Sunday, September 27, 2009

Tyrone at the Art Students League


Tyrone held one pose for the afternoon on Saturday, posing in sessions of 20 minutes each with five minute breaks, seated on a high stool in front of an old plaster bas-relief. James McElhinney's class is focused on drawing, the figure and anatomy. The class runs from 1 pm. until 4:30. These four drawings, each done with a 6B pencil, represent one afternoon's work.

Note: image enlarges if you click on it.

Friday, September 18, 2009

Looking across Oyster Bay from Center Island


Beautiful weather this week and clear skies. This is an abridged and edited view that comes at the top of a small hill on a weekly bike ride I do. I'm not a sailor, so I don't know for sure, but the boat off in the distance looked positively 19th century.

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Figure drawing, year six




Laetitia has turned her back on you.

These were done with a 7B pencil, the top drawing in two minutes, the drawing below it in the course of roughly an hour, in three twenty-minute poses, punctuated with five-minute breaks.

I've been going into the Art Students League in Manhattan on Saturdays or Sundays now for six years. Before that I tried briefly going in one week night each week but it was tough fighting traffic and trying not to get into class too late. Weekends are better.

I drove in for a few years. It was especially nice when I had a Sunday morning class just after the city revoked parking fees under the campaign that people shouldn't have to "pay to pray" on Sundays. But after a year the rest of the world figured out that parking in the city is free on Sundays and now I'm convinced that ghouls circle the city at midnight on Saturday nights waiting for the clock to strike and grab their spaces.

I did take the summer off, although most years I have continued in one class or another.

I'm of a mind to take a sculpture class but the only weekend class offered in sculpture at the League is one in which students work life size. For a guy who lives on Long Island that's a bit daunting. I'd like to bring my work home when it's finished and I'd prefer not to have to contract with a mover to do so.

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

The sketchbook project




The Sketchbook Project, as it was called, invited artists to fill rather small, modest sketchbooks and submit them to a traveling show. I did as requested and to my surprise the show traveled quite a bit this year. Perhaps you saw it in one of the following venues:

Atlanta, GA, Art House Gallery;
Washington, DC, Museum of Contempory Art DC;
Philadelphia, PA, Chris' Jazz Café;
Boston, MA, Laconia Gallery;
Chicago, IL, Antena Gallery;
Chicago IL, Art Source Gallery;
St. Louis, MO, Soulard Art Market;
Brooklyn, NY, 3rd Ward Gallery;
Atlanta, GA, Museum of Design Atlanta (MODA);

The Art House Gallery is all about staging large participatory exhibits like this. Their current project involves having as many artists as possible fill a handful of tiny canvases which are then exhibited mosaic style in the Atlanta airport.

Fun stuff.