August 29, 2005
Look out! He's got a brush!
Well, a virtual one anyway. Okay, to be sure, I do have some real ones too, but I haven’t touched them in years. Painting is pretty messy, and the condo doesn’t have enough room for me to have a dedicated studio. Not that it’d be worth it anyway, since I’m just a dabbler. So I’d been meaning to try working with digital painting for a while, but never got around to buying any painting software. And then over a year ago, Mark blogged about ArtRage, a free painting program for Windows and Mac OS X.
I tried it out, but found that it didn’t make drawing with a mouse any more easier, and in fact the makers recommended using a graphics tablet with it. And so I finally bought a Wacom tablet, and I’m very glad I did. It came bundled with a bunch of software, including procreate Painter 7. This was a much more sophisticated program than ArtRage with features that I really wanted to use, so I tried learning it but kept getting frustrated with the user interface. So I bit the bullet and upgraded it to Corel Painter 8 (choosing 8 over 9 because I wasn’t sure my old computer met the system requirements of the later version, and because I’d read that most of the usability issues were addressed in 8).
It’s still a bit of a learning curve, but I’ve gotten to the point where I can satisfy my urge to scribble without having to invest that much time in setup or cleanup, which was pretty much the goal. And as I’ve mentioned earlier, art is competing for my time with a plethora of other interests.
But the neat thing about abstract art is that it doesn’t take too long to get something that looks kinda cool (I whipped this up while sitting on the couch, watching/listening to various music videos). Plus, as you might have guessed, I’m a big fan of Wassily Kandinsky, specifically his Blue Rider period. Indeed, I have a huge print of his “Improvisation ‘Klamm’ Ravine” piece on my living room wall (although my favorite piece is “Composition VII”, which is the background wallpaper for my iBook). I’m not as fond of his later geometrical work. And I also like Willem de Kooning. Shouldn’t be surprising, given my interest in jazz.
I’m not going to pretend that I’m some great talent, but I have taken a few art classes and also read a couple of books, which is far more than I can say about photography. And I thought this came out pretty interesting enough to post here. I’ve also uploaded it to deviantART, but it doesn’t seem to be drawing much attention.
I won’t go into much explanation of what I was thinking when I painted this, as that kinda spoils the point of art. But I just thought I’d point out that this is not a completely abstract work. Not sure if it’s obvious or not. It looks obvious to me (especially from the thumbnail), but when I showed it to Erika, she couldn’t see what it was. She guessed it was the Flying Spaghetti Monster, which has been amusing us greatly as of late (I first heard of it from Hank, and you can read more about it at WikiPedia). But that’s not what this is.
Of course, now that I’ve mentioned the FSM, that’s probably what all of you are going to see in this. Argh. Well, I’ll be sure to try and paint it next, I suppose.
August 29, 2005 01:47 PM in Art | PermalinkLooks like you picked a good tool for the job. GIMP is a source-only GNU project for just about any platform. Inkscape seems to be a quality GNU project for vector graphics. One of these days I’d like to dabble with more free apps like these. Check out Wikipedia’s Comparison of vector graphics editors and Comparison of bitmap graphics editors.
Oh, and yes, your work is obviously NOT the FSM. I think the thumb does indeed give it away quickly. Very insomniatic (I know, not a real word).
Posted by J. J. at 09/01/05, 08:47 AM (link)