A Gentleman

A Gentleman

A Gentleman

This painting was a quick 1-day deal which took over a week to dry… If you saw my Facebook page no doubt you saw me complaining about it. I think it was due to a new yellow paint I used in the background. Everything dried quickly in a couple of days except for that yellow corner. By Monday I was getting worried it would never dry in this humidity (it’s the rainy season now) so I left it under the air conditioner for 2 days. That didn’t help very much, so yesterday I put it outside in the sun all day long. That did a good job, and after one more day of sunning it, it was finally dry. I actually painted a pair of chickens — his wife is on another panel — but the other one is not dry enough to scan yet. Perhaps another day sitting in the sun will do the trick.

It’s a pretty simple piece because of its size. It’s on a very small wood board and I did it for a show/competition next week based on this size image. Hopefully I’ll be able to post the other panel tomorrow. They look pretty good side-by-side. In fact, I think they would make decent men/women restroom signs.

Fukuiraptor at Nishiyama Koen Station

Fukuiraptor at Nishiyama Koen Station

Fukuiraptor at Nishiyama Koen Station

The latest in the Fukuiraptor Riding the Train series is finally dry enough to scan, though I think I got a few speckles of titanium white on the scanner glass.

Nishiyama Koen is a famous park in Sabae city, and one of the more popular destinations among residents of Fukui prefecture. It’s a small mountain (or a very large hill) with a park on top. The mountain is covered in various flowers which bloom at different times of year, and is the pride of Sabae city. It’s also home to the city’s red panda mascots, who live in the small zoo on the mountain top. I’m sure Fukuiraptor would want to go there, if nothing else to see the red pandas (and maybe to eat them).

Process is Everything

I’ve been pretty quiet on this blog recently, due to the fact that I haven’t been up to any thing particularly interesting recently. I’m working on a handful of projects, but I generally don’t post anything about a project until it’s finished. Well, not today!

I thought it would be fun to post my next Fukuiraptor painting at the stage it’s in now. Have a gander!

WIP - Fukuiraptor at Nishyama Koen Station

WIP – Fukuiraptor at Nishyama Koen Station

Last October when I was working on the A-Yokai-A-Day project a lot of people said I was insane to paint a new one every day. That may be true, and I did lose a lot of sleep that month, but the fact is that monsters are easier to paint than real things. The anatomy is made up, and our eyes can’t really tell the difference. Plus, the yokai were basically one monster on a fun textured background.

Realistic pictures (or at least semi-realistic) are a lot harder to fool the eye with. As you can see by the sketch, I have to take a lot of time drawing all the linework on the architecture with a ruler, and though you can’t see them now there are also many guide lines all over that board helping me to measure accurately. With buildings, you can’t fake the perspective by much or else our eyes will tell us something is wrong. Maybe we can’t identify what it is, but our brains and eyes work together to tell us it’s not natural. Dinosaur anatomy is a bit easier to fool people with, but it still does involve lots of study. I have a ton of dinosaurs toys that I use as reference, and for movement ideas I watch the crows in the rice paddies outside my window — I always imagine that is how dinosaurs would watch. And finally, human beings! They’re the hardest thing of all to draw, because even the slightest anatomical mistake and your character will look like a diseased or disabled person. Perhaps it’s part of our genetic heritage that we are able to read emotion, intention, even health in even a single glance at another human being — but this is also the artist’s greatest challenge. There are two ways to go with this problem: you can either spend years and years practicing until you can produce anatomically perfect figures like masters of painting and illustration, or you can simplify the character until it’s an abstract human form, like cartoon or anime characters. I tend to prefer a slighty-cartoonish but still anatomically human character, which isn’t as taxing as painting a realistic human but still requires a lot of anatomical work.

My process for these goes like this. First, I gather my reference materials. In this case, going to the local train stations and gathering photo references. After I have an angle/viewpoint that I like I do thumbnail sketches to decide the forms, then a larger rough sketch to confirm how everything fits on the paper. Then I do separate sketches of the dinosaur from my toys, and the human from other reference shots (in this case my wife). Then I scan the 3 sketches and blend them together in GIMP on my PC. Then I use a ruler and basically very carefully lay out the architecture and then the figures onto the final board, spray-fix it, and put a layer of matte medium on it for a little texture. After that I’m ready to paint.

There you go! That’s how I generally work with most of my paintings, thought sometimes I do more or fewer steps depending on time and purpose. This process takes a bit of extra time and preparation in the beginning, but it means that the final stages of the painting are a lot less stressful, and it usually pays off in the end. It takes a while for the paint to dry, but I’ll post the final version of this once it’s complete.

Fukuiraptor at Nishitakefu Station

Fukuiraptor at Nishitakefu Station

Fukuiraptor at Nishitakefu Station

Next in my series of Fukuiraptor riding the local Fukutetsu train line, our friend visits Nishitakefu Station, the 2nd station on the line.

I compressed this file at a higher resolution for the web, so the detail is a little cleaner than the previously posted one. Scanners can pick up a lot of detail, but computer displays aren’t so good at viewing very fine detail without zooming in, so again it’s a little less pretty than it is in person.

I have done back and re-uploaded a higher res version of the previous Fukuiraptor painting as well, so go back and take another look. It should be a little more impressive this time.

Fukuiraptor on Takefu-shin Station’s Platform | 武生新駅でフクイラプトルその2

Continuing from the last dinosaur-in-a-strain-station painting I did, here’s a fukuiraptor on the platform of the local line with some schoolgirls. Pretty self-explanatory.

Fukuiraptor on Takefu-shin Station's Platform

Fukuiraptor on Takefu-shin Station’s Platform

This one was done in oils rather than digital like the last one. Unfortunately I really couldn’t do a decent scan of it no matter how I tried and how I adjusted the file afterwards, so the image above looks kind of washed out and strangely colored. The actual piece is a bit more vivid. I’m trying to decide whether to continue the piece in oils or digitally… looking at the physical painting I want to continue the series in oils, but when I look at them on the screen, the digital one looks far crisper.

Update: I’ve reuploaded a higher resolution image. The detail of the oil painting is a bit clearer now.

武生新駅でフクイラプトルその2一番最初のフクイラプトルの絵はディジタルで描きましたが、今のは油絵で描きました。これも武生新駅です。

Chickens of the World: Mutiny (The Swashbucklers)

It’s been a long time coming, but finally the paint is dry and I was able to scan this huge painting. It took about two weeks to paint, and I’m sending it to Nagoya for a gallery tomorrow, so I was able to scan it just in time. It took 9 separate scans and a lot of stitching to put this image together, so the color isn’t entirely uniform in this scan. Other than that, I hope this picture speaks for itself. And I hope it’s been worth the long wait with no new artwork. You can click the painting for a larger version.

Mutiny (The Swashbucklers)

Mutiny (The Swashbucklers)

And here are a few details of the individual chickens:

Japanese Landscapes

I mentioned these paintings a little while ago but they’re finally dry enough now that I feel confident putting them on my scanner. These three landscapes were done of places around me in Japan where we took my family after they came to Japan for our wedding — the famous Todaiji down in Nara, the not-so-famous Mt. Hino in Fukui prefecture, and the even less famous teahouse Yokokan in Fukui city.

Yokokan, Fukui

Yokokan, Fukui

I love this teahouse. It was burned down in the World War 2 firebombing of Fukui, but rebuilt in the 80’s when the foundations were discovered underneath a road. It’s in such a beautiful neighborhood, and it is one of the most tranquil places in Fukui prefecture. If you ever come to Fukui, you should go there.

Mt. Hino, Echizen

Mt. Hino, Echizen

Also known as “the Mt. Fuji of Echizen province” (by I-don’t-know-who), Mt. Hino is a huge mountain that towers above Echizen and is always beautiful. If you’ve been reading my blog since I lived in Takefu, you’ll know that I’ve loved Mt. Hino since I first saw it. So this is one of my favorite views of the mountain, from the Hino river.

Todaiji, Nara

Todaiji, Nara

Todaiji is probably the most famous landmark in Nara. It’s an enormous wooden temple which houses an enormous seated Buddha. The park by Todaiji is famous for its tame deer which will walk right up to you and bite you over and over until you throw food on the ground and run away while they’re distracted.