Saturday, February 25, 2012

The Model


As a child I drew from imagination, although often inspired by something I had just viewed: an animated program or comic book/magazine. The simple but stylish animation of a Pink Panther cartoon I recall leading to many a sheet of paper. The elegant background art in a Roadrunner and Wiley E. Coyote episode... Fractured Fairy Tales, an epic frame from a fresh Mad Magazine. These medias would fill me with creative energy and send me into long minutes with pencil, ball point and felt tip pen (Flair).
The female figure is hard to argue with for visual and creative interest. I think more artists would use the figure in their work if A) it was more salable and B) they weren't so terrible at it. As a figure painter The Model is indispensable. Without using a real model, one can at best, draw the same (type of) woman over and over (see Frank Frazetta). The way a shadow defines the myriad terrain of each unique woman, changes enormously with the slightest move and differs from time of day and season is a mystery that is only revealed by the human eye and a helpful and courageous art model. Without a model (or the reference material supplied from same) I am a painter with a clutch of brushes standing before an incredibly blank or dull canvas.
This being said there are two camps with regards to the use of a model. One camp says the painter must paint the sitting (standing, laying, whatever) model on site. The other camp says, the pose captured of a live model is likely to be less interesting than endless possibilities captured with the camera's lens. The first camp says paintings from photos are "dead". The second camp say "oh yeah?", etc. One certainly doesn't want a painting to look like a painted photo, and as I wrote in a previous post, a photo will give you much more information than one will NEED for a painting. That's where the painter has to make decisions.
Back to the model for a moment, enough has not been said. Beyond being given the information that a painter needs to begin working, a model gives the painter energy and fire. This combined with technique is what makes a painting worth viewing.

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