Showing posts with label IMC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label IMC. Show all posts

Thursday, June 08, 2017

IMC 2013 -- The Illustration Master Class

I love the IMC so much!!!  A week of wallowing in fantastic fantasy art!

Check it out:  Illustration Master Class IMC Website

They always sell out right away, so don't hesitate.
A core group of top-notch teachers working in traditional, digital, comics, gallery, children's book illustration:  Rebecca Guay, Boris Vallejo, Julie Bell, Donato Giancola, Dan DosSantos, Greg Manchess, Scott M. Fischer.  Often with Iain McCaig and James Gurney.  With a main Guest Instructor, and many dropping by to give talks and lectures.

IMC 2013 had Mike Mignola as Guest Instructor (although he had to leave a few days early).

A list of assignments to pick from to work on during the week (held in Amherst, MA, in June), is given out beforehand.  We bring materials/supplies/computers to work on.  Live and eat together.

Around 100 students.

Auditorium for Lectures/Presentations--
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Crits on the first day, with 3 or 4 of the faculty--
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Lecture on Shooting Reference, with Scott Fischer and Donato Giancola having some fun--
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Some of my rough sketches for the "A Midsummer Night's Dream" assignment--
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More detailed sketch of Titania and Oberon--
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There are some models/drawing/painting sessions... this one has James Gurney doing some painting--
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Boris Vallejo--
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My oil painting, on 18x24" masonite, at my workstation--
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Diana Harlan Stein, working on her Captain Nemo painting--
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We were in the first floor painting studio.  There was also a room upstairs, and another room just for digital (darker and no paint allowed!)--
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Row of easels--
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Greg Manchess, painting--
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Iain McCaig, Greg Manchess, and Donato Giancolo looking at artwork--
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Scott Fischer, painting--
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Donato Giancola, painting--
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Diana Stein, painting--
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Rebecca Guay, painting--
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My painting--
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End of the week, display of work and sketching in everyone's sketchbooks--
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Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Illustration Master Class (IMC) 2012

I'm at the IMC (Illustration Master Class), all week.
http://www.illustrationmasterclass.com/



Core instructors are:
Rebecca Guay
Donato Giancola
Boris Vallejo
Julie Bell
Dan Dos Santos
Scott Fischer
Greg Manchess 
Irene Gallo
and last year's guest instructor, Ian McCaig, is back again.
Guest Instructor for this year is Brom.
Doug Gregory, AD for Blizzard Entertainment
James Gurney, guest instructor from 2 years back, is visiting again to do demos and lectures.

Before we arrive, we get the assignments.  There are a lot of cool ones this year: 
Tristan and Isolde
Tarzan and Jane
Old Man's War
... a YA story (can't remember name)
... and a few others.



I chose the "Tristan and Isolde" assignment.  Going for the Romance!

We are to make thumbnails and bring sketches for a crit on the first day.

There is an online student network were we can ask questions, post images, and arrange shared shuttle rides from the airports.  I was busy reserving one of those on the way out for the afternoon arrivals (there were 5 of us), during the days before... But I actually did work up some sketches... No thumbs, though, bad me!  And as usual, I had to work on the sketches a bit more on the plane to Mass.

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We signed up for a crit sessions with a set of instructors... So here are Rebecca Guay, Dan Dos Santos, Greg Manchess and Ian McCaig doing crits. 

These are the BEST crits ever.  Nothing nasty.  Just lots of great ideas to choose from.

We are encouraged to shoot reference.  There are lights set up in the Lecture Hall between lectures, and students bring stuff--like this full suit of plate armor.  And other students will put it on to model it for other students.  Everyone has work to do, but there's a serious amount of fun and cooperation.
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We choose from two painting studios and one no-paint allowed digital room to set up our stuff.  And the instructors set up, too.  They come around and help students and also do demos and work.  Watching people like Boris Vallejo (here) and Julie Bell paint is just amazing.
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Lectures so far:
Iain McCaig's Beginner's Boot Camp
Shooting Reference
Art of Greg Manchess
Manchess: the Talent Myth
Dos Santos:  The art of...
Iain McCaig:  Visual Storytelling
Art of Brom
Gurney: Composition
Gurney: Light and Color

Demos:




Donato's paper mounting method
Gurney d
Dos Santos painting from the model
Figure model for gesture poses
Manchess--painting
McCaig--monsters

I spent two days on my sketch, got it mounted on board the third day and did some underpainting...  Two days left to oil paint...!!!

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

Illustration Master Class-- Day Five--Fri. June 19

Sorry for the being slow with posting on this (Dad went into hospital briefly for an angioplasty--all is well, no worries). Anyway... back to the IMC! On Thurday, I'd finally got my image on board (Clayboard 18x24), so I tore through the underpainting... I had to pretty much be careful to keep the image since the non-pigment ink had floated off during the wet-mount method and was VERY faint (and green!--used to be black!). I used burnt sienna acrylics, I think. I'm usually a burnt umber type of person, but was thinking of Boris's and Julie Bell's lighter-toned underpainting...

Here I am looking a bit manically at Diana Harlan Stein who was taking the photo over my shoulder...


Finally, finally, finally... Friday, I actually squeezed out some oils... all brand-spanking-new W&N tubes. We had a list of basic colors to buy, and that's what I had. I was a bit confused about which mediums to use and tried linseed and turp with a smidgen of cobalt dryer... although I decided I didn't like the dryer since it totally seized up the paint way too quickly (I probably had used too much! --also, the stuff is horribly toxic). I was told that Boris and Julie didn't like using any mediums at all... and I was discovering that if I painted thinly enough, the oils would dry pretty well as it was. I still continued to use the linseed oil/turp mix, though.

Rebecca Guay was down in our Studio and she came by to paint a bit on the dress, saying that it was possible to glaze with white... she put a bit into the water and smudged it around, saying it could be misty-looking... That helped a LOT, since I totally suck at drapery (even with my photo-ref) and I didn't have a clear idea of how I wanted the painting to look. I usually don't work at all so high-key... it was weird (I was still totally at sea!), but cool (love trying new stuff!).

Basically, the underpainting, with some blue in the sky/distance (cobalt and ultramarine), some green in the leaves and some light flesh tones on her face and the thin layer of white on her dress... the white glaze over the underpainting created a sort of violet cast to the shadows. So yes, I caught up quite a bit in one day.


Greg Manchess and Scott Fischer did some duel-painting on Ruth's piece. It was amusing to watch and attracted a crowd of on-lookers--


There were putting in some color on the banners--


The after-lunch lecture was by Special Guest Jon Foster. We couldn't take photos or record. But in the general presentation that was shown the first day, and run again the last day, I snapped a few quick pictures of his (very recognizable) work, here's one--


He gave an amusing/interesting run-down of his past (community college, jobs, Parson's in NY, being OCD-ish, going to RISD, working in art store while looking for work... for years, finally getting stuff in Aboriginal SF mag., meeting other artists at cons, Spectrum 3--a big break for him, TSR, Wizards, Tor books, Dark Horse, Vertigo, National Geo., etc.)

He did the cover for Brandon Sanderson's MISTBORN, (which is where I first noticed his art, several years ago)--


And this book (which I also read, but can't remember who it's by... GREAT cover, though!--


And the sequel--


Dunno where this lovely piece is from--


He stayed to do a Digital Demo--a sketch of a head from ref., using Painter and Photoshop.

Boris and Julie presented the after-dinner lecture. No photos allowed, either. And wow, I was SO sleepy!!! but had to stay awake, of course! They do their underpainting in acrylic. Block in dark areas in oil, use turp as medium, pick off paint with turp. Use #1 W&N Ser.7 Round Sables for faces.

They've been together over 20 years, over 100 pieces done together. Found their body-building background very helpful.

by Julie (from the same instructor's art presentation)--


by Boris--


Late night in the Studio... Charles Vess inked his Lady of the Lake piece--


And started painting--


Student work, Studio A, Princess of Mars piece--


And another--


Student work, Digital--


Tired, but everyone was still painting until the wee hours of the morning. Money was collected and pizza was ordered again. This time I ordered a bottle of diet coke--which I totally needed (caffeine-wise!). Only one more painting day to go on Saturday before the showing of the work on Sunday, and the clean-up... Everyone was pretty frantic...

TO BE CONTINUED LATER...

Wednesday, July 01, 2009

Illustration Master Class-- Day Three

Report on the Third Day of the Illustration Master Class... We had our Guest Instructor, Michael Whelan come in the day before, but today, after lunch, would be his lecture/presentation. I'd been a fan of his work way back when he did that great image of Elric, and he certainly influenced my early work...

He's at the back, ready to comment on his images...


So, on the previous day I was checking my photo ref and working on refining my sketch, and by Wednesday, I had it as refined as it was going to be. On Monday, I'd shot refs (using L. A. William's fabulous equipment and with the excellent Zelda as a volunteer model). On Tuesday, I'd had Charles Vess look it over (he drew an alternate composition on tracing paper and told me about how most people were getting the legend of the Lady of the Lake wrong--that she was an earth goddess and had gifted Arthur with the sword in order to do good, but he used it for more typical things, like battle; I told him I was thinking of the Lady as a Celtic Water goddess--the sort they may have been sacrificing precious objects to when throwing items into certain bodies of water... which, I thought, wasn't too dissimilar an idea). Donato Giancola had come by and suggested that I not move the composition about so much so late in the day and said that perhaps I should have the lake/water more prominent--as in coming down from the background, in a rivulet sort of thing, so her feet and the sword and the roots at the bottom of the picture could be in water. I looked at Charles and he said he loved hearing alternate suggestions. And since I really didn't want to change everything (after having shot refs and all), I went with Donato's suggestions.


Unfortunately, the copy shop still had their printer out of order. Ruth Thompson's printer was working, but it only took up to 19" and I wanted as large an image as possible on the 18"x 24" masonite board... which would mean doing a bit of tiling (printing on two pieces of paper and cutting them irregularly so that the two pieces would jig-saw together along less noticeable lines... but that sounded like a pain to me. Drew Baker had his 22" printer but the ink ran during the mounting process... but they thought there might be a work-around if we spray-fixed the ink. I thought it would only take the morning to get that all done, but it took a while to get my file sized, then to make an appointment with Sarah who was running Drew's printer... then to borrow some spray fix from some nice guy... anyway, I didn't get a print on my Strathmore 500 series single ply Bristol until late in the afternoon. Diana Stein helped me with Donato's mounting method...

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Donato demonstrating his drawing transfer method with a student's work--


Wet Mount Method
1. Wet down print or sketch (whatever you're mounting)--both sides, with paintbrush or soaking in water.
2. Apply Matte Medium with brush to board (masonite or whatever) and back of paper. Cover corners and edges well. Make sure excess water is gone first.
3. Use roller/breyer lightly to get out air bubbles and excess medium (do not squeeze it all out or it won't stick properly). [my suggestion, since I've done this before: roll from center outward to get ride of air bubbles)
4. Brush medium on top (unless wanting to use watercolors as an underpainting/painting)
5. Sand down when dry and add and sand 2 more coats (150 to 200 grit)

Note: Tom Canty used to transfer his drawings by reproducing his detailed sketches photographically in a sepia tone and mounting them on Strathmore board... I'm not sure if he wet mounted them or not, though. I learned a similar wet mounting method from my teachers at Art Center and used it with drawings reproduced by a sepia tone blueprint printer (they could make oversized copies way back in the days when they didn't have printers/copiers available).
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I think only a few others were still in the sketch stage... so I was pretty behind! Ah well. But I was fairly sure I could catch up, since I'm not a very careful painter! Heheh.

So, after lunch, Michael Whelan was speaking-- Diana Stein was fan-girling a bit (and rightly so, I thought!), but I have also been a huge fan. He was THE book cover artist for F/SF for most of the years I've noticed such things. I've got prints of his, and several framed book cover comps and a sketch by him, collected over the years when he was at his prime.

He does very finished comps, here are some examples--


Here's a sketch/comp--


The finished piece--


He said the ADs were the ones who kept picking his centered more iconic compositions. He'd generally supply a number of skeches/comps for them to choose from. Used whatever medium he felt like, but works mostly in acrylics. Also likes Gessoboard by Ampersand.

He sometimes uses airbrush, mostly for flat areas, no details. Often uses free-hand, hand-made frisks made from mat board or other material, so that the edges aren't hard. Here are some of those--


Some other tools he sometimes uses--


He also recommends THE ARTISTS WAY by Cameron--


After the presentation and Q&A, Michael set up in Studio B and worked on/demo-ed a monochrome horror piece--


He also brought lots of prints of his work which he gave away (graciously signing them for us). I grabbed three--one of which was a poster of the Elric I always liked. Diana had me go up there to take a photo of her with him. I thought it came out nicely! (Heheh, she was later miffed at me when Michael was heading towards our table to sit, but then I pointed him towards Rebecca Guay, who was waving him towards where she was sitting. No way I'd feel comfortable sitting across from Mr. Whelan, but Diana would have loved having him by her. Ah, well! He WAS still at the same table, just farther down... )

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The evening was lovely--students and instructors were throwing frisbees on the green in front of the commissary and studio Halls.

The 7pm lecture/presentation was made by Donato Giancola. He's one of those artists I totally noticed right away--almost from his first covers--or so I thought! But Donato started with his beginning work (a fun retrospective way back to his childhood) that showed me he actually had a few covers on some secondary lines that I hadn't seen. He seemed to me to have a meteorically quick rise, coming out of art school right into book covers, but again, I was wrong... the guy still put in his time and has got to be one of the most motivated and hard-working artists around... Thoroughly impressive! His love of doing art and wanting to inspire it in others was palpable.

A private commission detail... scene from a battle (Agincourt?)--


The full triptych, he worked an image of the buyer in, just like artists used to do in the middle ages--


Very early influences (childhood): Star Wars, Tolkien and D&D, Romita's Iron Man comics.




He mentioned that with the advent of all the digital programs, it was no longer so necessary for an artist to leave room for type on book cover art. Diana had left 1/3 of the image open at the top in her sketch for the Princess of Mars assignment, but was told she shouldn't worry about that, which surprised her. Apparently the currently thinking is just to create a good painting, as Donato said in his lecture. And for the purposes of our class, it was better to make a good portfolio piece, anyway, since it wasn't a true book cover assignment. I have to say, this is a huge relief, since the 1/3 business always made for crappy compositions without the type in there, I thought!

And then it was Studio Time from 8 to 10... or to 1am or later/earlier for the students...

Boris, sitting back and thinking about his painting--


Julie, working on the figures (they are both just ace at rendering fleshtones!)--


Greg Manchess, adding a bit more to his painting Wizard of Oz--


Student, Ruth Thompson, had her under-painting finished--


Other students with their drawings/paintings on board (more Lady of the Lake pieces)--


Students, Painting away--


One of the Barbarian vs Polar bear pieces--


I was furiously lathering matte medium on my board... I didn't even bother with the sanding phase (not worried about the texture so much). I just wanted to get my ground ready to paint ASAP...!


MORE REPORTS TO COME

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