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My dinosaur drawing for the 'Window On Bristol' collab piece with Acerone at M Shed museum, Bristol.
The dinosaur is made up of buildings from around the harbour in Bristol both past and present. It was really interesting researching this, finding out about the buildings that are no longer there.
drawings from my "Communal Living" series.
part of the Freedoom show at Guerrero Gallery in San Francisco, 2011.
drawings available from the gallery:
info@guerrerogallery.com
This is a drawing of an old friends mut Rooster,what a crazy dog he was and sooo big and tall,loved him to bits.
I had his brother Louie from a later litter and he was wonderful,he used to sneek onto the school bus to follow me to school,it was cool cause I had to bring hium home too.
I think they are two flower seller ladies, or possibly a farmer and his wife? It's quite an intriguing looking statue anyway, decorated with a mosaic of pebbles. Apparently by the local primary school.
Série à la main et encre de chine de dessins d'appareils digestifs, réalisés pour l'artwork de MaltHruyst.
It's really fun to draw with drawing application. Whenever and wherever I go I am with my smart phone, Galaxy Note 2 and draw. Here are some of them.
Seth Morrison is the Guitarist for Skillet. He's new to the band, and Skillet's new album Rise is the first he's played in. He's definitely as good as Ben Kasica was, and he's got some insane guitar solos in a few of Skillet's new songs.
Because he is newer to the band, he was quite hard to find a picture of. Most pictures I use to draw are posed photoshoots, but this time, I had to resort to live photos. Like my Trevor Mcnevan drawing, (which was also a live photo) I found it to be easier than posed photos. I don't know why, in fact it seems like they would be harder, but it wasn't. I'm really pleased with this one. I really like the suit, and the face is pretty good considering the angle the picture was taken at. Well, now onto John Cooper!
Germogli electricity pylons - Italy
HDA : Architecture and engineering
Client : Terna
Architect : HDA have won first prize in the "Pylons of the Future" international competition for Italian energy supplier
Date : 2009
See more at : www.hda-paris.com/
He lived at Rose Haven Nursing Home ( Roseburg, OR ) for years. Paul Smith, the man with extraordinary talent was born in Philadelphia on September 21, 1921 with severe cerebral palsy. Not only had Paul beaten the odds of a life with spastic cerebral palsy, a disability that impeded his speech and mobility but also taught himself to become a master artist as well as a terrific chess player even after being devoid of a formal education as a child.
"When typing, Paul used his left hand to steady his right one. Since he couldn't press two keys at the same time, he almost always locked the shift key down and made his pictures using the symbols at the top of the number keys. In other words, his pictures were based on these characters ..... @ # $ % ^ & * ( ) _ . Across seven decades, Paul created hundreds of pictures. He often gave the originals away. Sometimes, but not always, he kept or received a copy for his own records. As his mastery of the typewriter grew, he developed techniques to create shadings, colors, and textures that made his work resemble pencil or charcoal drawings."
This great man passed away on June 25, 2007, but left behind a collection of his amazing artwork that will be an inspiration for many.
Web site with more pictures: www.paulsmithfoundation.org/main_gallery.html
A bit inconsequential, this one, I know; but I came across it in a slide box and passed it by, then returned to look at it again, then turned on the scanner.
It's silly really, but this sums up a certain phase in my life quite well. It was taken in late May or early June 1981. I was coming to the end of my apprenticeship, and I'd borrowed a spare drawing board from work to do the detail design for my final year college project. As the drawings are nowhere to be seen, I'm assuming that I'd handed it in by this time.
Instead, there's a partially completed pen and ink drawing - a female head outlined against a darkened window - which later formed the basis of one of my poster designs. (Does anybody use a drawing board like that these days?)
The decor is something else - stained and faded pink wallpaper and mixed autumnal shades on the carpet. I'd bought the house in Lena Street, Easton, Bristol, the previous November, and hadn't given any thought at all to redecorating. This was my living room, as shown by the 1950s HMV radiogram in the corner, for which I'd paid two pounds to a chap at tech college, and rebuilt from scrap.
Originally a charcoal pencil drawing, then mixed media coloured and finally a digital manip back to mono.
Triptych drawn as exercise in "Abstraction: Drawing and Painting with Michael Ottersen," a class at the New Mexico Art League. I took the opportunity to get some experience with vine charcoal, with which I have very little experience.
Vine charcoal
Strathmore Drawing paper, smooth surface
Each panel: 17.8 x 35.6 cm (7 x 14 inches)