Wednesday, April 30, 2014
Artist Series - Day 120 - Mike Yamada
Tuesday, April 29, 2014
Artist Series - Day 119: Will Eisner
Monday, April 28, 2014
Artist Series - Day 118: Glen Keane
Some personal philosophy...
OMG, a post about me and not some other artist! I'm sorry! (Or at least Canadian....)
Years ago, I picked up a camera and started taking pictures pretty seriously. This was back when I was a computer consultant, thoughts of painting and drawing were still 6 years in my future. I worked pretty hard at it, and focused on it like I tend to focus on everything, so you probably understand where I was coming from.
Anyway, for the first year, I really struggled to get "good" pictures...and by good, I mean "Well composed, in focus, exposed properly, good range of colours." Even with photography, that stuff takes some work, at least once you move beyond the point and shoot cameras. I shot A LOT, and made progress. Then came a turning point - It was April 2004 in NYC, and the weather was finally nice enough I wanted to wander around midtown taking pictures. I hit up the library, and did a whole bunch of shots of the stone lion statues by the stairs. You've seen them in Ghostbusters.
I got home, downloaded them all and started to go through them...and was completely bored. Basically, every shot was "good." They had all met the criteria I'd been holding myself to - composition, exposure, focus, colour....but there was NO POINT. I pointed at all of them and said to myself, "Great, another fucking stone lion." This has become something I say to myself A LOT since then...weird how your personal phrases come about...
They didn't say anything. There was no emotion. I had captured the physical aspects of those statues without exposing any part of myself. Every statue I ever took a picture of after that, I tried to image as a living model I was interacting with. Still got some more "stone lions", but my success rate went way, way up.
I wasn't shooting "badly" when I was focusing on technique. When you start out, I really believe you have to focus on that stuff. You must learn to talk before you can orate. We don't expect toddlers to talk like Dr. Martin Luther King. We also don't tell kids that their 3rd grade paper about their summer vacation is literary genius.
Your art is not going to be interesting for a LONG time. If you only focus on being interesting and not learning the fundamentals, I personally believe it's not going to be interesting FOREVER.
Two weeks ago, I talked with Pascal Campion at Wondercon. That man is entirely about the emotional content of his work. When you look at it, you FEEL what it is like to be swimming as a kid in the hot summer afternoon.
This last week, I was profoundly affected by http://shitmyphotoprofsays.tumblr.com/ - Sure, it's funny, but it is absolutely correct.
I have been painting stone lions this year. I've needed to, and, while I will always get more technically proficient, I can paint "correctly" now. It's time to say things. "Because it's freaking cool!" isn't a reason that calls to me. I am now completely inspired to go paint. Hopefully I will make you feel something.
Years ago, I picked up a camera and started taking pictures pretty seriously. This was back when I was a computer consultant, thoughts of painting and drawing were still 6 years in my future. I worked pretty hard at it, and focused on it like I tend to focus on everything, so you probably understand where I was coming from.
Anyway, for the first year, I really struggled to get "good" pictures...and by good, I mean "Well composed, in focus, exposed properly, good range of colours." Even with photography, that stuff takes some work, at least once you move beyond the point and shoot cameras. I shot A LOT, and made progress. Then came a turning point - It was April 2004 in NYC, and the weather was finally nice enough I wanted to wander around midtown taking pictures. I hit up the library, and did a whole bunch of shots of the stone lion statues by the stairs. You've seen them in Ghostbusters.
I got home, downloaded them all and started to go through them...and was completely bored. Basically, every shot was "good." They had all met the criteria I'd been holding myself to - composition, exposure, focus, colour....but there was NO POINT. I pointed at all of them and said to myself, "Great, another fucking stone lion." This has become something I say to myself A LOT since then...weird how your personal phrases come about...
They didn't say anything. There was no emotion. I had captured the physical aspects of those statues without exposing any part of myself. Every statue I ever took a picture of after that, I tried to image as a living model I was interacting with. Still got some more "stone lions", but my success rate went way, way up.
I wasn't shooting "badly" when I was focusing on technique. When you start out, I really believe you have to focus on that stuff. You must learn to talk before you can orate. We don't expect toddlers to talk like Dr. Martin Luther King. We also don't tell kids that their 3rd grade paper about their summer vacation is literary genius.
Your art is not going to be interesting for a LONG time. If you only focus on being interesting and not learning the fundamentals, I personally believe it's not going to be interesting FOREVER.
Two weeks ago, I talked with Pascal Campion at Wondercon. That man is entirely about the emotional content of his work. When you look at it, you FEEL what it is like to be swimming as a kid in the hot summer afternoon.
This last week, I was profoundly affected by http://shitmyphotoprofsays.tumblr.com/ - Sure, it's funny, but it is absolutely correct.
I have been painting stone lions this year. I've needed to, and, while I will always get more technically proficient, I can paint "correctly" now. It's time to say things. "Because it's freaking cool!" isn't a reason that calls to me. I am now completely inspired to go paint. Hopefully I will make you feel something.
Sunday, April 27, 2014
Artist Series - Day 117: Mike MacRae
Saturday, April 26, 2014
Artist Series - Day 116: Simon Stalenhag
So, apologies if you are already sick of seeing Simon's stuff, but hey, enjoy it!
Friday, April 25, 2014
Artist Series - Day 115: Gustave Dore
Thursday, April 24, 2014
Artist Series - Day 114: Jill Thompson
Wednesday, April 23, 2014
Artist Series - Day 113: Akihiko Yoshida
Tuesday, April 22, 2014
Artist Series - Day 112: Joshua Middleton
Today's artist works in comics, illustration and animation. He was one of the concept artists for “Legend of Korra” and does a lot of book and comic covers.
Monday, April 21, 2014
Artist Series - Day 111: Juanjo Guarnido
Sunday, April 20, 2014
Artist Series - Day 110: Minkyu Lee
Saturday, April 19, 2014
Artist Series - Day 109: Sho Murase
Friday, April 18, 2014
Artist Series - Day 108: Creaturebox
Thursday, April 17, 2014
Artist Series - Day 107: Mingjue Helen Chen
Wednesday, April 16, 2014
Artist Series - Day 106: Brian Stelfreeze
The first time I ever saw Brian was doing a life drawing demo at DragonCon in 2008. I was really impressed with both his skill at drawing and his skill at explaining things. He has a gentleness you have to see to believe, combined with an incredibly obvious passion.
The second time was at Free Comic Book Day in Charlotte, NC in 2010. I asked him to draw me Alfred from Batman, he was completely into it, and it remains one of my favorite comic book sketches. He also gave some of the best advice to a kid I've ever heard about drawing, and I have since given it myself. "Your mistakes will wind up being your style. Make as many mistakes as you can, as often as you can, and the ones you like will become who you are as an artist."
The third time was when he came to my university for a 4 day workshop on painting comic books. It remains the best class I had at my school in the entire 4 years I was there.
In case you can't tell, I have a lot of respect for this man.
The third time was when he came to my university for a 4 day workshop on painting comic books. It remains the best class I had at my school in the entire 4 years I was there.
In case you can't tell, I have a lot of respect for this man.