Painting of Simian Ongarian: February 2008 Archives

This continues from my previous post here.

So I've finally finished the drawing.

cam1g.jpg

 

The trees in the background are a bit funny - i.e. skewed to the left and look like they're leaning a bit. But I don't care as I'll correct that when I do the actual painting.

 

When I finished the drawing I decided to trim the paper by a few centimeters on the right hand side. I though it would make the composition 'better' proportioned. Also I was in a particularly black mood that day so I put a black dog to the right of the picture - drawing the viewer into my dark world.

 

cam1h.jpgThe next stage now is to do a watercolor sketch of the work (maybe A3 size).  But I'll start that in the next few days (I hope)

 

Continues on here

This continues from my previous post here.

Ok after a nice rest and a very long fifteen hour sleep I have finally got down to doing more work on the drawing.

 

 

cam1f.jpg 

As you can tell I've nearly finished it. I just need to fully define the trees and the bank and try to figure out all the compositional details needed. The more details I have the more busy and interesting the picture will be (I hope).

 

Anyway, I'll see how it all pans out when I attempt to finish it by Friday.

Next post.

Continues on from here

So, after a few days rest I decided to work on the drawing some more - on Sunday morning at around 3am. I was using the same pen as before and continued on very slowly building the picture up.

 

cam1e.jpg

 

I finished drawing Simian and his boat and then had some fun filling in the details of the water. I then tried to start drawing the boats in the background but was a bit tired. Too much wine had its affect and I couldn't seem to draw a straight line - I eventually resorted to using a ruler to steady my shaky hands. After 20 minutess of trying this I've decide to go to bed.

 

 

More drawing tomorrow. I hope.

Next post

This continues from my previous post here.

Ok, I had the main ideas sketched out using the felt tip pen and I knew roughly how to proceed. I would have Simian in the foreground, the lake behind him and trees and buildings in the distance.

 

The next stage of the painting would now proceed with a detailed ink drawing on paper. I put do a highly detailed sketch of all the elements of the composition in preparation for the actual painting.

 

The pen I was using was a Staedtler technical pen - nib width 0.1 - I could have used a dip pen but I wanted the thinness lines possible. Also as I was doing this in bed, I didn't want to mess the bed sheets with any spillages.

 

(I stayed up late yesterday so decided to stay in bed until late into the afternoon to recover and also whilst I was there - prepare this composition.)

 

cam1d.jpg 

So I concentrated on getting the drawing of Simian correct from the outset. I was trying to define the head and eyes and draw a bit of the shirt he was wearing - introducing folds, creases and wrinkles.

 

 

 

This took the best part of an hour and by that time I was even more tired. So I'll probably leave it for after the weekend and continue with this on Monday. Or maybe do some more on Sunday in the early hours of the morning. We shall see.

Next post.

So I was out last Friday with my old friend Simian Ongarian. We decided to have a boat/punt trip up the river Cam and get in some sites and have some fine wine and a picnic.

 

    cam1a.jpg 

We were crossing one of the backs when I decided we'd "drop anchor" for a bit and I could do some drawing. I did an initial sketch below using pencil on paper. The punt was fixed to the shore via an iron chain - so the boat was a bit wobbly, but I managed to refine the drawing in several stages. I used a very hard pencil initially to get a very weak line. The pencil's I used were Derwent pencils on a Cotman sketch pad.

 

We then had the picnic finished off some wine and cheese - and then and I went home and had a sleep. After waking up in the afternoon I went over the initial sketch with a felt tip pen to get the major forms.

 

cam1b.JPG

I then decided to block in the rest to get an idea of how I would begin to paint.  I carefully sketched the boat and houses as the main view and had the trees in the background on both sides to frame the picture. This was all done using a felt tip pen using broad strokes so I could get my arm moving. Basically I was preparing myself for the actual job of painting which would probably start in a couple of days - depending on how I felt about the composition. cam1c.jpg

The next post is here.

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This page is a archive of entries in the Painting of Simian Ongarian category from February 2008.

Painting of Simian Ongarian: March 2008 is the next archive.

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