Wednesday, July 27, 2011

100 DRAWINGS IN 100 DAYS - WALK LIKE AN EGYPTIAN


as i was trying to wrack my brain for inspiration for a new Blythe drawing, i was poring over images of historically powerful women, or women of note in historical times, and i came across an image of the late Elizabeth Taylor in her role as Cleopatra. what a beautiful woman she was, and timelessly lovely. my mother used to say that there are two types of beauty in women - "chocolate box pretty" and "classical beauty". the former being that of the glitzy, sparkly, shiny and attractive (on the outside, but lacking inner substance) women, and the latter is the type of woman who was just stunning all the way around, just like Elizabeth Taylor.
now, i did some research on darling Cleopatra, and while she was a very influential woman historically, she came from a period in time when families were in-bred to preserve the integrity of the throne... ahem... wow! that's all i got to say. wow! (and YUCK!) yes, her first two husbands were her brothers (again, YUCK!).
her third partner, to whom she bore a son, was Julius Caesar, who was not related (hail Caesar!!), and finally Mark Antony, to whom she bore 3 children. when Mark Antony committed suicide, Cleopatra followed suit by way of a bite from an asp...
Cleopatra was renowned not only for her leadership in the Egyptian Empire, but more notably her liasons with extremely powerful men, which were testimony to her aesthetic and sexual appeal. go Cleo!

Sunday, July 24, 2011

100 DRAWINGS IN 100 DAYS - IN MEMORY OF AMY WINEHOUSE


this morning, it was all over the news that 27 year-old singer Amy Winehouse died last night. i have to admit, i wasn't her most devoted fan, but i did enjoy her music, i loved her beehive hairdo, and the woman had an amazing voice! unfortunately, as her famous song "Rehab" tells the story, she was known to indulge in too much drink and drug from time to time.

but she's not the only young singer to have lost their lives at the ripe old age of 27 - joining "club 27" are Janis Joplin, Jimi Hendrix, Kurt Cobain from Nirvana, and Jim Morrison from the Doors. so, in memory of Amy Winehouse, today i decided that Blythe should be a famous singer with an even more famous beehive hairstyle...

100 DRAWINGS IN 100 DAYS - DREAMING OF JEANNIE


it was just a couple of weeks ago that i was watching the morning news show, and they had the stars from "I Dream of Jeannie" in the studio, and i could not believe how Barbara Eden had aged so beautifully! who knows, maybe she has had some work done, but she looks amazing. and what a racy little number she used to wear on that show from back in the 60's!! they were talking about how she could expose her belly, but not her belly button - that was taking things too far (if only they had known then what we are like now!)

i've decided, at least for a while, to feature famous women or female roles in showbiz history in my 'Blythe' drawings, simply because i think we all get a bit of a kick out of seeing how someone else might portray that figure. and i will be drawing the Blythe dolls for a while, possibly moving along to other things for the rest of the 100... or maybe not. i have yet to decide... so stay tuned.

Thursday, July 21, 2011

100 DRAWINGS IN 100 DAYS - pocahontas takes a ride with thelma and louise!



or as my mother calls it, 'de Shan and Laura', after my niece was visiting from the US last year. she rented a convertible and we drove around and stirred things up a little bit during her trip here, much like the two in "Thelma and Louise"... we did not, however drive the car off a cliff. this is a very good thing.

but this movie was a classic tale of female soul-mates, and if you haven't seen it, do make the time to check it out on DVD. Thelma is played by Geena Davis, while Louise is played by Susan Sarandon, and they both do an exceptional job of portraying 2 women throwing all caution to the wind and just living their lives the way they want to. and i think that's what my niece and i are doing at present as well. sans the driving off the cliff. again, this is a very good thing... "Somebody said get a life... so they did".


it is a well-known story, thanks to Walt Disney, about the little indian girl, Pocahontas, whom i have chosen to illustrate Blythe-style. i have just read a little bit about her life, and it was most definitely interesting to say the least. she was born around 1595, and her nickname was 'Pocahontas', meaning 'frolicsome'. in her tribe, they used to have many personal names, for use at different times or in different contexts. among the many things that happened in her life, Pocahontas was captured by the english and held for ransom to release the english prisoners held captive by her father Powhatan, the paramount chief of Tsenacommacah, and she was considered a princess. there is this story about her rescuing the englishman John Smith, which has been under dispute, but she then went on to meet and marry the englishman John Rolfe and bear a son.
there was just so much about Pocahontas in the blurb on wikipedia, but this is just a smidgeon of what you will find there. at any rate, she has always been portrayed as a beautiful woman, and here i have drawn her as a beautiful Blythe.

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

100 DRAWINGS IN 100 DAYS - CHASING THE WHITE RABBIT


i think it is fair to say that my favorite all-time children's story is the classic "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland" by Lewis Carroll. (Lewis Carroll was a pseudonym later adopted by Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, which happens to be a play on his real name: Lewis was the anglicized form of Ludovicus, which was the latin for Lutwidge, and Carroll an irish surname similar to the latin name Carolus, from which the name Charles comes*). in 1865 the book was first published, after much begging from a family friend's daughter, Alice Liddell (after whom the book was supposedly based upon), and other friends of his. the story was whimsically created in his head and told one day while he and a friend took alice and her sisters on a rowing trip, after which she made him promise to write it down for her.

so there is a little bit of history about the famous author and his most famous story. but i have to say that of all the movies made over the years, my favorite was the recent Tim Burton version. spectacular.

i even have an entire series of paintings entitled "chasing the white rabbit", which were derived from my similar experience as alice's with the search for the ever-elusive (fill in the blank...). mine was abstract painting. my elusive "thing" that i could never quite get a hold of, was to be able to paint a proper abstract. but i think i eventually did - and they all sold!

at any rate, i always try to include a little alice everywhere i go... even my cat is cheshire.

*courtesy wikipedia

Sunday, July 17, 2011

100 DRAWINGS IN 100 DAYS - the bunny gave it all away...


it's really hard to not get too attached to these drawings during and after i have worked on them. that is particularly true for this one... when you create a piece of work, you are building a relationship with it while you're working on it. every song that plays in the background, every phone call you take, every interruption or smell, taste and sound is recorded inside the artwork. and what amazes me, is that when i hear a song or a tv commercial jingle that i listened to while drawing, it reminds me of the drawing. and likewise, when i revisit a drawing much later on, i can remember what song or tv show was playing... (just for the record, i was listening to the movie "punch drunk love" in the background while i drew this one!)

so i am quite fond of my little Moulin Rouge girl here, with her amazing costume and the cutest little bunny toy.

100 DRAWINGS IN 100 DAYS - giddy'up cowgirl and the screen siren


a friend of mine was admiring my Blythe doll drawings, and was commenting on how i should do a jessica rabbit (blythe), from the movie "who framed roger rabbit". she was the notoriously-sexy-lounge-singing-vixen who was married to roger rabbit, had a gorgeous unmovable mane of flame red hair, purple satin gloves, a fire-truck-red sequined gown with a slit up to "there", full pouty lips, and the most amazing curves that you needed to slow down for... and when i grow up, i want to be jessica rabbit...

so this is the Blythe version of the classy "jessica rabbit".






ah, good times. i grew up on a quarter horse ranch when i was a girl, and i just could not wait to get my own horse, so i could get the cowgirl hat with the pretty band, the boots with the engraving and multi-colored leather detailing, the fancy saddle, etc. such a girl. but i guess it's always there in the girliest of girls that you have to look good while you're out there stomping around in all that horse poo.

now for this blythe drawing, i used two different types of pen. her eyes were so light that my 0.1mm pen was still too thick to cross-hatch her eye color, so i used a much smaller ball-point that i could use to "shade" in her eyes. i'm happy with how her eyes turned out, and yes, her hair took forever!

Thursday, July 14, 2011

100 DRAWINGS IN 100 DAYS - punk blythe and too much mascara...




it's nice to be caught up. i get so busy with all the stuff in my head, and i end up forgoing the drawing for the little bits and pieces of information/pretty pictures/new recipe on the internet, that by the time i get to really work on my drawing, it's bed time... i'm like a moth to a flame when it comes to finding new interesting things on the web. it really out to be called the "spider web" of information...

i'm starting to realize that the level of tones depends on exactly how you hold the pen. and i didn't get that until i bought the new pens in .1, .2, .3, .5 and .8mm. it's even more easy with a plain ball-point pen, but don't tell my old college professor that!

i received a comment on my Pinterest page today with regard to what sort of dolls these are, and that his daughter would just love them. unfortunately, they are hard to come by and they are quite expensive. and of course, i want one... don't we all now... but you can find them on ebay, and try pinterest for a beautiful custom doll.

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

100 DRAWINGS IN 100 DAYS - WE CAN DO IT!

i found when i was doing this "100 drawings in 100 days" in 2008 (wow, yes it's been that long, but 2009 and 10 were just too crazy to be able to do it), that each day my drawing was improving. and i am finding this to be true this time as well.

i'm not bragging, just making a statement. as an art teacher i try to gently instill in my students the importance of practice, and how (i know this sounds corny, and i sometimes want to hunt down the person who coined this phrase and do things to them that would ensure i get my face on the front page news) 'practice makes perfect'. in this instance, i find that my practice is greatly improving my skill. and that makes me a very happy little artist. and that makes me want to do more.

so, here i am on day 9, and i still have today's drawing to do as soon as i finish posting the last few days' drawings here.

they are becoming increasingly more interesting to me, and this last one ("BLYTHE - WE CAN DO IT!", above) i just adore! i have seen this old WWII poster a thousand times, and now this war wife is here in all of Blythe's glory! how about that. i'm always intrigued at how good art is often mimicked by other artists, as a tongue-in-cheek gesture that keeps the spirit of the original piece alive.

and here we have "BLYTHE (KNOWS FULL WELL THAT SHE IS A CHAMELEON AGAINST THE POLKA-DOT WALLPAPER)".

i just love the costumes that people are making for the Blythe dolls nowadays. when i was a little girl, my dollies had home-made clothes (maybe that's why i went on to study fashion design before i studied art...). and they usually were just tied on, not made with buttons and little velcro closures.









this little one is just darling. "BLYTHE (FEELING A LITTLE BIT SMUG ABOUT HER FANCY NEW HAT)".

Monday, July 11, 2011

100 DRAWINGS IN 100 DAYS - MORE BLYTHE


i'm still so amazed at how these dolls have such a huge impact on the world of grown-ups! myself included.

these little beauties though really do have the most expressive eyes, and i have to admit that i love drawing eyes. anybody's eyes. it doesn't matter.

and i'm still floored at the fact that it's on already - my friends and i are planning which charity to donate a percentage to, and all the things i will add to this year's show.

anyway, these two dolly's are (top to bottom) "BLYTHE (ROCKIN' THAT BEANIE AND MATCHING SWEATER SET THAT GRANDMA GAVE HER FOR CHRISTMAS) and "BLYTHE (SUPER-STAR WITH THAT FRESH BED-HEAD LOOK)".

i'm just loving my new pen set... very nice fine lines....


so, how do you feel since reading this blog?