Showing posts with label art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art. Show all posts

Sunday, July 29, 2012

Spectrum Fantastic Art Live!

Yeah, I'm trying to catch up, which is just impossible for me...  Anyway, back in MAY, the folks at the Spectrum:  Best in Contemporary Fantastic Art series of art books held its first event in Kansas City, MO:  Spectrum Fantastic Art Live!

Here's the website:
http://www.spectrumfantasticart.com/spectrumfantasticartlive/

Brom was one of the special guests, he gave a slideshow overview of his career, which was, of course, fascinating--
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Brom had lots of amusing stories about getting to work for TSR and his time there.  From the outside it seemed like they must have loved having him there, shaking things up a bit and keeping the art interesting and fresh, but he thought management felt he wasn't quite fitting in with his muted palette and dark, edgy characters.

"the secret to making it cool:  put an eyeball in a hand"

management:  "your elf looks gay"
brom:  "i posed for that"

gets called by the people doing Scooby Doo and goes he goes in thinking, "you want me to be Shaggy" 

Sculpture by Virginie Ropars, based on Brom artwork--
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... She won the Spectrum 19 Gold Award for Dimensional Art at the Awards Ceremony.

Another of Virginie Ropars' sculptures--
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Batmobile displayed outside--
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Random photo--
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Special Guest Iain McCaig (creator of concept art for Darth Maul, etc.) gave several interesting presentations.  I picked up one of his books and a sketch by him.  Yay!
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The Art Department had their booth across from ours--
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Diana Harlan Stein and I shared a booth.  It was by the stage where the Guests made their presentations, which was very cool I got to see them all.  There were also panel discussions, but I missed those.
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More random booth photos--
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Spectrum Art Awards--held in a fabulous old theater.  Announcing the nominees for Best Dimension Art, Virginie Ropars, winner of the Gold.
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Spectrum Art Awards.  Donato Giancola, one of the presenters.
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Spectrum Art Awards.  Michael Whelan announcing Grand Master award given to James Gurney--
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James Gurney was there to accept (as were most of the artists.  He also gave presentations during the day, and had a booth where he did demos.

Cool dance/art show between the awards, by the Quixtotic Fusion dance company with Android Jones (one of the Special Guests)--
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The hotel bar was buzzing afterwards.  Exhibitors I heard from reported "Eh" or "OK" sales, but were enjoying other aspects of the event.  That was pretty much my experience, too.  The show and the Awards Ceremony were well-organized and definitely worth going attending.

It was announced that Spectrum will try it again next year.

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...!!!

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

SPECTRUM Fantastic Art LIVE!

I've been trying to sort out my convention schedule for 2012 (luckily I don't have regular events early in the year, eh?).

New this year is the new SPECTRUM Fantastic Art LIVE Exhibition in May.
http://www.spectrumfantasticart.com/spectrumfantasticartlive/

Is anyone else out there going? Just curious!

Saturday, July 18, 2009

Illustration Master Class-- Day 6 & 7--Sat. & Sun. June 20-21

Saturday was our last painting day, but it was also full of lectures. Argh!

One of Rebecca Guay's originals sitting around in Studio A--


At 11am was a lecture by Shelly Bond, an Editor at Vertigo Comics. Ever since its inception, I've been a huge Vertigo fan. Even though my comic buying is way down, I still like some Vertigo lines, such as FABLES. So this was quite exciting for me.

Shelly talked about what went into the production of FABLES--script, pencils, etc. and about what she did as an editor, coordinating it all, making a guide for where the word balloons would go, overlooking the pencils and panels and general look of the pages. She showed examples of pages, talked about balance of positive and negative space, numbers of closeups per page, two-shots (2 characters in a frame, speaking to each other--and the need to vary the angles). Lettering. Inking (looking at page balance). Color ("color will not save black and white"). Covers (likes it graphically pleasing, tells a story, sense of motion).

Talked about where she found artists (web, published things, conventions). Tips for Portfolio (presentation neat and orderly, less than 10 images). Prefers getting postcards 4x a year rather than .jpgs via email (which I thought was interesting). Advice: Know your potential client (do your research), make yourself available (may be needed to fill in for someone in an emergency), go to conventions and know how to submit your work for reviews.

She was just FULL of interesting and specific information and advice about comics work.

Piece Rebecca Guay was working on--


After lunch, there was a lecture by David Saylor from Scholastic (publisher for US Harry Potter books, largest children's/YA publisher in the world). Talked about picture books (32pp, 16 spreads, typically), the graphics book line (doing a BONE novel by Jeff Smith). Talked about advances against royalties(usu. 1/2 up front), schedules, how children's tends to be a bit more stable in this sort of economy, about other rights (foreign--as in, they will try and sell them). Agents (depends on the agent). Showed samples of various projects/books he was involved with. Recommended: Society of Children's Book Illustrators. Portfolio: likes to see a strong portfolio, maybe a full book MS with illustrations or illustrations from a classic tale. Talked a bit about narrowing market for books--mostly Barnes and Nobles and Borders (maybe Target and Walmart) these days. Covers need to work for THEM--like maybe one guys working for B&N who calls all the shots.

Both Shelly and David were roaming about the Studios in the afternoon, looking and talking with students.

I'm pretty sure this was Donato's... it was being worked on in Studio B, upstairs, so I never saw him actually painting on it--


But a day or so later...!!!--


Sadly, I had a very slow painting day on Saturday. I guess all the lectures didn't help, either. There was more lectures to come, too. But I felt like I was slogging through molasses compared to the day before. Luckily, Donato came by to suggest using some purples in the shadows of the shield... I really had no clue about what reflective light colors to use! And I painted in some golds in her hair and on her dress... and a wee little boat in the distance (Arthur coming for Excalibur???). Her dress and feet and part of the sword and the shield are supposed to be under water, but I hadn't managed to work on that yet...


To my left was Mark, working on a Princess of Mars image--


Karen's Lady of the Lake painting (she was on Ruth's other side). Karen's only been painting for a few years, so I think she did a fantastic job during the class--


Diana's Princess of Mars cover painting--


Jennifer Oliver's lovely Lady of the Lake and Arthur--


Irene Gallo's lecture was after dinner at 7pm. She, of course, is the very well-known, award-winning Art Director for Tor Books (also Forge and Starscape). And she'd been involved with the IMC all week, taking pictures, talking, wearing L.A. William's suit of plate armor, etc. She says she finds artists through annuals such as Spectrum and Expose and Soc. of Illustrators, Mailers (postcards with links to websites), Networking and Conventions, Bookstores (seeing published work), online communities(conceptart, cga, gorilla), recs from other artists.

Portfolios: 8-12 pieces (you are hired on your WORST work), consistency important, show work that answers your client's problems, show work you want to do/get, show great figure work (figures in motion, multi-figures).

Websites: should update regularly, no pop-ups, no indecipherable thumbnails, keep it fast and easy and sharable. Watch over-doing water-marks. Interviews: Impress, don't embarass; don't apologize, don't argue critiques, thank you notes are excellent excuses for a reminder/sample. She likes art blogs, for ease of access.

Irene has an excellent blog on blogger. Lots of photos and posts on the IMC and other things. Google her to find it. (And scarily enough, she had one or two photos of me/my painting, identified by name, which totally freaks me out. Nah, not really. She was actually very fun and nice! ... still... wish I had finished killer piece to show, but ah, well--my competitive days are over... I just don't care as much now! I even sketched in her book, which is something I avoid like the plague... told her the story of how everyone sees those sketches, such as other artists and ADs and some sketches can just be horrible--and that I'd actually done one of those horrible sketches that you just want to tear out of a book, but can't--and it turned out the guy became an AD later!!! Nightmare!!! although he hired me, but still!!!)

Again, this was upstairs in the other studio... but I think Greg Manchess was starting another painting since he finished his group of Steampunk Oz piece. Definitely a Princess of Mars, this one--


Student--Steampunk Wizard of Oz--


Another--


A Lady of the Lake--


Charles Vess ran an unscheduled lecture/slidshow after midnight on Fantastic/Fairy Art--lots of illustrators who are not commonly seen, many from the golden age, a few modern. He just happened to have some images with him and was just running through what he had. Said he often gives similar shows, but swaps the images out, so it's different every time. Surprisingly, even though most of us were frantically trying to get as much painting done, since it was our last opportunity, the lecture room was pretty full! It was a nice break, actually. And we all loved seeing more images! (I took audio notes--still haven't transcribed any of those yet, so no details, sorry!)

I think pizza was ordered again, but I can't really remember! I know it was getting light whe I finally walked back to the dorm rooms!!! ...and there were still people in the studios painting...

Our dorm hall--



SUNDAY---LAST DAY:
10-12 we had to clean up the studios, leaving only our paintings on the easels.

1-5PM Open Studios with public invited to view. Also Yolanda LeRoy, Editorial Director of CharlesBridge Publishing and Susan Sherman, Art Director of Children's Books at CharlesBridge Publishing were going around looking and talking with students.

Hall with our studios and lecture hall--


Also... we all had these lovely red-bound gold-embossed IMC-logo sketchbooks to take notes in. And to collect sketches in, apparently. It started that morning... I grabbed Charles Vess early! (a fairy on a wood/demon) I love his work so much! Casual-seeming lines started to form. And piles of sketchbooks. I tried not to go crazy, since I knew none of the instructors would want to do 80 or so sketches. I just tried to get a few. Also got one from Dan DosSantos (elf girl head) and Greg Manchess (dragon head). And I got a few random sketches from the other students.


There was a closing ceremony where students had organized to give gift packages to the instructors. And we'd all contributed sketches for Rebecca Guay, and signed cards to all of them, and for Sarah, Rebecca's assistant. I tried to write about how much some of these artists had influenced me in the past and how they continued to inspire me, but I doubt it came off half as well as I wish it did. They really are so amazing, there really aren't words!

Rebecca's work from the intro-video. She didn't give a lecture this year since there were just too many people speaking already--


Dinner was quiet. We were all exhausted! People were hanging out in the studios, still, afterwards, doing a bit of final clean-up, putting all the easels and chairs away, etc. And still sketching!!!

I was doing very scribbley dragon head sketches... they kept getting looser the later it got! I was SO tired... but in a good way... Also sad, and didn't want it to end, even though we were all cleaned up and just needed to sleep and pack up for flying out the next morning.


One of the students fell and badly sprained her ankle while running around trying to show her samples to the publishers on Sunday. Students accompanied her to the Emergency Room and made sure the CharlesBridge people saw her work and samples and got her painting and items back to the dorms, and grabbed dinner and breakfast the next day for her.

Otherwise, things slowly wound down. I took a shared ride to the airport on Monday (organized through the class forum, beforehand). Had flight delays and changes along the way, but made it home at midnight (three hours more if you don't count the time change), and slept all day on Tuesday.

And that was it!

I hope there is an IMC next year, and if there is, I'll certainly try to be there.

In the meantime, it's not quite over. They've told us we need to finish our paintings by Sept. 1. I still haven't worked on it, but am thinking about what I need to do on it...

Sunday, July 05, 2009

Illustration Master Class-- Day Four--Thurs. June 18

During the class, I hadn't managed to get to sleep before 2 or 3am, so I started to skip breakfasts in order to sleep in to at least 8:30. I ran into town (well, across the street and down a block or two) to hit Starbuck's and the drug store to pick up some paper toweling since the studio had run out the day before, so I didn't want to count on it.

I had slapped another coat or two of matte medium on my board... too much in a hurry to sand the texture away. And all too soon it was Lunch. And after lunch--two special guests gave a presentation on Fantasy in Picture Books, children's book illustrators Dennis Nolan and Gary Lippincott.

From "Dinosaur Dream" (I think!), by Dennis Nolan--


Dennis Nolan presented his work first. Influences (from childhood onward): '50s Golden Books, Dr. Seuss, Rackham, Parrish, Little Nemo, Mad Magazine, Frazetta, Sendak, Jason and the Argonauts. He did a variety of jobs (magazine covers, album covers, book covers, etc.) before becoming more well-known for his picture book work.

From one of his earlier books, "Castle Builder," which was done all in pen and ink, stippling it all (he said he estimated the number of little dots he'd made at about 2 million).


Example of his making a model for reference--




Painting in progress... watercolors, I think--






Then there was Gary Lippincott--


Uses watercolors, liquid frisket (an art of its own, he said), works typically light to dark, back to front, wet washes to dry brush.


Example of in-progress (actually, unfinished) painting--


The after dinner presentation was by the wonderful Charles Vess, who did the art for the original graphic novel version of Neil Gaiman's "Stardust." I think he said he did this image before the book/story was finished--


Influences--Prince Valiant (comic strip), Beardsley, Pyle, Wyeth, Rackham, Dulac, Kay Nielsen, etc.
Example of painting progression--








In Studio B, Dan Dos Santos did a Life Portrait Demo, working on several quick monochromatic sketches first--


Then mixing colors--


Boris and Julie had moved up to Studio B to continue their paintings--



Greg Manchess had original art tacked to the walls of Studio A--


Charles Vess started working on his own version of the Lady of the Lake, penciled then inked within a day or so, and he also had originals on the walls of Studio A--


Students painting in Studio B, another Lady of the Lake--


... and one of the SF covers--


Working furiously, students in Studio A... Pizza was ordered around 10 or 11pm... work continued way into the morning hours (with all the presentations and demos, there was little other time to work, aside from all night, but the energy was high, although there were early-birds who slept and came in early in the morning. Most people were working traditionally whether they were digital artists or not, taking advantage of all the instructors who worked in oils, but there were also stations along the sides with tables for those working digitally--


To be continued... SEVERAL MORE DAYS TO COME!!!


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I hope all the Americans had a fab 4th! Fireworks, music, picnics, barbeques... what's not to like???