Our famed watercolor group at the even more famous CandP Coffee shop has erupted with all sorts of rabbit images for Easter....and other furry beasts.
As usual, the class is composed of old hands and dudes (a Far West metaphor for Far West Seattle), and their individual progress was amazing. Mary, a gifted illustrator in her own right, jumped from working almost solely in line art to handling subtle glazes in shaping the form of a polar bear and a couple of very fine rabbits. Sara, a first time student, painted a brilliant hula rabbit while her mother Rebecca surpassed herself with a bunny in an Arts and Crafts mode. And Kim produced a jumpin' prairie hare. Wendy painted a hatted cat with attitude, Elizabeth painted a " Whoops! Stuffed bunny", Carol did a lovely liquid rabbit sketch, and Ingrid stole the show with her "Dressy chickens."
Ingrid
I wanted to focus on the qualities of pigments....staining, granulating and glazing, and the idea of furry animals seemed to provide a good vehicle. As you can see in my example below, the addition of raw umber (R), Lunar black (middle), or burnt umber (L) to a re-dampened (or if you feel gutsy, a wash) of raw sienna can give a nice "furry" quality. And, if you want to get down and "Durer", you can painstakingly render the dry under washes with strokes of pale gouache or darker strokes of watercolor
In fact, I started the first class with a print of an Albrecht Durer rabbit (circa 1502) and the whole unit has been devoted to the class experimenting with the qualities of pigments...underglazing, the subtle blending and textures of sedimentary pigments, and the advantages of using glazes over all to tie in different forms and values in a composition.....and, the use of negative space as an element in composition.
The last two classes were concerned with watercolors and colored etching of animals in illustration for children's books. We looked at the work of Tasha Tudor, Beatrix Potter, Tenniel , Rackham and Grandville, and contemporary work by artists such as Jane Dyer and Maurice Sendak. We noted how animals in costume, both as parodies of famous persons and as important additions to children's literature, has been a tradition of illustrators from the time of Italian grottescas through Victorian lampoons to today's Jane Dyer's charming illustrations.
Consequently,as a result of our discussions, I noticed some very fine animal fashions evolving in the latest class creations.
Perhaps next Tuesday, the class will surprise me with bunny bonnets.
Over the years, I've had a few animal fashion epiphanies myself. A waspish chantuse....a soulful (soleful?) fish flautist, a very hip daddy-0 goat......
Jazz Band © Jennifer McCabe Carrasco 3/28/ 2008
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