Thursday, July 21, 2011

I'll never be late again

I read a lot.  I always have.  And if you draw, what you read eventually ends up on paper.  Whether it be a recounting of written events, or a protest illustrating what should have happened.  
This is the latter.
Lewis Carroll has influenced my work as much or more than anyone.  Not just my drawing, but my life.  He danced on the line between art and science...something I've always tried to do with the bits and pieces I was born with.
That said, here is the white rabbit, casting off the shackle of his oppressors and beginning a new life.  It's a character redemption and rebellion that I always wanted to see.  How often do we cling to something or someone because it's familiar, even though it's destroying us? 

Sometimes to fix your world, you have to break something.



Sunday, July 17, 2011

The boy who lives...

Well, today I saw the last Harry Potter movie.  Now, let me preface this by saying two things:
First, I am a Harry Potter nerd.
Guilty.
Second, I don't really like the movies that much.  I mean, I can accept them as a visual aid for the books, but definitely not as a replacement.  I haven't really been excited for a movie release since the third one (which they totally dropped the ball on) so between you and me...it was a struggle to get to the theater.  But, they did a good job on this'un.  It worked.  Everything that was cut or embellished or reconstructed worked to tell the story in a visual format.

So in honor of the end of the era, I came home and forced myself into a corner.  The tech pens I usually use also came with some brush pens, that I avoid like the plague.  They feel loose and sloppy to me, and I like complete control.  And its 'bout time that I grew out of that.  So my challenge to myself was a 5 minute Potter.  Fast and loose, with the brush-pens and then finish it off with markers and chalk.  Of course I chose Harry as a child...partially because I'll always have a place for the boy who lived, and partially because I had The Sorcerer's Stone playing in the background while I did it.  But it was fast, loose, and I was happy with the results, which means it ends up here, to be loved or hated by the masses.

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

News from the "Goon Docks"


Things slowed down for a couple days because half my face got eaten by a hockey puck.  Nevertheless, this is the first stab at the aforementioned piece I'm working on for a friend.   Part dragon, part sunfish...all Nessie.  Needs to be refined a little further, but I'm happy with the vision-impaired attempt. 

Luckily the swelling has started to go down, and I'm looking less like Sloth and more like One-Eyed-Willie.   Stay tuned for more adventure on the high seas.

Friday, July 8, 2011

Fished in!

Every year, I go to my friend's-parent's-cottage (follow that?) somewhere around the 4th of july.  The last couple of years, his mom (who has been a second mother to me through parts of my life) has asked me to draw something to adorn the walls of the lake house.  I have no problem with this.  Makes me feel like I'm earning my keep.  Today I brought my book and markers because I was going to work on an upcoming project, but ended up getting sidetracked for her.  So I did a sunfish, which is what the kiddies were catching all morning.  This is significant for a couple reasons:
1.  It is the first piece I've done with any amount of reference in quite some time.  Usually it's just me thinking about what things should look like in my head.  Don't tell any of my old drawing instructors...I'm pretty sure they'd shoot me for even thinking about going reference-less.
2.  I was able to do something that will directly apply to the project I'm working on for another friend.  The treatment of the scales, fins, even the eye...all usable for an upcoming piece.
Two for one sale, pal.

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

MOAR CHICKIN!

I've always been a fan of storytellers who can do a lot with a little.   And good zombie movies.  Put those two things together and you have the original Night of the Living Dead.  It was released in '68 and still holds up today.   And if this flick has taught me anything, its that little girl zombies are creepy.  Especially ones that are just gnawing on a bone. 

This was also inspired, in part, by this picture i took of my son massacring a plate of spaghetti.

So you get a freaky little zombie girl, going to town on a piece of chicken.
The colonel would be proud.

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Gargamel's End...GNAP!




Well, it was a long weekend.  Figured I needed to throw something together for a Monday post.  
I apologize.
I saw the new Smurfs trailer.  Let's just say, it doesn't look like the movie I wanted to see.  Add that to severe sleep deprivation, and you get today's post.  
Once again, I apologize.
It's actually just a working sketch for a  much larger piece I want to do with the theme.  It's not quite right yet, though.  He looks too sinister, and I want him to be a little cuter and have a little less intelligence.  Like a dumb little puppy that just mauled a bunny.  He didn't do it to be mean, he just did it, because that's what he does.

*Side note..please don't try to evaluate my psyche based on the images you may see here.  Sometimes they take on a life of their own and give me the willies.  This is a prime example.  I even debated whether or not I should post it. Is it worth risking the weak stomached or easily offended just to get a quick post done?  Would people still love me if they knew this was the kind of thing I was capable of?  
Was it too much poison and not enough donut?

Then I figured, "Ah, smurf it."