Done with black pastel, pencil and eraser. (after a light coat of pastel was applied to the paper)
Sunday, September 29, 2013
Thursday, September 19, 2013
Conte artists
Louis le Brocquy "Dissembled"
Henri Toulouse-Lautrec
"Lady clown"
Jean-Francois Millet
"Haypile"
"Au Concert Europeen"
Sunday, September 15, 2013
Automatic drawing
(Done with black pastel)
drawing without thought
more drawing without thought
beginning to form shapes
Darkening areas to highlight shapes
Furthering the dark areas and shapes
Adding detail and finishing with white pastel.
Saturday, September 14, 2013
Wednesday, September 11, 2013
Hatching the Pot
1. Why is it important to know how to use lines to shade?
It can express many variants of detail to implement in your works. It is also one of the most basic ways to shade and essential to learning other methods.
2. How does light fall differently on the outside of the pot than on the inside?
3. How can you internalize the feeling of roundness as you make the stroke, and move beyond the more neutral feeling of simply reproducing the curve?
Use your whole arm and don't be afraid to have some sketchiness in the design. Practice getting the feeling of recreating the roundness of the stroke.
· Giorgio Morandi
· Conor Walton
· Rachel Ruysch
· Harmen Steenwyck
· Paul Cezanne
· Jan Davidsz de Heem
· Willem Kalf
· Jean-Simeon Chardin
· Frans Snyders
· Francisco de Zurbaran
· Pablo Picasso
· Caravaggio
· Rembrandt
Pablo Picasso
His bizarre techniques and style show roundness in an abstract way with sloping lines and suggestive lighting techniques.
Caravaggio
He uses soft colors and subtle differences in lighting and shadows to show the slope of rounded objects.
Rembrandt
He uses contrast in effective ways and the organic flow of his brush to create roundness beyond the curved line
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