Posts Tagged ‘portrait’

Portrait Work in Progress

 

Portrait Work in Progress, by Thaneeya

Here’s a colored pencil portrait I’m working on.  The head is about 4″ square.  It’s on an 8″ x 10″ paper, so there is a lot of white paper around the face.  I have an idea of what I want to do with the background – something funky and abstract!  I was also envisioning tentacles.

First I need to finish the face, before concentrating on the background.  Most of the face is finished; it’s just the lower left side that needs to be completed.

For this portrait, I referenced a photo in a magazine.  I took great liberties with the face – changing the face structure, eye placement, nose size, jaw line and lip construction.  I also took great liberties with the coloring!  The magazine photo was just a normal face with normal coloring.  I wanted to create something more interesting with really hyped-up colors.  So I mostly just referenced the photo for inspiration.  I find it helps to get started – then I just let my imagination take it from there!

 Portrait idea, by Thaneeya

This is an idea of what I could possibly do when I finish this current work in progress. I scanned the drawing into Photoshop, then on a whim added the Fulgent Life abstract background, just to see what it would look like. I think it works quite nicely! I have other ideas for how I’ll finish this portrait though, so this version will probably only exist in the digital realms.

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Portraits

Lately I’ve been in the mood to capture strange faces in paint.  It’s been awhile since I dabbled in portraiture, so it was fun to play around with the paint and see what happens. 

Mister, by Thaneeya McArdle

Mister – 4″ x 6″ – Acrylic, Watercolor and Ink on Paper

Available for Purchase here

The inspiration for this painting was a face that I found in an advertisement in a Flemish magazine that someone gave me.  I never directly copy images that I find in magazines; rather, I use them as guides to get an idea of different face structures and shadows.  The guy in the magazine ad appeared very “masculine”, in the way that models in ads always seem to take themselves and their looks so seriously.  So I decided to take this portrait in the opposite route.  I had some fun by making his fictitious watercolor counterpart a bit more flamboyant.  He seems like a bit of a harlequin or cross-dresser. 

This dapper fellow has violet-ultramarine eyes, teal eyeshadow, and light red lips. His hair is punked out with red-orange and cream stripes, highlighted with a sienna pattern of circles and waves. He wears a fancy poofy neckpiece, and the rest of him fades into watery blackness. He stares fixedly at the viewer with his unabashed gaze. He certainly is an unusual specimen! The face and background were done in watercolors, the hair was done in acrylics, and the fancy neckpiece was done with ink.

Next portrait…

Melancholia, by Thaneeya McArdle

Melancholia – 2.5″ x 3.5″ – Watercolor on Paper

Available for Purchase here

My previous explorations with watercolors have tended to involve quite precise, controlled lines and shading, so I was eager to explore the more fluid and watery possibilities of the medium, in order to evoke a more emotional viewing sensation.  This portrait was fun (despite the sadness of her face!) and I look forward to pursuing the more ethereal and emotive qualities of watercolors even further.

This is an ACEO portrait of a sad, female face, done in watercolors. The eyes were painted in a crisp, clear style, whilst the rest of the painting was done in a more watery, fluid style.  Sometimes it’s nice to create images that come purely from the imagination, without using a photo or solid object as a reference point.  It can be quite liberating.

What are ACEOs?

ACEO stands for “Art Cards, Editions and Originals”, and refer to artwork that is 2.5″ x 3.5″ – the size of playing cards or baseball cards. They are fun, tiny, collectible works of art!

Last portrait for the day…

Portrait for Mark, by Thaneeya McArdle

Portrait for Mark – 5″ x 7″ Acrylic & Glitter on Paper

This painting is the one peeking behind the still life in this photo.  As I explain in the photo caption, I hate wasting paint, so I normally work on several paintings at once.  This painting was created in tandem with my Two Pink Cupcakes photorealist painting and my Summer Harvest abstract… three very different paintings created in the same time frame, using the same materials!  This portrait is quite fun (goofy even)and carefree.  As with the Mister painting above, I used a magazine photo as a reference point for this portrait.  However, I took some liberties with the proportions of his face, and gave him a bulging nose and really wide grin.  I also added some silver glitter nail polish to his eyes, for a bit of extra pizazz.  I decided not to sell this one.  Instead I’ll be giving it to my friend Mark.  I hope he doesn’t read this before it arrives!

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Lost & Found

Cleaning out my studio, I came across some old(er) paintings that had been left lying around for quite awhile. It was kind of neat to see them, because when I look at my old artwork (whether finished or unfinished), it usually brings me right back to “where I was” mentally, physically, and emotionally at the time that I was working on that piece. So in a way, each artwork, whether it’s a well-rendered drawing or a simple scribble, is like a piece of me. Some are long-forgotten until they accidently reappear in some form, and those are always exciting moments; it’s interesting to see the “old” vision with new eyes. In this way, my artwork almost functions as a purely visual journal because my thoughts and feelings at the time become so embedded in the artwork, moreso than I could have explicated in words. And it’s also probably one of the most “secret” journals possible, because no one can look at my artwork (or anyone’s artwork, for that matter) and really know what the person was thinking/feeling/experiencing at the time.

So anyway, here are two of the pieces I came across. Someday I would like to finish these! I suppose it’s just a matter of time. As the years go by I become more aware of just how many pieces of art I can create/finish in a week, month or year, and I have come to accept the realization that there will never be enough time to manifest all the ideas and visions that run through my mind. One lifetime is just not enough! But when it comes to creativity, I feel that it’s better to have too many ideas than not enough.

Portrait in progress, by Thaneeya

This one is a 5″ x 7″ portrait on wood panel, drawn in graphite and begun in acrylics. I started this over 3.5 years ago, and haven’t really touched it since. I think all the detail was too daunting at the time! But I look at it now and feel that it’s something I can handle, because my skills have developed enough in the past 3.5 years. Sometimes certain paintings just need to simmer for awhile until the artist has matured enough to finish it!

Still life painting in progress, by Thaneeya

This painting is 8″ x 10″ acrylic on wood panel, started at around the same time as the previous one, and probably set aside for similar reasons. I think I spent so long perfecting the silver bow that I just got sick of it for awhile (never was a big fan of monochromatics!). Now when I look at it, the daunting thing is all those shadows caused by the marbles on the plate. Well-blended shadows can be so difficult to create with acrylics, since they dry so quickly, thus requiring many layers of glazing (and many hours of patience!). I much prefer to work on all the tiny detail bits!

It was good to run across these old photorealist paintings, since I feel I’d like to explore that more in the upcoming year, especially continuing to combine photorealism with the abstract stuff and seeing how that evolves. As I said, I’ve got a million ideas, I just wish I had a million fingers to manifest them all!

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