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May 9, 2008 01:16:00
Posted By R. Richardson
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Some people have "second chances" as for me it's more like my 10th on this
drawing but who's counting? I was really sucking it up yesterday and most of today... but here
is.
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April 12, 2008 02:48:02
Posted By R. Richardson
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I was watching my teacher today, as he demonstrated color mixing in Corel painter X.
Much of the principals I was shown came from his immense experience as a fine artist.
I found great value in using the mixer and its benefits. Some of these benefits include
Creating harmony and unification in a painting.
Experimenting with the color mixer I have seen leads to new discoveries and possibilities
for painting and art piece. It is much more than just mixing hue’s together, there is a
methodology and deliberateness about it. The randomness is part trial and error and part
deliberate execution.
There are no wrong or right, no solid rules. Only possibilities.
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April 8, 2008 03:06:26
Posted By R. Richardson
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Adding new information can be frustrating. There are times when I’m overwhelmed with new information. Sometimes when I add new information to my studying, the quality of my work drops because I can no longer focus on my process or routine. The whole process becomes a totally new one. So I have to re-start from scratch and develop a new way of working.
I guess with change there is an adjustment period that I’ll have to deal with but that’s just part of the grind. I must remember that in growth, things must change; therefore this is natural for the quality of my work to drop until I can adjust to the change.
For myself I have found that there isn’t a fast track to growth, so it is only persistence and dedication that will help me to grow. I have to take the good and the bad, success and failure, growth and stagnation. But I’m sure you get the point, its just part of the learning process.
R.Richardson
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April 5, 2008 12:51:22
Posted By R. Richardson
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I’m working away, I’ve started working from George B. Bridgmans book
“the complete
drawing from life” as well as continuing my figure drawing from the pose
file.
I also got a first look at digital value painting yesterday, It was amazing to see it done. It has
opened up my eyes to new possibilities with my work and directions I can grow in. I
can’t wait to tackle learning value.
Looking at this process in action, has presented the importance of each step before painting
begins. Making sure that you have followed to the reference as accurately as possible will
help the value rendering to go very fast in the final stages of the illustration.
If things are done incorrectly in the beginning stages, these uncorrected issues will cause
problems in the value rendering of the art. Imagine working on a piece of art for 4 hours,
just to realize you have to scrap it because things we not correct in the beginning
stages.
I have realized that the drawing must be as solid as possible.(which is something I struggle
with every day.) So I must raise my level of awareness in the art before value is applied.
I’ve also been reading Two Worlds of Andrew Wyeth: A Conversation with Andrew
Wyeth -- His thoughts and concepts I have found to be
inspirational and motivational. It has given me a new direction and a new voice to seek out
in my work. Reading about other artist and the trials they have overcome in their artwork,
has helped me to tackle problems that I’m facing in mine.
I believe it is a must to learn as much as I can from other professional artists, so that I can
overcome obstacles in my own art that may seem insurmountable.
R. Richardson.
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April 3, 2008 06:43:58
Posted By R. Richardson
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The past two days I have been struggling with one of the figures from the pose file. 10 hrs-- 5 bad sketches later,I finally finished; well not really, a drawing is never finished only abandoned for another. The goal was to get my sketch as accurate and consistent as possible compared to the reference. So my abandoned sketch got me to this point.
To see the latest go here:
http://www.conceptart.org/forums/showthread.php?p=1705364#post1705364
I’ve learned a lot about myself my skill level and how much further I have to go. I have learned a new way of thinking from the sketching process all the way to the final drawing.
I have found that we must not settle for the first or the second sketch we finish. We must scrutinize every stroke we lay down on a piece of art and search out ways to improve consistency and accuracy.
I had recently come to the conclusion that I can no longer settle for where I’m at as an artist…I must grow. I am taking some time to refine and correct many of the errors I have failed to fix in my work. At this point in my career working in comics is on hold but not stagnant. It is moving -- just in a different direction.
R. Richardson
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