Sunday, November 15, 2009
Holly Smith's Lichtenstein- Pop Art Portrait
I confess I was surprised by one characteristic of Lichtenstein's art - the close up detail is, well, a bit sloppy. Not as intentioned as I would like to see. By intentioned, I am referring to the characteristic of a line that is totally confident. You can see this in the stoke of a pen or brush where the line starts with a clear intention, follows through with purpose and confidence and ends boldly.
I first saw the beauty of this in the lines delineated by a professional sign painter. He had painted thousands of 'A's in his career and the sweep and speed of his work was mesmerizing. The lines he created were so unique, so powerful.
I tried to accomplish this intentionality with Holly's portrait (my daughter). The lines in her hair for example are classic thick/thin inspired from ink drawings and comic art. The minimalism and the contrasts are pure Pop art as are the primary colors used.
By the way, I show here the Whamm panel as well as the original comic book panel from All-American Men of War #89, 1962 (DC Comics) that Lichenstein used.
Randy Bachman, Canada's Rock n' Roll Hall of Fame!
Since I can't do it through music, I chose to pay homage to Randy Bachman through pop art - after all, he is a Canadian superhero and deserves his own splash page.
First with the Guess Who, who became one of the biggest selling groups in the world and then BTO, Randy penned dozens of classic rock songs and memorable lead riffs, including Taking Care of Business to American Woman.
This painting on a 24" x 36" gallery wrapped canvas was commissioned for the Sapphire Technologies Charity Auction in November of 2009. The painting is signed by the artist as well as Randy himself.
Sunday, January 18, 2009
Optical And Other Illusions!
Most people would guess their system had been infected by some nasty new computer virus. Or their video card had given up the ghost. In no case would they think this was normal everyday computer behaviour and just ignore it.
But when our own computer system, in other words, our brain, goes into a similiar tail spin, we completely ignore the illusion and go on as if nothing has happened?
Most of us know this experience as a child. We spin around a few times, eyes closed, then drop to the grass. When we open our eyes and look up at the sky and trees, they are no longer rooted to the spot, the way we have always known them to be. They are now flying around us in a stomach lurching blur. The whole universe is spinning madly out of control – trees, building, clouds, everything.
We know this is wrong. Inaccurate. A gross delusion of some kind. So then why don’t we have ourselves checked in? Why do we just accept this new view of the universe so casually?
Researchers tell us we are born with a very powerful 'baloney generator' built right into our brain. It essentially runs 24/7. Rationalizes our odd behaviour. Makes excuses to protect our fragile egos. And fills in the blanks when information is missing. And that leads us to the reasons why optical illusions are so interesting and can be used by artists to make a statement.
The painting shown here, Hulk In The Fog #1 is an example of what I think is a fairly effective optical illusion. Because our visual cortex is used to processing blur, dust and smoke as a distance effect, whenever we see these visual clues we assume they are representative of the background. Using a simple splatter effect on most of the monster pushes him back into the distance. But notice the arm and hand, clearly outlined, seems to push into the foreground with much more emphasis than one would expect based on the information we have.
Our brain doesn't see the splatter as dots on the page. Instead an optical illusion of distance is created.
Painting shown is Hulk In The Fog #1 by Russ Smith, 24" x 36" January 2009, after Tim Sale's drawing of the Grey Hulk. To enlarge the image, please click on the painting.
Thursday, January 15, 2009
50 Year Old Printing Technology Celebrated!
Two comments then. First, he must have received immeasurable satisfaction from the work he did. What else would drive a person to spend 12-14 hours a day for decades perfecting his craft. Despite the low pay, the theft of his intellectual capital and the lousy managment he faced - he perservered. And you can see the passion in his work. There was nothing else he wanted to do with his life. How many people can say that?
Second. How much better would we be at our jobs or hobbies if we spent 10 lifetimes perfecting our craft? That's what Kirby essentially did. He started out with talent, within only a few years was recognized as tops in his field, but he didn't stop there. He took on more work than anyone else in the industry, worked under as many as four different pen names and worked in a variety of styles and genres.
The arc of Jack's career was truly unique. So much so that he created a new shorthand for graphic illustration, pushed envelopes in every direcion, built universes of characters that may well live forever.
But like I said, this posting wasn't supposed to be about that. It was supposed to be about registration.
Registration? Coincidentally, the cover for a recent Kirby prespective used a typical comic lettering style (the KIRBY above) with mis-registered coloring. Anyone who is interested in Golden Age comics is familiar with this problem. It must have driven artists crazy - to see their hard work messed up by a hurried colorist. But it is so much a part of the experience, too. Immediately that look communicates old comics, yellowing newsprint and raw artwork.
That's why in this painting of The Spirit, I intentionally 'mis-registered' the color on a part of his sleeve. It came so naturally to me I hardly noticed until I was finished, I was paying homage to 50 year old printing and coloring techniques.
(Shown on this page: Brave & Bold #1 in Acrylic on canvas, and The Spirit on canvas and Captain America #1 on masonite. If the titles sound like comic books, nuff said. To see a larger image, just click on the graphic.)
Wednesday, January 14, 2009
Pollock and Romita United!
The artist who made Spiderman truly a heroic figure though was Johnny Romita. He 'super-sized' Ditko's creation, fleshed him out, made him feel more substantial, more masssive and powerful. (No question - I'm going to get email now from the Ditko fans).
While working on a sketch for the Spiderman canvas above, I was struck by some of the limitations of comic art structure. You know, the hard ink line, the flat colors. Yes, there is a boldness about the color and shape of a typical superhero image that transcended the character. The hard black 'gesture-like' outlines light up my brain and the reds and blues boost the reaction. But I wanted more.
So I took a basic image of Spiderman and began playing with different settings for the background. And as soon as I added abstract paint backgrounds, I knew I had what I wanted.
This 'idea sketch' is based on using Jackson Pollock's "Number 8" (1949) painting as a background with Spidey up front. Yes, Photoshop is as important a tool as a good sable brush.
My apologies to both Tim Sale (who inked this version of Spiderman) and Pollock's estate. This was only an exercise in mashing genres and images.
(Painting shown here is Spiderman Abstract #1 2008 24" x 36" by Russ Smith. For a larger image, please click on the graphic.)
Monday, January 12, 2009
Edge Detection Software and Dopamine!
Poplar trees in the snow are a rich field for edge junkies. The painting in progress above is only one of several I am currently experimenting with, inspired by photos like this one, taken in late December at Birds Hill Park in Manitoba.
Gives your edge detection software a real workout.
Painting shown is by the author, Underneath The Snow #1, 24" x 36", Feb 2009. For a larger view, please click on the image. To purchase artwork, please send email.
Sequential Art Anyone?
The canvas I am working on here was selected from several issues of Hell Boy, drawn by Mike Mignola. Mike doesn't really play around much with line thickness, which is pretty unusual in the post-Kirby world of bold pop imagery. But I didn't really notice this until I started painting a page of his art onto canvas.