Tuesday, June 24, 2008

On My Easel and Behind My Easel


I took on a botched illustration job that a designer friend of mine had farmed out. The illustrator refused to take any art direction. That is not the hallmark of a professional illustrator! I asked if I could have the botched illustration. It was on a large piece of masonite, I gessoed the other side and did this painting of a decaying sugar beet plant near Sacramento.
You can see several interesting items on the easel just below the painting. To the right of the pink post-a-note is a plastic canister containing a roll of exposed and undeveloped 35mm film from about eight years ago. I have not a clue what's on the film, and if I procrastinate much longer, I may never know! Who will be left to process film in the digital age? The post-a -note has a "to do" written on it and that I have procrastinated on and will most likely never get done. The paint tubes to the right and left are not really paint tubes. Open their caps and a ball point pen tip is revealed! The tubes are even dented like real paint tubes. A devilishly inventive way for one's thumb and finger to ergonomically hold the pen! Got these from an art store catalog. Poking up over the left side of my painting is a three foot glass vase holding hundreds of spent watercolor paint tubes. Yes, when I finish off a tube, it gets tossed into the vase...kinda like making a rubber band ball...how cool is that!
A wee glimpse of my working environment.

17 comments:

  1. This is a very cool looking work. A lot of effort but it is paying off.

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  2. Hi David! Great painting! :) I was wondering, for the orange plastic construction fence in the lower right hand corner, did you paint that by hand or did you use a piece of mesh fabric for the design?

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  3. Good way to recycle.
    The painting looks great.
    Isn't it funny the things people wont throw out? You have your used tubes. I never throw out an old brush. I have cans of them. You never know, one day I may not be able to afford new ones and I'll bring some back to life. Or I'll make a fence.

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  4. Effort?! No way, Onpainting! All the art I do is a piece of cake! No struggling whatsoever. You trust me, don't you?

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  5. Amber: I first painted a SOLID orange shape, let it dry, and then painted in the negative spaces.

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  6. It sounds like with the number of brushes you are saving, Frank, you could do both! It's good to get some positive comments. I've worked so hard on this painting that I can't objectively judge it very well. I think we all can have that problem.

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  7. very good looking work! No shortage of challenges on this one.

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  8. that is big!good you have those dark shapes in the foreground leading in,i feel i can step right in.

    i never throw away tubes and old brushes...no idea why...

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  9. So much more than a glimpse!
    I'm impressed!
    Quel talent, bravo!

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  10. Thanks Marco...always interested in your opinion... good or bad (constructive). Thanks!

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  11. Alina: Thanks. Hey, you are a very talented animation and sketch artist. I'm definitely going to explore your web and blog sites some more. As you probably know, I'm a fellow Bruin, except I go my Master's degree shortly after the last ice age!

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  12. Rob: Maybe being an artist comes with a wee bit of pack rat syndrome!

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