can't get it just right. Well I learned a lot about drapery in these drawings LOL.

It's really late for me, I'm usually in bed by 12. So goodnight computer!

05 October 2009

Blast from the past





So I'm going to post a few things from a little while ago. I really enjoy doodling and making comical stick figures and such, and last year I came up with the presenting the archetype of a beggar using a similar stick figure style. The whole idea of the beggar is that they are constantly dependent on something, so I illustrated two beggars dependent on each other. (The two alien- like figures with the fused arms). Later I showed their separation and faulty communication in a simple drawing. And then I used a similar figure in a diptych with a girl and her lamb and the separation of the two. I guess I've always been interested in the interaction between people and the development and decay of relationships. I'm not exactly showing my best work here, just some ideas I've had in my head that I think are interesting. I'll post some more stuff later, and hopefully something a little more current, LOL!

- natasha

16 September 2009

Throw Back




So I'm starting this blog from scratch again. I'm entering my third year at OCAD and I had a little assignment where I had to collect old images of mine and make a project using my own work as a starting point. So, that meant photographing some of my work. So I'm going to post some old sketches.


I did these sketches in my first year in my drawing class. Two are done from live models. I believe they are done in conte pencil. The other one is a drawing of Henry Moore's sculpture "The Archer". That one is done in charcoal.