Pages

Showing posts with label Arts Umbrella. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Arts Umbrella. Show all posts

Saturday, November 15, 2014

Succulent Saturday - Oil Painting Workshop, last

 Last week of  the oil-painting portrait workshop. Last, 2+ hour demo from our illustrious instructor.

 Rough block-in.

 Refining areas...

 Starting to add color.

Lovely end result of demo....

 Tools of the trade...

 Then we got a turn. My initial block-in/underpainting.

 Initial color application.

 How far I got in our 2.5 hours...

Then our final critique. Compared to our first week, I think we made amazing progress! In the meantime, I have a teensy bit more of a feel for this thing called oil paint....

Saturday, November 08, 2014

Succulent Saturday - Portrait Workshop

Week 3 of this oil painting portrait workshop with Liana Bennett -
We practiced mixing skin tones, and then watched a Liana demo.

It's interesting for me watching this approach to painting -

(SO different and abstract compared to my more typical watercolor...)

We talked quite a bit about color and mixing this week (again - very different from how I normally work).

Things are so soft and mushy with this medium!

Took lots of notes on the thought processes behind applying color and tone...

Liana's lovely underpainting....

So, this is my first attempt at adding color. It was funner to use this week (although I'm not sure I ever really want to paint with this for real....)

One more week....

Saturday, November 01, 2014

Succulent Saturday - Portrait Workshop

 Second week of the oil-painting portrait workshop...
(more instructor examples.)

 This week, we were shown several different approaches to underpainting...


 Shadow patterns, silhouettes, vine-charcoal drawings... Shown with the hope that one will 'work' for us in any given situation.

 (I still don't know what I'm doing....)

 (Oil paint is stupid!)

 Charcoal is a little more familiar...

I want to do one of these a day until I get a better feel... Given my current schedule, it's a little bit wishful thinking, but something I'd like to aspire to.

Wednesday, October 29, 2014

WIP Wednesday - Oil Painting Workshop

 Last week, I started a 4-week oil-painting portrait workshop -

 - taught by the owner of Arts Umbrella, Liana Bennett (studies shown here).

 She's a beautiful portrait painter, and despite me not being versant in oils at ALL, I wanted the chance to hear how she thinks and approaches the face and figure.

 We got to watch her thought processes as she demonstrated an underpainting....

 (all the pretty colors!)

 I don't know how to use this medium, or these stiff brushes or work on this surface, but, it's interesting to mess around with....

First day critique. Now to see if I can get any painting-practice time in...

Friday, December 04, 2009

Of Life Drawing, Ice, and Funky Chickens...

We've had a few days in a row of chilly, frosty weather -

(iced fountain in the courtyard outside of our Life Drawing class in Country Village) -

-the chickens do not seem the least bit daunted - neither the funky ones at Country Village (this is a Crested Polish) nor mine in the backyard.

Inside, we had a full house of folks drawings today! (yay!)

This past weekend, I participated in a streaming live-course from ConceptArt.org called "Sketchbooks and Observational Drawing". One of the things that were discussed were timed gesture drawings. George Pratt, who was one of the instructors, showed a number of examples of amazing 5-second gesture drawings. That is definitely faster than I've ever done before - so we tried that today. Wow. I didn't get much done in 5 seconds - but after a page of those, 60 seconds felt like forever!

And then 20 minutes seemed incredibly long - for poses at least. I'm still not happy with my ability to manipulate charcoal in an accurate or pleasing way...

...yet another thing I'd like to work on when I finish up these books...

Speaking of which, I must back at it...

Saturday, November 15, 2008

Life Drawing -

*THANKFULLY* Life Drawing this week was much more serene than *last time*...

Lovely, lyrical model - made for fun gestures and warm up sketches...


Sadly, this is the only session at Arts Umbrella this month (our normal week happens to be the day after Thanksgiving :-(....)
But I'm happy for what I can get.

Friday, October 24, 2008

(Mis)Adventures in Life Drawing - or Why Our Session Ended in Police Reports

The day dawned overcast and grey, but brightened a bit by the turning October foliage. I headed off to this week's figure drawing session at Arts Umbrella in Country Village where I am the class organizer and monitor.


We had another well-attended session, with a good model.
(gestures and 5-10 minute poses here).


We did a couple of 20 minute poses, where I experimented with conte crayons and pencils. Haven't used those for a long time. It's always interesting - can't get too terribly detailed since our individual boards/easels are not lit, so one is drawing in dim lighting...

We took a longer break for the model to stretch and rest, and walked a few doors down for drinks and cookies. There was a young, very large black man wandering around outside talking to himself outside the cookie/coffee shop. He didn't seem 'all there' and would intermittently get quite loud and somewhat agitated sounding. We steered well clear of him.

We were just settling in for our last hour of drawing when this same young man came pushing his way into our classroom by way of the unused back door. He was told this was a class (as we were all in a dimly lit room, with a naked man up front) and not open to the public. Instead of turning around and leaving, he started shoving his way through the classroom, throwing easels aside and yelling that he 'couldn't see' and 'where was the restroom'? By this time, one of one my figure drawers had run out to the front classroom (full of women who paint together on Friday mornings) and herded them all out of the building before he got that far.

He was now in the (empty) main classroom yelling for a restroom (which we don't have inside the studio - they are outside around the side of the building). Several of my male students were trying to herd him outside, saying that they'd help him find it, but this just seemed to incense him further and he started violently pushing through the tables and easels in the main room while yelling.

Anyhow - this went on as one of the class members dialed 911 and called the police. He continued with more vocal raging and overturned tables and chairs and made threatening gestures towards anyone who approached him until he finally made his way outside the studio (this lasted about 15 minutes total). Ours was not the only location he had entered or attempted to enter, so I suspect the police had a number of calls by then. Several cars with sirens streamed past. He was finally cornered, and being completely non-responsive to instruction (I don't know if he was just mentally imbalanced or completely high on something) had to be tasered and handcuffed before being hauled into a police car.

At this point a number of frightened, shaky ladies came back into the studio. Wanting to recover from the chaos of the last 15 minutes we started setting things back upright and mopping up the floor. I wish I'd had the presence of mind to take pictures first - or really, we should have left it for the police to see. A number of officers came in right after we finished putting the place back together (and I was terribly grateful he *hadn't* decided to act on his decision that the storage area was a urinal as he loudly announced it was).

They came in to get witness statements and to assess the damage done, and to see if our model - who had put on his robe and stood up to his rantings and had consequently been physically threatened - wanted to press charges (he didn't). Really though, nothing much was damaged. One smallish mirror was broken, and drinks were spilled and things were knocked over, but no one was hurt (most everyone ran out as soon as he started getting loud and throwing easels) and there was no other real damage.

The model and I who were there for the entire rant (since this was my class, I was feeling somewhat responsible for the rooms. And the model was only wearing a bathrobe. It was cold out!), and a couple of others who saw most of it stayed to give written statements. A first for me! They were very nice, big, burly, reassuring police officers and we were grateful for their quick response.

Needless to say, no more drawing happened. I hope they can get that poor man some help.

And I picked up enough chocolate on the way home to assuage any lingering nerves. I still have lots of painting to do tonight!

Here's hoping for much less eventful figure drawing sessions from here on out.

Friday, September 26, 2008

Life Drawing at the 'Village...

I have found that since I've been working fairly non-stop on series' illustration that trying to fit in time for personal art has become problematic (it may just be me, your mileage may vary).

So, since I was starting to feel like I didn't have enough going on in my life (*cough*), I volunteered to monitor a Life Drawing series back at the art studio I used to teach at before my-life-of-relentless-deadlines.

Arts Umbrella is located in the quaint and charming Country Village.

It was a beautiful, sunny morning, with their weekly Farmer's Market in full swing (nearly the last one of the season).


One of the reasons I love Country Village is that there are all kinds of critters underfoot -

Including this mama-hen with her *10,* just days-old chicks. Awfully late in the season for these babies...

But back to Life Drawing - in trying to put these sessions together with enough attendance to pay for the models I stumbled across the most wonderful 'event' site: Meetup. This site and service was new to me, and boy is it comprehensive! and a terrific meeting tool. I'm looking forward to expanding its use in the future.

And I must say that the figure drawing session went well. We had a terrific turn-out and a great model. It's been some time since I've done life drawing and am working out the kinks in the rusty anatomical-observational skills, but it felt really good to be doing it again. Doing something that is just art, for art's sake rather than for a client or deadline. And the whole rationale behind being 'in charge' was to make certain the I would have no excuse not to attend.

This should work!