Showing posts with label life drawing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label life drawing. Show all posts

Sunday, October 17, 2010

(d)Evolution

Last year around this time I was drawing people. Then I switched to birds. Now I'm working on shells and fossils.

I've discovered some things over the last year or so:

I have a lot more success if spend some time on getting-to-know-you sketches. These are the ones where the expectations are really, really low, the "Look, I just need to get a feel for how this thing works" sketches.

Like this, multiple views of the shell of a moon snail, a "predatory sea slug":


Most of the doodles on birdlydrawn are sketches of this type. There's no art anywhere in this kind of work. It's truly just to try to get an initial sense of what I'm looking at, to work out what's happening in space.

In my zoological illustration class, we're working on learning how to use carbon dust. So after the getting-to-know-you sketch comes the rough measured drawing in graphite, with some values.


Still not much going on in the way of artistic expression, but it's one step further along the continuum of understanding.

Next up: I'll take this view at 75% and experiment with carbon dust on a smaller sheet of paper. Then, I'll go to 125% and do the final version of the assignment.

Here's my other discovery: I usually have to do assignments like this twice, once to get a sense of where I'm going (get the rookie technical mistakes out of the way) and once to make some actual headway. In other words, my real beginner experience happens the second time around when I'm not freaking out about getting to the work and can actually pay attention to what I'm doing.

Slow on the uptake? Perhaps, but I prefer to think of it as being deliberate about my work. It's my experience after all, and this is how I get the most out of it.

Sunday, May 23, 2010

Doodle B(ug)

Yesterday Dana and Lilo went for a walk while I stayed behind with B to watch the second game of the subway series (Yankees vs. Mets).

Actually, B doesn't watch TV. She sits on the back of the couch so she can see out the picture window. Watching the world go by seems to be far more entertaining to Bernini than Major League Baseball. Who knew? (Maybe she was disappointed that the Yankees weren't playing very well... I know I was.)


She sat in a patch of sunlight and relaxed for a few minutes... just long enough for me to do a muddy little drawing.

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Remiges & Rectrices


When B molts, it's an excellent time to study her feathers.

The one on top is a remex (pl. remiges), a feather from B's right wing. You can tell because the feather is asymmetrical, with the leading edge being narrower than the trailing edge.

The middle is a contour feather, most likely from somewhere on her front.

The bottom is a rectrix (pl. rectrices), from her tail. It's more symmetrical and has a more square appearance.

Feathers are so specialized... it's really pretty amazing. Even more amazing is the fact that B seems to be able to control each of her feathers individually.

Flight feathers are actually very stiff. Lilo (the dachshund) likes to chew on feathers when she finds them. Thankfully, Lilo finds individual feathers more interesting than the ornery strong-beaked cockatoo from whence the feathers came.

Friday, October 16, 2009

Life Drawing: Cacatua sulphurea


The nice thing about living with a parrot is that they like to be watched.

Wait. I should amend that. They like to be watched if they feel safe. Most parrots are flocking birds, which is why they can get along so well with us. In the absence of other parrots, we become their flocks. B has lived with us for ten of her 11 years, so we might as well be cockatoos, for all she knows... just bigger and not as beautiful.

And since Bernini rules the roost (hence the nickname Queen B), she's pretty sure that we should all be watching her (or petting her, or feeding her) all the time.

The problem, which I've mentioned before, is that she's not one to sit still for very long, so if you want to sketch, move quickly and don't expect to catch a lot of detail. She was preening the other night while I was sitting in her room with her, which offered a few pages' worth of different angles and perspectives.

Friday, September 25, 2009

Life Drawing



Class, today's model goes by 'B' -- short for Bernini -- an 11-year-old lesser-sulphur-crested cockatoo. She holds still for no one, so doodle quickly.