just wanted to share an progress portrait shot of my man Douglas Heffernan AKA The King of Queens AKA Kevin James.
I have been meaning to paint this for a while, plus I am trying out a new brush. Hella good so far.
http://irisrevolver.storenvy.com/
Tuesday, 1 October 2013
Thursday, 12 September 2013
Monday, 8 April 2013
Wednesday, 27 February 2013
Wednesday, 13 February 2013
Wednesday, 6 February 2013
The Charge of The Panamaniacs
Snow falling into their eyes, the wind is against them, nature they must endeavour. As the resonance of the signal to commence battle reverberates through the team, they emerge from the mist. Nothing can prepare the challenger for the onslaught about to reign down on them.
I completed the entire piece within five days, to my surprise. Just proves to myself that the more you learn the quicker you become, as all the knowledge become second nature in its application.
Thursday, 24 January 2013
Rough anatomy practice, with some help from Andrew Loomis
Hands are very tricky to draw. I studied my own, breaking the hand down to simple building blocks that I could understand. Then practising without reference.
Studying the skin folds around the eyes, what happens when you open and close the eye.
The books of Andrew Loomis got me back to the fundamentals of facial construction. the skull is the building block, from which the guidelines used in facial construction can be moved to produce varying identities.
Tuesday, 8 January 2013
Sapian
I had a portfolio critique from a professional concept artist, who advised me to return to the fundamentals of painting. it stung a little but I was happy that he was honest. So after much reading, viewing tutorials I pulled out a sketch and set about practising colour theory. This was my first try, I went through the self doubt that every artist has to struggle through, long periods of feeling as though the image will never be pulled together. I learn't to ignore my doubts and focused simple on applying fundamentals to the image, put my head down and worked. I was surprised how well it turned out, though there are always areas of improvement.
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