Figure Study

Showcase at RAW ARTIST: Impact

Posted on

Exciting development for me!: I was scouted to be a featured artist at IMPACT: the first showcase held by RAW Artists in Salt Lake City. They are an international organization which organizes local art shows in Australia, The US, Canada and Mexico. I’m very excited. The show is at the Depot on Tuesday April 30 from 19:00-23:00. There will be other local artists, musicians, dancers, fashion designers and filmmakers showcasing their work as well. It’s an honor to be sought out to be part of Salt Lake’s local art scene. Here are just a few of the pieces I’ll be showing and selling prints of at the show.

 

About these Pieces:

***

This piece I made specifically as a test to sell something on my recently opened Etsy online store. I sold it and mailed it to my parents. Thanks for the support guys! – The image is form a photograph I took while on vacation in Riga, Latvia. I quite liked the cat shaped weathervane on top of the wood shingled, conical roof. The reflectiveness came through well using the chalk pencil.

Riga, 2018, Chalk and Graphite on toned Paper
Riga, 2018, Chalk and Graphite on toned Paper

***

This torso study is based on a sculpture by Marusia Nita, an Italian Sculptor in Florence. Find their work on instagram at @marusianita. This is one of my very first digital works, and certainly the one I’m most proud of so far. I’ve been teaching my self to use Krita, a digital art software and drawing on my surface pro, which I highly recommend for doing this type of work.

2019_03_03_torso_sculpture

***

My dear friend and ex teacher, Paul Ramsey asked me to draw some of his cameras; well, as he put it, he had “a number of cameras who would love to pose for me”. This is the first, I plan to draw more of his cameras when I get the time.

untitled shoot-3
***

Perhaps one of my favorite drawings in recent months, I found a piece of a security envelope in my apartment building’s recycle bin (I am consistently stealing and hoarding ‘trash’ for art purposes) and the printed pattern on it begged me to draw on it. Hopefully the first in a series of many pieces created with up cycled and found materials.

untitled shoot-4-3

***

I drew this ink drawing of my hotel I stayed at, in Torino, Italy, (Otherwise known as Turin) while I was waiting for my flight home at the airport. I think this piece was so successful because I used a limited color palette, and the colors all work very well together. The deep tones are made by layering the orange, blue, and green ink. This has the effect of making the shadows read as genuine darker tones of the same colors. If i were to have used brown, purple, or black ink for the shadows, the effect would not be the same. Even though shadows appear as those colors to our naked eye, there are still complex tones that we don’t pick up on. A shadow may be brown, but any brown pen is not likely to be the exact mix of colors, or the exact brown, that you see when a lighter colored surface is in shadow.

Untitled 3

P.S. for those of you who don’t know, the series of three asterisks (***) is called an asterism. It’s a typographical symbol used to divide sections or segments of text. I’ve always found it to be an attractive typographic ornament.

***

Thanks for reading!

Inktober Part…Four ?

Posted on Updated on

I wouldn’t say I gave up on Inktober, I just got off track and after that it wasn’t my main focus any more. So it’s taken me until now to accumulate enough drawings, that I just happened to do in pen and ink, to finish the 31 drawings for Inktober. Hope you enjoy:


Drawing #31

image3 3.JPG

I drew this on my last day on my trip to Vancouver over MLK weekend. It feels a bit flat, but I still love the way it turned out. Faber-Castel Black SX Pen & Gouache Embellishments.


Drawing #30

image4 3.JPG

I took advantage of the long weekend and rode the train up to Vancouver for three days to do some drawing and photography. This was my first drawing I did…It was so cold that it was hard to stay outside to finish it.

Also, look for my photographs from Vancouver on the Photography Collections page, coming soon.


Drawing #29

image3 2.JPG

Male and female torso and arm studies. I love the way the whole page of them looks together, but here are closer pictures of each one, below:

image2 3.JPG

(1/4 – Male torso with arms extended)

image5 2.JPG(2/4 – Female Torso)

image4 2.JPG

(3/4 – Male Torso)

image1 3.JPG

(4/4 – Female torso with arms extended)


Drawing #28

image5 3.JPG

A drawing I did of the Utah State Capitol Building, when I went home for winter break. My buddy Esteban and I drove around for a while, ended up at the capitol, drew it in the freezing cold, and then went to Siegfried’s german deli to eat when it started snowing and we had to stop drawing.


Drawing #27image2 2.JPG

Nothing more than some doodles really.


Drawing #26

image1 2.JPG

Lake Union, Seattle. I love this one.


Drawing #25

image5.JPG

The seam in the cement, the shrub at the base of the walkway pillar, and the black and grey scribbles in the foreground on the left…look like a man sitting with a fishing pole…or so my aunt tells me. (That’s called apophenia)


Drawing #24

image4.JPG


Drawing #23

image3.JPG

Red Square on UW campus. Perspective is really off…just keep moving. Nothing to see here.


Drawing #22

image1.JPG

These were really fun to draw. A VW bug in the parking lot next to my building, from two different angles.

image2.JPG

I actually liked these more before I inked them, when they were just pencil. Here I tried something new. I used these box grids to help me visualize how the cars would fit in there. It helped with getting the perspective (almost) right.


Thanks for all your support! Its been a fun project. I’ll try again in October.