Portrait Night 12/20 (Roy Harper)

I’m so busy with pre-Christmas stuff that I almost punted on this evening’s #PortraitNight drawing. Here, though, is a quick and sloppy drawing of Roy Harper. My apologies for the cruddy cell phone pics, but it’s far far too late to crank up the ol’ scanner. Edit – here’s a scanned image:

And here’s the original, from Shindig magazine:

Not the greatest… but, hey, what do you expect at midnight on a “school day”? I think it lost a little in the inking, actually. Here’s a blurry cell phone pic of the pencils:

If you’d like to suggest a #PortraitNight subject, you can do so either via the comments section here, or via my Twitter.

J is for Jaculi

You can follow the other “J” entries as people post them to Twitter this morning by following the #AlphaBeasts hashtag. View all previous AlphaBeasts entries at the AlphaBeasts Tumblr: http://alphabeasts.tumblr.com/. You can also find some submission guidelines there, as well as links to bestiaries and lists of creatures.

The pickings for “J” D&D creatures were surprisingly slim. There weren’t a whole lot of “J” creatures with illustrations to begin with and once the sentient creatures were eliminated (leaving only proper beasts) things were even more paltry. But, you win some/you lose some. From the Fiend Folio….

J is for Jaculi

The original art for this is for sale here.

Come On Thunderchild – Live At The Tremont

Before attempting to make a living drawing stuff, I had another equally foolish, idealistic, and difficult-to-make-money-at pursuit: music. In the mid-90’s I was in a band called Come On Thunderchild, based near Charlotte, N.C. We spent a few years touring on and off, eventually got signed to an indie label, and made what I think still stands up as a pretty damn good record.

On thing that you’ll find out pretty quickly if you have an interest in pre-2000’s regional indie rock is that “everything” is for sure not “on the internet.” There’s a definite wall you hit around the year 2000 or so where information about regional music just kind of vanishes. A lot of independent weeklies weren’t online before then and neither were many of the other press outlets reviewing records at the time. I’ve discovered this the hard way, as I’ve recently (albeit slowly) been trying to digitally archive what music and video I can scrounge together from my band and a few other bands that we palled around with at the time.

Given all that, I was pretty excited to find out during some email back and forth with Charlotte videographer/director Jay Thomas that some footage of our CD release party might be still kicking around. Apparently, the tapes for this show turned up when Jay was moving and he was kind enough to get them together digitally and post the show on video. This was filmed on “The Casbah” stage of the Tremont Music Hall in Charlotte, NC in maybe ’96 or so. Please note: No blog comments regarding my attire will be responded to.

Portrait Night 12/13 (Tilda Swinton)

So, for this week’s #PortraitNight drawing, instead of just breaking out the sketchbook and drawing someone, I decided to subject myself to a taste of my own medicine and do a caricature exercise I occasionally make my students do when I teach comics classes. The exercise is one of Ted Stearn’s (of Fuzz and Pluck fame) and you can find it here. Since I was working from a picture rather than a live subject, I had to modify the exercise slightly, but I kept with the general spirit of things.

I started with two blind contour drawings, followed by one opposite hand drawing. I hesitated to even scan this since the point of these sorts of exercises has absolutely nothing to do with what winds up on your page–It’s entirely about forcing yourself to really, really look at what’s in front of you rather than drawing what you think something “should” look like. (See the great Drawing On The Right Side Of The Brain for a lot more on that.) It’s also a great way to familiarize yourself with your subject. I imagine my finger tracing around the subject’s face as my pencil moves. Anyway, here’s the result of that. (Since the drawing itself is inconsequential, I just drew each right on top of the other.)

Then, as per the exercise, I studied the photo I was working from and made a list of what I thought the most prominent features were. Here’s the picture I was working from and my list (which you can see in my usual chicken-scratch at the top left of that sketchbook page above):

Features:

  • small mouth
  • “beaked” mouth
  • big doe-ish eyes
  • round chin
  • big ears
  • prominent cheekbones
  • eyeline low?
  • angular jaw

The main drawing part of the exercise involves then drawing two (or more) iterations of the subject, pushing the exaggeration further and further with each successive drawing. Like the warmup exercises, these are timed. I, though, gave myself some extra time with each since I wanted a more polished finished image than the proscribed five minutes would have allowed; I gave myself fifteen minutes for each. Here’s the first iteration:

Not terrible–I’ve certainly done worse for Portrait Night–but not great either. With the next iteration, though, the idea is to push the exaggeration and abstraction further. So here’s the final image (I inked/colored it later, but the underlying pencil drawing was done in the allotted fifteen minutes):

I’m actually reasonably happy with this one. I wish I had time each week to do this whole exercise for each Portrait Night. I don’t… but I’ll definitely have a go with it again at some point.

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If you’d like to suggest a #PortraitNight subject, you can do so either via the comments section here, or via my Twitter.

I is for Intellect Devourer

You can follow the other “I” entries as people post them to Twitter this morning by following the #AlphaBeasts hashtag. View all previous AlphaBeasts entries at the AlphaBeasts Tumblr: http://alphabeasts.tumblr.com/. You can also find some submission guidelines there, as well as links to bestiaries and lists of creatures.

From the original Monster Manual

I is for Intellect Devourer

The original art for this is for sale here.