Sunday, November 05, 2006

Figure Drawing 6- gesture and the lesson (shoulder)










I missed two weeks, and wow was that hard to figure out where I was again. I was also using a smaller size paper, and the model was shorter, so excuses, excuses.....

Illustration Friday- SMOKE


A good name for a cat.

Wednesday, November 01, 2006

The Ratcliffe/Emerson Family Portrait




Amy Ratcliffe

Paul Emerson
I have just completed a portrait of my good friend Amy and her family. She and I went to high school together and became close quickly. I was new, and she was gracious. Anyway, long story short, we went off to college and our seperate ways and came back in touch a few years back, where I learned the AMAZING things she is doing and has done. We have a really fun relationship now, watching what each other does with the skills we have attained over this life. Also, we love to talk about balancing lifetime goals with family and trying to keep them all part of one great dream. She also has been a GREAT supporter of my art, she flies in for shows, buys paintings, and most of all looks and thinks and talks to me about it. Always at the right time, when I feel I have no direction, there is Amy, putting into words what I try so desperately to express. I asked her to give me a little background infomation about her and Paul, she is great with words, I'm better with paint. So, if you want to be inspired... take the time to read what one family is doing to improve the fate of the world.
http://www.cartercenter.org/news/experts/paul_emerson.html
http://www.fightingmalaria.gov

Paul and I met in Farafenni, The Gambia in 1997 when I was there
considering topics for my doctoral dissertation. I decided to study
men
and reproductive behavior in a polygynous society. The question was
posed to me, are men polygynous for the women or the children? My
answer, after three years of research, was both. In the rural Gambia,
men's idea of what it is to be successful is based on being the leader
of an active and productive family. And, for anyone wondering, many
men
in The Gambia are very concerned about their family's well-being and
want provide for everyone equally. I have always been interested in
gender studies but as I learned more and more, I wanted to apply my
science to improving public health and making a difference. As an
epidemiologist/demographer, I try to make sure my research is directly
relevant to health programs that will benefit the most disadvantaged.
At the Centers for Disease Control and Promotion, I am working to show
the impact of the US government's malaria programs in sub-Saharan
Africa
with a really great team of people.

Paul's work on trachoma, a potentially blinding eye infection, has
included demonstrating that flies spread the infection, identifying
breeding sites for flies, showing that building latrines to reduce
breeding sites can reduce infection, and evaluating programs that
promote hygiene and sanitation as ways to reduce trachoma. At The
Carter Center now he runs programs in several African countries and
works to address trachoma directly. He also still finds time to
publish
new scientific findings in top medical journals, including two in the
Lancet this year!

By the time Paul and I left The Gambia in 2002, we had both earned our
doctoral degrees, been married for 4 years and our first daughter was
18
months old. Our second daughter was born while we were living in
England in 2003. At the moment, we are settled in Atlanta with our
children in a fabulous school that shares our values of equality,
respect for all peoples and the environment, and community service.
The
girls are healthy and make us proud every day. We live down the street
from the Martin Luther King Center and work at fabulous institutions.
We travel to England to visit family and enjoy long walks over rolling,
green hills.

For both of us, our work is as important as our family. Today is our
eighth anniversary and we adore our two daughters but Paul is off in
Southern Sudan and I am busy at work getting ready for a meeting in DC
tomorrow. We are both very passionate about the need to improve the
health of people around the world, especially in Africa where poverty
puts people at risk of diseases caused by infection, nutrition and poor
access to health care. Hopefully, our children will respect us for
that
and not feel neglected when we wave good-bye from another taxi to the
airport.

Saturday, October 28, 2006

Figure Drawing 5- Improvement?







I really tried to draw the shapes and volume, I drew the gesture with color first and tried to keep it quick, then forced myself to draw the shapes, kind of keep myself out of it and really draw. They aren't pretty and they are a little stiff... BUT I really think they are starting to get a little "deeper"?.

Figure Drawing 5-gesture and lesson






I was still not getting the "gesture" or the spirit of the pose. It's fast, it's direct, its intention.

Friday, October 27, 2006

Illustration Friday- WIND




I like this topic! I have a bunch that I have previously made regarding this one.


Here is the whole "windy" painting that is from my profile.





And... this one is called "rooted"

Thursday, October 19, 2006

Autumn Artistic Diversions





While I haven't been blogging a lot, I have been painting in some silly way or another (on Sunny's face). Working on two illustration projects, the pregnancy blog, and the family portrait of Amy's family that keep staring at me that I am afraid to finish for fear of ruining it (which, thinking about a painting, can really be much more taxing than actually doing it!) and getting my butt kicked in life drawing and feeling guilty about not being able to stay up late enough to go to drawing club which starts at 7pm, AND trying to maintain some form of physical dignity....10 weeks pregnant, I guess I can still call myself an artist?

Figure Drawing 4-Defeated






It's not about the outline of the gesture. It's shape and form and action. How to draw without line?
I feel so defeated after this session.

Figure Drawing 4-5 minute poses





Figure Drawing 4-gesture ?






Apparantly I shouldn't be "outlining" the figure in the gesture phase.
Ugh, I'm getting worse, I feel that I have to unlearn everything I have taught myself, without losing my own style. It's hard, but I really want to do it. I want to be confident in my drawing.

These first drawing are the gesture (which apparantly I'm doing wrong, it's not supposed to be about LINE, it's about the "spirit of the pose", the intent, it needs volume. I apparantly am outlining, no action....ugh, ugh, ugh,

Thursday, October 05, 2006

Illustration Friday-QUIET


She's Buried in My Garden

Tuesday, October 03, 2006

Drawing Sunny Drawing




It's so hard to draw my little girl, her proportions are so "in between" and she never stops moving, and I can never capture her crazy smile and surprising beauty.

Beate Minkovski



The Chicago Women's Caucus for Art is honoring Beate Minkovski, she runs Womanmade gallery in Chicago, and was one of the first people to support my art work. Thanks Beate, and congratulations on this well deserved honor.

Figure drawing 3-anatomy






Drawing a muscular guy is way harder than drawing a female, let me just say that.

Figure Drawing 3-the lesson

We really focused on "stage 3" the anatomy, and really getting how everything was connected, the drawings weren't pretty, and they were tough, focused 10 minute poses.



I even had to hold the charcoal pencil differently, on the side, kind of flat like.
Karl helped me with this one, OBVIOUSLY