Sketches and Musings

  • Oklahoma City Colored Pencil Society

    okccpsaOn the last Tuesday night of the month, I have been attending the OKC chapter of the Colored Pencil Society of America.  The first meeting was a bust as it had been moved to an off night because of the weather.  There were only five or six of us present.  But we colored with our pencils and generally had a pleasant visit.  The next meeting I attended was a business meeting.  I still had a pleasant visit with the folks there, but it just wasn’t what I was looking for.  Then last week, I finally made a full fledged meeting.  OK, it wasn’t fireworks but it was a genuinely good time.  We watched a video demonstration on layering and using watercolor pencils to lay down a base wash.  I thought that violated the rules, but hey, I’m all for that anyway.  Then we watched the winners of one of the regional CPSA competitions.  Talk about breathtaking!  And this too!  So, I decided that I’m in.  If I hang around these people, maybe they’ll show me some techniques because that was awesome work.

    EDM 110: Draw a bowl
    EDM 110: Draw a bowl

    I have found that when I snack, if I will put the snack into a little bowl like this one, I can feel satisfied.  If I bring the bag that the snack came in over to the couch, I will eat the whole bag and want more.  Especially if the snack happens to be the crack-cocaine doritos or nutter butter cookies.

    Don’t knock it.  I’ve lost 54 pounds so far.

  • Hierarchy of Love

    Hierarchy of Love
    Hierarchy of Love

    If you stick around this site long enough, you will hear (read) me go on and on about love.  Brought up by hippie-wanna-be parents in the ’70’s I was || close to being named Starshine.  I was raised on movies like “Billy Jack” and “Jesus Christ Superstar” where love is the central them.  Billy Jack was a Rainbow Warrior before rainbows were usurped by the Pride activists.  Combine that with my childhood subscription to Highlights magazine and you can find the inspiration for my Illustration Friday submission this week: Hierarchy of Love.

    My mother has fallen out of her chair laughing at this point, and my father is simply rolling his eyes.

    Seriously, I had a ton of ideas for this topic.  There are lots of things written for what to do about a creativity block, but not a whole lot about dealing with a creativity flood.  I now have ten projects listed from three basic ideas, none of which I felt I could complete and give justice to by Friday, let alone by tonight.  I have dutifully made notes about them and filed them away.  Rest assured if I ever get around to completing one of them, I’ll tell you about it here.

    EDM 109: Draw a flame or flames
    EDM 109: Draw a flame or flames

    Most of my earliest childhood drawings had to do with muscle cars with painted flames, and flames shooting from the pipes, and smoke rolling off the tires.  They were all black as night with bright yellow, orange and red flames.  Until I saw Grease (the movie) and then many of them were red, white, and silver.  I still love flames on hot rods.  Even my bike has flame tread on the tires.  So does the beanie that I usually wear when I ride.  The other beanies have either Jack Skellington or shamrocks on them.

  • Pushing the Darks

    EDM 108: Draw a clock in your home
    EDM 108: Draw a clock in your home

    At the beginning of last week I had asked some of the online artists that I admire if they would be willing to write a critique on my first hundred days of the EDM challenge.  I received a lovely letter from Jeanette Jobson of The Illustrated Life.  For those of you unfamiliar with Jeanette’s work, she specializes in dry media but works in everything from stone to fish.  She seriously wrapped a fish in paper and then added paint to the impression.  It sounds nasty, but the results were gorgeous.  Jeanette is an artist’s artist full of talent, creativity, and practice.  That’s exactly what I said to butter her up so she would write me this nice letter:

    Sent: Monday, April 27, 2009 7:28 PM
    To: Jonathan Manning
    Subject: Review of your art

    Hi Jonathan,

    I have looked at your drawings and the first thing that strikes me is your dedication to put in effort to improve your drawing as well as the quantity and diversity of subjects that you tackle.  It truly is the way to improve drawing skills by practice and by exploring objects in the world around you.

    When I look at your initial pieces and compare them to your more recent work, I can see the changes that have taken place with your ability to observe objects, values and relationships.  Your early pieces show a good grasp of form even though its not there completely at that point.  As the drawings progress, I can see the changes in your observational skills as more detail creeps into them.  You’re starting to really see what is in front of you, rather than what your brain is telling you should be there.

    Values are fairly flat in the early drawings as is quite common with people still feeling their feet as artists.  Later drawings are showing more form through depth of shading.  Darks are still limited but moving in the right direction.

    I get a sense of the pieces that held your interest in the sketches and those that were more just ‘things’ to draw to fulfill your commitment to the EDM.  The detail and livelier marks in some of the drawings shows how a subject inspired you and how creating the detail was part of the enjoyment for you.

    Overall, I see an improvement as I’m sure you do as well.  Practice is the great leveler for achieving drawing skills.  It is said that it takes 10,000 hours to become proficient at anything, from baking bread to drawing.  I’d love to see your work after the 10,000 hours are up.  I’m sure it will be inspired.

    Best wishes,

    Jeanette

    Wow.  That makes me feel warm and fuzzy for sure.  I received that letter shortly asking my beautiful young bride, the art teacher, for some advice on “pushing the darks.”  Here is what she had to say:

    When my Dear Husband (DH) asked me to help write a lesson for his site, saying I was intimidated is a huge understatement.  I normally teach 6th-8th graders to draw what they see over several months.  I walk them through various value techniques – shading, cross hatching, stippling…  How on earth do I write a single lesson to instruct you, dear reader, to “Push the Darks?”

    To begin, figure out what you’re going for – realism or not.  For realism, study your subject for SEVERAL minutes.  Pay attention to the composition.  What do you, the artist, want to focus on?  Do you want to draw all or part of the object?  Will it fill the page?  Do you want to add anything else?  Study the contours and draw what you see.

    If you are not going for realism, what are you trying to capture.  Focus on that while you lay out your shading and composition.

    My DH has a habit of getting the basic shapes down and then making up the shading as he goes along, never looking at the object again.  The artist in me says, “Wow, cool!”  The teacher in me screams, “Wrong, do it again!”  (Just like Pink Floyd.)

    Values, the degree of lightness or darkness in a color, give form and dimension to your work.  It can make your project look like a photo or a cartoon, 3-dimensional or flat.  Be careful to not just draw outlines to show light and shadow.  Instead focus on the value areas.  Let your viewers eye/mind fill in the areas not outlined.  Let the negative space, the area AROUND your subject, do the work for you.  The contrast between light and dark provides movement and draws the viewer in.  When I say, “Pushing the darks,” I mean that you should try to have your darkest areas as dark as you can make them and in stark contrast to your lightest areas.

    For practice, complete several drawings of the same subject with the same light.  Push the darks on one.  Make the contrast stark, just black and white with no middle value.  Do another with only a variety of values and no lines.  Vary the shading- try hatching (straight lines for shading), or stippling (a series of dots to fill in an area).

    ptdsample

    As my DH reminds me often, experiement and break the rules.  The rules exist as a reference for unfamiliar territory.  But they can seriously hinder your art.  They’re really more like guidelines anyway.  Be a pirate.

    I couldn’t have said it better, dear.

  • Weekly Roundup!

    edm107lightbulb
    EDM 107: Draw a lightbulb

    Or, “A Weekly Excuse to Sleep In!”

    Well, week one of The Artistic Biker is officially in the tubes!  There was a lot of feedback over the new site, and all of it positive.  To those of you who saw the super-secret thank you page buy following the “donate” link, I can’t thank you enough and I am very glad to know that you are enjoying it.

    Monday Discovery: 3…2…1…LAUNCH!

    This week’s Monday discovery was the launch of this website.

    It’s finally here! It is the official launch of The Artistic Biker. No more
    late nights working out bugs! (Yeah, right) No more stressing at the last minute whether or not the blog is going to be ready on time! (Double yeah, right) And finally an end to the chaos, organization has finally settle… Oh who am I kidding…

    Tuesday’s Challenge: Tuesdays and Illustrated Friday

    This week, and likely many weeks to come, I chose Tuesday to post my Illustration Friday challenge.

    …it’s just as the intro describes it: a no stress, fun excuse to use your creativity…

    Wednesday’s Figure Drawing: Figure Drawing and such

    The first three Tuesdays of the month, I attend a figure drawing group with the Oklahoma Artists Guild.  Wednesdays are good place to talk about that.

    …I focused on things like her hands and feet, her shoulders and her face.  Then someone pointed out to me that I could draw hands, feet and faces anywhere…

    Thursday Challenges: Internet Challenges

    On Thursday I posted a colored pencil challenge from Wet Canvas.

    …Imagine, and many of us can remember, when just getting a reference photo was kind of a big deal. You either took the photo yourself and then had to develop the film, process the photos, etc. Or you went to the 1library or 2bookstore and spent forever going through the pages looking for just the right image…

    Friday Critique: Friday Critiques

    On Friday, I introduced the topic of Friday Critique and invited you to participate.  If you are interested, May has already filled up but you can certainly get in line for future critiques.  E-mail Me and I’ll get you in queue.

    …Anyway, it got me thinking that I want to have a permanent feature where I chat with another artist to discuss art and life in general, and then we would critique a couple of each other’s recent works…

    Saturday’s Sketchbook: Saturday Sketchbook Vol 1, No. 1

    On Saturday, I posted a couple of watercolor sketches done at the Oklahoma City Festival of the Arts.  I also challenged myself to sketch more by telling you that I should.

    …Daily sketching is the secret to great drawings.  I have been told that over and over and never paid much attention to it.  I always just wanted to be able to draw.  But just like piano, guitar, golf, and kissing, you have to do it often to get better…

    Mailbag…

    Leigh from Finding My Wings writes:

    I would love it if you would post my blog in your blog roll.
    thanks for checking it out.
    Like your entry for virtual sketch date.
    thanks for looking.

    My Response:

    Leigh,

    Of course I will list your blog!  I’m sorry I missed it the first time as yours is one that I am subscribed to.

    Sincerely,
    Jonathan “Blade” Manning

  • Saturday Sketchbook Vol 1, No. 1

    sketchbooksVol 1, No 1!  How’s that for pretentiousness?

    Daily sketching is the secret to great drawings.  I have been told that over and over and never paid much attention to it.  I always just wanted to be able to draw.  But just like piano, guitar, golf, and kissing, you have to do it often to get better.

    On Saturdays, I will post my sketches for the week.  Maybe this will encourage me to sketch more than just the EDM challenges.  This week, I managed to throw together two quick WC sketches at the Festival of the Arts in OKC.

    EDM 106: Draw where you get your news
    EDM 106: Draw where you get your news

    For EDM 106, draw how you get your news, I couldn’t decide whether to draw my computer, my TV, or what to represent BBCA.  So I drew the cable listing.  I don’t know how they are with British news, but they don’t seem to have the same extreme views of American news that all of the American news sources have.