Saturday 24 December 2011

Happy Holidays!












Hey Nonny Nonny! 2004, 217x285 mm, relief print (mdf block), oil ink on acid free heavy art print paper.
Not a good reproduction as I photographed the print through glass. This is always difficult to do without getting some reflections.






This holiday celebration print was based on a snapshot a friend of mine took at work on Christmas day.
I wasn't working that day but when I saw the fun expressed in this photo I asked for permission to use it. The nurses, one in a red velvet outfit and both with Santa hats, were dancing for the youngsters in a children's ward at the local hospital. I left the background blank and greatly simplified the Christmas tree.
I made enough prints to be able to give one each to the dancers and the photographer, and keep one for myself. I also used a reduced version for my Christmas cards that year. I added a gold star to the tree for my cards.

Saturday 17 December 2011

The tall and the short of it!! Or.. heads and feet!
The five giraffes at our little zoo are all males, one older, one younger and three adolescents. Great fun to watch.

Photography is not my strongest talent. It is one of the minor subjects in my Learning Connexion course and the one I am most behind in in my studies. I try to go to the zoo regularly to practice photography on the animals as well as to sketch them. Its less embarrassing than to try to take photos or sketch people unaware.

Each time I visit the zoo I spend the bulk of my time at one of the enclosures-- the giraffes or the white rhinos or the spider monkeys--
The monkeys use their tails like fifth hands. So clever. But they move very quickly so are hard to sketch or photograph.
I love the shapes. Those two above could be letter 'Y' in an ABC book.
And to the left, the younger boy with his head poking up from behind the oldest giraffe's back like a backward question mark..

Sunday 11 December 2011

Good design-- Form follows Function
I was reading a chapter on the spirit and beauty and art in a book owned by a friend. I need to read it again more carefully but I did pick up on the author's comments that art started to go downhill so to speak with the idea early last century about form following function. And he used the example of ugly modern buildings. 
While a lot of buildings are not very interesting and many are ugly, I do not think that form following function is to blame. Poor design can't be blamed on form following function. Except perhaps a building filled with accountants or stockbrokers or insurance workers might be excused being dour looking.
Banks used to be designed like temples. Perhaps their function was worshipping money.

CBD Auckland has a lot of interesting and sometimes delightful buildings. These rather ordinary windows make wonderful patterns reflected in an art gallery window.
http://www.facebook.com/pages/ARTprintmaking-and-MORE/166241816805041

Saturday 3 December 2011

Life Drawing







 This was a charcoal drawing on A2 grey sugar paper.  The blind drawing below was marker pen on white cartridge paper.
Yesterday was the last session for the year for the life drawing group that I belong to. Life drawing is a bit addictive. When I started attending several years ago I didn't even like drawing. I knew I could draw and I needed to draw regularly for my course at the Learning Connexion. But I didn't like to draw. Can't say it has become my favourite activity but, as I said, the life drawing part of it has become an important part of my art life.
These two drawings were done during the same session. The charcoal one is a considered drawing. I worked hard on the proportions and the modelling of the form. The other drawing, however, was a much quicker one -- a blind drawing where I looked closely at the model but did not look at the drawing I was making on the paper until I was finished. I do enjoy doing blind drawings. I must confess my ability to do them has never improved but some of them just look so interesting. I have used a number of these as the basis for relief or drypoint prints.