Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Child

Drawn yesterday, from imagination.

Water soluble markers and metallic ink on white paper, about 6" x 7".


AUSTIN UPDATE:

22 comments:

  1. Dear Jean, your work is not just lines and colors combined in a senseful or even in an abstactive way. It sentimentalize its depth.
    Warm regards.

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  2. What's this sad little angel doing in your imagination? Cheer up. It's a lovely piece. It looks good with the newspaper border. There certainly is enough grief out there in the world always in the news. This could be a collage.

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  3. Thank you, Konstantina. Warm regards.

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  4. Linda, I have been hanging out in palaces and such and it has rubbed off. Not sad, just old, when life was on the whole much less jolly. Though I agree, there's plenty of tragedy today, as well.

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  5. Is that the metallic ink on the left? It makes modern an image that seems rooted in antiquity, as if the past has just been energized.

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  6. Silver ink. In a fiberpoint pen, from the stationers.

    The colored inks are cheap children's "very washable" pens, from the same source.

    Thought I could get by on this trip with just iPad, but missed paper too much.

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  7. This is so full of emotion I find it beautiful.

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  8. There are so many images in our heads. It is amazing when they get out.

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  9. Glad to hear I'm not the only one finding something melancholy (or angry? fierce?) in the child. I really like the sense of two aspects of children and/or angels. The silver-white lines cheer it all up, but I can't overlook the fading of that in the left part of her face. One of my favorites of yours!

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  10. very nice work you have a great personality, i like you so much

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  11. Lovely, the quality of your line and the advantage taken of what I assume were some happy accidents with the water soluble pens.
    I have been trying something from the imagination as well. Your work encourages me to be less literal with the process.

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  12. Seems very DeVinciish. Lovely colors.

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  13. The silvery swirls remind me of a garland. The child has a curious expression on his/her face. Can't pin it down. Gives it an air of mystery

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  14. Very endearing. I love that she lives in your imagination, and impressed that you could draw her form the same (an are in which I really struggle). I smiled when I read in one of your replies that you missed paper- there is just something about paper that it... comforting? familiar? energizing? Can't quite find the word, but I share the need!

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  15. Thank you, Anthony. You do a lot of this, and it does tend to amaze.

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  16. Thanks, Banjo. I am very fond of this child, too.

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  17. Thanks, Margaret.

    One of my heroes,
    . He often drew faces or features from his imagination.

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  18. And tactile, very important!

    Thanks, Minn.

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