Saturday, March 20, 2010

Cartoons: 1975 - 2006

In 1975 I enter the Military Academy, among the many activities there I was part of the "Journalistic Circle", we edited a school newspaper, dedicated mostly to comment life inside the Academy, poetry, historic ancedotary, and of course, pull the leg of senior cadets and officers. There I got published some of my first cartoons.


In this one above are depicted the feelings of most recruits during their first field exercices. The one below was about the extreme vigilance measures that were taken during the military government to prevent terrorist attacks.


I swear Captain that I was sure he was a terrorist trying to introduce a bomb into the Chimmenney

Almost 30 years later I tried to 'resucitate' the humor, but this time using it as a way to see with a a very personal and crictic eye some aspects of the military life.
Below is a sketch in a notepad of a cartoon drawn probably during a break at the office.


Personally I liked more the office uniform rather than fatigues which most prefer so I tried to present my arguments here:
-I think this is the most comfortable uniform we have.
-I do not think so. I think the best one are the fatigues.
-How can you say that? The fabric is harder, all wrinkled, and boots ar more uncomfortable that shoes!
-To begin, you did not notice dirt, and I do not need changing shirt every day...


Unfortunately I lost the final version, but below there is a middle stage version during photoshop processing:

Here another one: I could not understand why you could not use an umbrella to walk from the parking lot to the building: it was not par of the uniform, but come on! how do you prefer arrive to the office all soaked? and the raincoat was too warm.


Also I never liked the winter office uniform, it was not very 'functional', just good looking. I lost the final photoshop colored version of this one. Anecdotically it circulated via e-mail and was quite popular among the people in charge of ruling and procurement of uniforms. Especially the head of that department. I celebrate their humor!

Monday, March 08, 2010

A graphic story left aside

I found drawings I did around twenty five years ago. By that time I sketched my last story, then I was very interested in comics, but also I was beginning to study engineering so "something's gotta give" do you guess which one did?
I have been thinking ever since on give a try on comic drawing, but my art creativity suffered in benefit of the sciences.

Saturday, March 06, 2010

Oil and Egg Tempera

My last work on last year's portrait painting course was a portrait of an actor. I wanted to learn how to use egg tempera, unfortunately I did not documented the sequence, but it was as follows:
1. Portrait drawing with charcoal.
2. Fix the charcoal with air spray.
3. Prepare the egg tempera. There are different methods, I use the easy one: mixing pigments (Sonnelier; burnt sienna and white) with the egg yolk (I used five eggs), I did not use any water on the mix (some recipes use distilled water, lineseed oil, etc.)
4. I applied the egg tempera to the background, then shadows and after lights. I had to work rapidly since the egg tempera dries very fast
5. The rest was oil painting, several sessions.
And the result is this:

Some try-outs on watercolor

Last year I was practicing watercolor painting, here now I present a little sample of my work with this technique:

I began with some invented scenes, and copying stuff from books



Later some sketches with live model (this one is the same of my second oil painting)

The house of a neighbor
A portrait of Andrew Wyeth from a photo I got from the Net
And finally, a small self portrait on Indian ink, watercolor, and some white to fix details.

Marcela, Oil and Alkyd paint

A new exercise on portrait painting using the technique of glazing, using alquidic paint, now I am using as model a photo of my wife Marcela I took during our honeymoon:

Step One: Charcoal drawing and fixing it with hairspray.

Step Two: Once the drawing is protected by the layer of hairspray give it a thin glaze with a mix of alkyd sap green and burnt sienna thinned with oil medium with a bit of alquidic medium.
Step Three: I begin to put color in it using only burnt sienna and white.

Step Four: I continue adding color, some green and blue to get in the mood, and then some glaze all over the painting with a mix of green and blue with oil and alkyd medium.

Step Five: I fix the size of the reflection which I had it wrong in the first step Continue adding painting to get more detail.
Step Six: I try to make the tones smoother and apply another transparent glaze.
Step Seven: I apply a local glaze on the reflection.

Step Eight: After another local glaze; the finished? Painting.

Even I am not fully satisfied with the painting I think it was a nice exercise. I still have to learn that what I have to do is exercises, not masterpieces, so sometimes among these exercises I might get something good.