Yes, your inner ant.
Let's start at the beginning shall we?
I was far beyond all levels of dorkness in middle school. Way back then, my prime wardrobe consisted of a yellow checkered zipper hoodie (the zipper was broken), cut off, roll-up jeans that resembled capris of peasantry, and splatter painted Velcro-fastened shoes. Oh, I was so cool. Anyway, in middle school, I took one of my first official art classes. It was here that Ms. Valentine, my teacher, greatly stressed the ability of "drawing by sight."
We started with looking at a simple picture and drawing what we saw. She taught us the analogy that "your eyes are an ant, crawling along the lines. Follow that ant with your pencil."
Ms. Valentine made art seem a little less enthralling for a time, by showing us all that art is really just a bunch of lines put together in an abstract way. However, her teaching later on greatly helped me see the endless possibilities of art, and how easy it really could be to draw whatever you want. You just have to keep following that little ant crawling along the lines.
Soon my classmates and I were accustomed to focusing only on each line at a time, and not rushing ahead to draw the entire picture as we saw it. To help us in this, Ms. Valentine would turn the picture of whatever we were drawing upside down. This would make it harder for our minds to comprehend the shape and rush ahead to draw it, so we would focus better on each bit at a time. By the end of our drawing session, we would all flip our pictures over and be thrilled to see how accurate our artwork was to the actual picture. As thrilled, granted, as you can get when you realize you were drawing Obama the whole time.
Once we all acquired this skill, we moved on to drawing more complex pictures, advancing towards the simple three demensionals. We started with baskets of fruit, then moved on to the complexities of things like chairs, dolls, and the human figure.
All the while, we had been brain washed, so to speak, to look at objects no matter how complex, as merely a pleasant arrangement of lines. We weren't drawing a human, we were simply following that little ant. By the end of it, yes our drawings would be of a human form, but the process was nothing of the sort.
Nowadays, I don't like to think of art as something as common as an assembly of lines. Because though it may be an assembly of lines, the result of our art produces so much more, often more than we had expected. But with this long-since begotten skill from way back when my dorkness levels were all over the place, I have been able to do so much more. Not only is imitation a breeze now, but originality (in a sense) is more enhanced.
For instance, when you want to draw an elephant, you often have a picture of what you want your elephant to look like in your mind as you draw? Well there's your picture. Using the same basic principle I learned in middle school art class, you can make that elephant by following the ant inside your head.
Here's some bases you can practice ant-following on. With enough practice, you can memorize what makes a good base, and simply follow your own picture inside your head!
Source:
http://alias-hugo.deviantart.com/art/Persona-4-Master-Body-types-chart-421762443
In conclusion, remember that a loathesome exercise like the one I learned so many years ago can actually come quite in handy.
So yes, even though it sounds ridiculous, follow your inner ant!
Stay majestic everyone!
Wednesday, December 31, 2014
Sunday, November 9, 2014
The simple steps of beating blocks
Have you ever turned the lights off and felt yourself completely engulfed in darkness? Then for a few moments, you closed your eyes and couldn't tell the difference? How bout when you opened them back up again? All of the sudden, your eyes probably could have detected the darker shapes of objects around the room, and the smallest flecks of light from your camera charger, or the pale gaze from the moon through the window.
It's interesting how taking just a few moments from trying to see everything in front of you, and just closing your eyes and not moving, can do so much.
By blocking out your vision completely, it can actually help you see more when you open your eyes again.
This same principle is applicable in art. Whether you're a painter, a sketcher, a photographer, a writer, a musician, anything - we've all had those days where there seems to be a wall in front of our brains, blocking us from inspiration. No matter how we push, claw, and even gnaw away at the wall, you still feel like Marlin from finding Nemo, desperate to get out of the whale's mouth, and charging into it at full speed to no avail.
"YAAAHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!!" BANG! *falls over*
"YAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHH!!!!!!!!!!!!" BANG! *falls over*
Wish I had a gif for that.
Let's face it, we've all had those moments where we're crumpling up sheet after sheet of paper, unhappy with whatever we've been able to create so far, but simply trying harder isn't going to get us anywhere.
Sometimes we just need to sit back, and get it all off our mind, close our mental eyes of inspiration, and breathe. Go get a snack, go watch a scene from your favorite movie, or talk to a friend about something pointless. Make an effort to AVOID the project for a good half hour. Then, if an inspiration hasn't hit you already, come back and try again.
Believe me, you'll be able to see things you hadn't seen before.
Like Marlin, we need to stop banging and banging our heads against the wall, and find a different way out, (though, preferably not through a whale's blowhole.)
The results will be a lot less mentally exhausting, and who knows? Maybe you'll come up with something completely different from what you expected...and like it.
As the great Austin Kleon, author of the New York Times best seller Steal Like and Artist says, "Nothing is more paralyzing than the idea of limitless possibilities...The way to get over creative block is to place some constraints on yourself."
Don't allow yourself to go crazy overboard into trying to create something amazing. Artists blocks aren't ever really the inability to think. They are the realization that the possibilities of what to think of are boundless and endless. You end up getting stuck thinking about that instead, and getting nothing done.
You can't just look at a pile of puzzle pieces and expect yourself to be able to simply throw them all on the floor and have them fit together all at once. Focus on one piece at a time, take breaks (fun ones) and breathe. If someone wonders why you aren't back working, tell them you ARE. Art isn't a simple process. You can't just sit down and expect to be inspired and do it all at once, like eating a Poptart.
Next time you're in a drought of inspirational juices, stop scrambling around in the dark, and close your eyes for a few moments. Close it all off completely. When you open them back up again, you'll be able to see things you hadn't before.
Don't allow yourself to go crazy overboard into trying to create something amazing. Artists blocks aren't ever really the inability to think. They are the realization that the possibilities of what to think of are boundless and endless. You end up getting stuck thinking about that instead, and getting nothing done.
You can't just look at a pile of puzzle pieces and expect yourself to be able to simply throw them all on the floor and have them fit together all at once. Focus on one piece at a time, take breaks (fun ones) and breathe. If someone wonders why you aren't back working, tell them you ARE. Art isn't a simple process. You can't just sit down and expect to be inspired and do it all at once, like eating a Poptart.
Next time you're in a drought of inspirational juices, stop scrambling around in the dark, and close your eyes for a few moments. Close it all off completely. When you open them back up again, you'll be able to see things you hadn't before.
Wednesday, October 1, 2014
The Art of Less
Focusing on one particular thing for an entire day can help you see everything through a different artistic perspective.
It helps you pay more attention to everything by searching for one thing.
The color red, first off, is a noticeable color anyway, but its amazing how much more you see in life if your only looking for the color red. There's red everywhere, from the blatant paint of fire engines, to the tiniest tips of the first autumn leaves.
Got a camera that has a color accent program? Even better. Pick a color and record what you see, and what you wouldn't have ever seen if you weren't looking.
No matter how boring, uncreative, and uncool your life may seem right now, life is still (and will always be) HUGE. There's so much in life that we'll never know we're missing if we don't slow down to take it all in.
Take a day to look for the littlest details, the tiniest flecks of color, the seemingly unimportant moments. Only by focusing on the smallest, most insignificant things will you truly be enlightened on how big and amazing life really is.
So get out there and be majestic by doing something small today.
Saturday, August 23, 2014
PAINT: Step it up a level!!!
Hm, what's this? A bucket of water instead of a regular cup to rinse brushes?
paper towels with peculiar markings? Those aren't brush marks....
A brand new foots-on style of art!
FOOT PAINTING!!!
Fun. Messy. And free style. Mistakes don't matter, just make it majestic. What could go wrong?
Try out Interpretations
Make Monsters
It's a foot print frenzy, and there's no brushes required! (But towels yes. Lots and LOTS of towels.)
Monsters are the best to make when you have a few colors of paint left on your palette and wish you didn't have to waste it. Now you don't!
Just mix it up (it'll usually come out grey or brown - perfect for beastly monster tones)
"Mona Lisa" by L. Davinci "Toe-nailisa" by A.K. Huie
Make Monsters
| "Feetured Beast" by A.K.Huie |
It's a foot print frenzy, and there's no brushes required! (But towels yes. Lots and LOTS of towels.)
Monsters are the best to make when you have a few colors of paint left on your palette and wish you didn't have to waste it. Now you don't!
Just mix it up (it'll usually come out grey or brown - perfect for beastly monster tones)
Stick yo foot in that junk!
Apply to canvas until you have an acceptable blob of paint.
Then wait for it to dry, add various body parts made of toe prints (eyes, teeth, tongue, legs, horns) and viola! Your foot beast.
Enjoy this crazy new way of getting more out of your paintings - by putting more into them!
Go nuts.
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