Archive for the tag 'Painting'

I never said I love you: Process 7

Ninja July 2nd, 2009

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Hallo, hallo you lovely folks! Thank you so much for all your encouragement and little love notes as I nervously go through prepping for this show. You have no idea how much it means to me.

For her hair, I layered burnt siena, raw siena, and raw umber acrylic paint around thin strips of ochre underpainting.

Here’s where I left off at 3 AM. Seemed like a good stopping point. Stay tuned for more obsessively detailed hair painting. ~__^

Much love back atcha,
Ninja

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I never said I love you: Process 6

Ninja July 1st, 2009

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Thanks for joining me as I go about my painting process and prepare for my first group show.


Fixed the crooked jawline and added some tone with light acrylic washes.


Evened out the eye levels. Then I built up and layered the shadows with thin acrylic glazes.

Next step: hair! I can’t wait. ^______^

Happy painting,
Ninja

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I never said I love you: Process 5

Ninja June 29th, 2009

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Good morning!

Long story short, I royally messed up the original painting. So I stripped off all the varnish and gave the guitar a through sanding and started over again. It’s the same concept, just a different, softer pose.


Happy painting,
Ninja

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I never said I loved you: Process 4

Ninja June 22nd, 2009

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I hope you had a great Father’s day over the weekend! I had fun hanging out with my Grandpa and dear Dad. ^______^ I did manage to squeeze some painting in too.

Payne’s Grey stain.

Sketch using HB and 6B pencils.

Blocking in the highlights with white gesso.

Bring on the Payne!

Happy painting,
Ninja

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I never said I loved you: Process 3

Ninja June 19th, 2009

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Good morning! Here’s where I left off at 3am. Oh, insomnia is fun when you’re painting. ~__^


I scored the sides of the guitar with an x-acto knife and snapped them off. Their drippy glued edges were messing with the silhouette.


Back panel: I’ve never painted on plastic before, so this surface was unfamiliar. The paint was beading up when applied, and it flicked off easily when it dried. Incredibly frustrating. So I lightly sanded the back, applied a coat of translucent matte medium, and applied white gesso over the figure. All of this was done in an effort to give the surface slight tooth so the paint will stick to it.


Now for some painting. I’m using Payne’s Grey (one of my favorite colors ever) and white gesso to block out the values.


Front panel: I’m letting the wood putty set overnight and then more sanding and staining. I wasn’t happy with the current walnut stain, so I had a custom stain mixed for the face of the guitar.

Happy painting,
Ninja

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I never said I love you: Process 2

Ninja June 17th, 2009

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Here’s the ballpoint pen sketch that I completed last night. I hope this better illustrates the placement of the hole (over the heart). My previous sketch had some drawing flaws, especially in the face.

I’m still using this pen that I stole from my hotel room while staying in Australia. It’s my favorite ballpoint pen. It has really even ink flow and produces delicate, thin lines. I’m going to miss it when it finally runs out of ink.

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Swan Lake Skateboards

Ninja June 16th, 2009

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Look what came in the post today! My Swan Lake skateboards are finally printed, and on seven-ply maple no less. ^__^ This first set is going to my wonderful model, Tanya.

Here’s the process if you missed it. ~__^

Happy painting,
Ninja

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I never said I love you: Process 1

Ninja June 16th, 2009

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Oy, I’ve been superbusy prepping for my first group show with Kaki King! Just to give you fair warning, this will be taking most of my time, and my posts will reflect this. Kaki requested process shots, and I don’t like to disappoint. I do hope that you’ll stick around for the ride. ^__^

What I want to do is to meet twelve amazing artists, give them each a blank guitar, and let them go wild, creating anything their heart desires. The theme of each piece would be the title of one of my songs, and my only artistic contribution would be to paint my fingers and play the fretboard (wherever it ends up) as I would during the song so as to create a visual representation of where my hands travel.

Everyone tells me that my playing is best witnessed visually—so this is one interpretation of that statement. At the end of this project we’re going to display all of the guitars in a gallery and throw a party with performances and perhaps the finalization of the last guitar.
– Kaki

When I first heard about the project, I was convinced that I would work around one of my favorite Kaki tunes, Happy as a Dead Pig in the Sunshine. Upon seeing the broken guitar, I opted for I never said I loved you off the record Until We Felt Red.


I never said I love you, lipstick

I know I look like  dork. Safety first, of course!

After striping the varnish, I sanded the face down to a smooth finish.

Then continued to sand with even finer sand paper (with the grain, naturally).

First coat of stain.

Tracing the body.

At one point, I was deluded into thinking that I could easily put this guitar back together. I had got uberstrong wood glue that wouldn’t swell and lots of clamps. Unfortunately, whenever I pinned one section down, another would pop and bow out. I even enlisted the help of my brother with no success. So there’s massive sloppy globs of glue all the sides of the body and back panel that I had to scrape off. I didn’t get it all off, but eh, I figure it adds character and texture.

Rough sketch.

Pencil sketch for the top of the guitar. I know it’s probably very obvious (or it will be once it’s painted)—I worked the portrait around the guitar’s hole (where her heart would be).

I am incredibly lucky to be working with my favorite Suicide Girl again—the lovely Miss Tanya Dakin. Thanks, Tanya!

Painting the back of the guitar with white gesso to give it some tooth. This back panel is not real wood, but some sort of laminate, which doesn’t accept paint too well.

I wanted the figure’s position in the back to mimic the pose in the front, both showing a 3/4 view of the face, hands clutching the body protectively, and expressing a bit of vulnerability/hurt.

I still need to fill up the front face’s cracks with some wood putty, sand it smooth, and add a few more coats of stain before I can begin painting it. Whew.

Thanks for reading!

Happy painting,
Ninja

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Illustrator: Casey Weldon

Ninja June 12th, 2009

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California native, Casey Weldon, is known for his whimsical visual wordplay and geeky cultural references found in his paintings. Casey spent his childhood reading and drawing comics. He studied at the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena where he graduated with honors in 2004. He now lives and works out of Brooklyn, NY.

The AT-AT is classic!

He latest show (see below) is on the virtual walls of the interactive gallery, 88Point5Gallery 1988’s online arm.  All his paintings are going for $250 or less.

Purchasing links
+ Casey Weldon’s prints, $23.00 each
+ Casey Weldon’s paintings, about $250 each

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Ketner and West are a dreamy pair

Ninja April 23rd, 2009

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Chicago’s Rotofugi Gallery presents an impressive dual show this month, Flower Parade by Jeremiah Ketner and Julie West.

Awake in this dream, Jeremiah Ketner

Parlay of flowers, Jeremiah Ketner

Secret nest, Jeremiah Ketner

The glowing garden, Jeremiah Ketner

Wonderfulness, Jeremiah Ketner

Best giraffe, Julie West

Going to a picnic, Julie West

Growing from the inside, Julie West

Really like cake, Julie West

Rollergirl, Julie West

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