DRAWING LIFE by fred hatt

2009/08/12

Cross Pollination at Green Space

Before going into the subject of this post, I will mention that this Saturday I will be exhibiting artwork and performing at “Summer Magic”, the fifth-anniversary fundraiser event for CRS, an important supporter of butoh dance, movement theater and healing arts in New York.  Info here.

Cross Pollination 02, August 2009, by Fred Hatt

Cross Pollination 02, August 2009, by Fred Hatt

Choreographer Valerie Green‘s lovely Green Space Studio in Long Island City (Queens, New York) overlooks the Manhattan skyline and the 59th Street Bridge.  Once a month Valerie hosts “Cross Pollination“, an open improvisational session in the studio where dancers, musicians and visual artists can practice their crafts while taking inspiration from each other.  For me it’s an opportunity to draw some dance and do some movement myself.  Many of the participants alternate between playing instruments and dancing or between dancing and drawing or painting.  Here are some of my recent sketches from these events.

Cross Pollination 02, June 2009, by Fred Hatt

Cross Pollination 02, June 2009, by Fred Hatt

Cross Pollination 03, August 2009, by Fred Hatt

Cross Pollination 03, August 2009, by Fred Hatt

Cross Pollination 03, June 2009, by Fred Hatt

Cross Pollination 03, June 2009, by Fred Hatt

Cross Pollination 04, August 2009, by Fred Hatt

Cross Pollination 04, August 2009, by Fred Hatt

Often the movement of the dancers at Cross Pollination is way too fast for me to draw the figures by observation.  I either construct the figures imaginatively from fragments observed or caught in memory, as above, or simply use the energy and fleeting impressions of figurative elements to construct abstract compositions like those below.  In these I’ve turned the paper to different orientations while working, so if you look at them from different angles you may be able to pick out recognizable body parts.

Cross Pollination 01, June 2009, by Fred Hatt

Cross Pollination 01, June 2009, by Fred Hatt

Cross Pollination 01, August 2009, by Fred Hatt

Cross Pollination 01, August 2009, by Fred Hatt

I know at least one other artist that often attends these sessions has posted her Cross Pollination work on the web.  Check out Irena Romendik‘s light-footed brushwork.

My drawings pictured in this post are either 18″ x 24″ (45.7 cm x 61 cm), ink on paper, or 50 cm x 70 cm (19.7″ x 27.5″), aquarelle crayon on paper.

2009/07/08

Museworthy-worthy

Check out my Independence Day drawing of Claudia on her blog, Museworthy!

2009/07/03

Alabaster & Obsidian

Filed under: Color,Figure Drawing: Models — Tags: , , , , , , — fred @ 14:49
Tragic Alley, 2006, by Fred Hatt

Tragic Alley, 2006, by Fred Hatt

Alley is an actress and a great professional artist’s model with strawberry blonde hair and alabaster skin.  In trying to capture the impression of brightness when drawing Alley, I use a lot of white crayon.  But clearly there are other color tendencies that I can see – pinks and yellows and pale blues.  These are not so much the surface color of the skin, which is pretty near white, but result from the translucency and reflectiveness of the skin.  Light penetrates below the surface, where blood flow gives it a reddish tone.  Other colors reflect off the satiny surface of the skin, picking up the colors of surrounding objects and light sources.  The slight yellowness is probably imparted by whatever low level of pigment (melanin) is there.

Alley, 2009, by Fred Hatt

Alley, 2009, by Fred Hatt

There are basically three types of melanin, the pigment that causes the spectrum of human skin tones and hair colors.  As the relative levels of red, green and blue in a computer monitor produce a wide range of hues, so the varying concentration of pigments create complexions we might describe as ivory, ruddy, olive, mahogany, butterscotch, cafe au lait, brown, and black, and all the hair colors from platinum blond and ginger through jet black.  The three pigments are black eumelanin, brown eumelanin, and pheomelanin, which is reddish.  Most hair-covered mammals have relatively little skin pigmentation, so scientists believe dark skin evolved as a protection against sun exposure and was later lost in populations that migrated out of the tropical regions.

The redness of blood in capillaries shows through the skin, as we can observe in flushing and blushing.  A model holding a standing pose for a long time may show a noticeably redder tone in the legs and feet, and sometimes in the hands if they’re hanging down, as gravity causes blood to pool in the lower areas.  In some light-skinned people you can see veins through the skin, especially around breasts, neck, shoulders and inner arms.  Veins have a bluish appearance, even though venous blood is deep red, not blue.  This phenomenon apparently results from the fact that the veins themselves absorb more light than other structures underlying the skin.  As most of the light that reflects back through the skin is reddish, the relativistic nature of color perception causes the impression of blue in these less reflective areas.

Jessi, 2009, by Fred Hatt

Jessi, 2009, by Fred Hatt

Of course sun exposure causes an increase of pigment in the skin.  The pinkness of the skin immediately following a sunburn is, as far as I understand, a result of inflammation in the capillaries, and so is imparted by blood, not pigment.  The increase of pigment we know as tanning follows more slowly.

Beth Sunburned, 2003, by Fred Hatt

Beth Sunburned, 2003, by Fred Hatt

Veins don’t show through very dark skin, but dark skin still has the qualities of translucency and reflective sheen.  Backlight that glances off the surface of dark skin can have a particularly vivid effect, as shown in this drawing where cool-toned window light comes from behind the model, Ken.

Kenneth, 2009, by Fred Hatt

Kenneth, 2009, by Fred Hatt

To my eye, dark skin often seems to take on a reddish tone in the shadows, and a golden tone in the highlights.  I think this has to do with the way the light penetrates the surface and reflects back.  African and African-American skin tones have an even broader range of hues than European or Asian types.  The model for the drawing below has a very dark complexion.  I was taken with the range of colors of light I could see in her skin, reflecting off the sheen, glancing through the edges, bouncing into the shadows.

Aimi, 2009, by Fred Hatt

Aimi, 2009, by Fred Hatt

I’m not medically trained, so it’s possible I have gotten some of my physiological facts wrong.  If you have better knowledge, leave a comment.

All drawings in this post are Caran d’Ache aquarelle crayon on gray Fabriano paper, 70 cm x 50 cm.

2009/06/04

Christophe’s Expressions

Weeping, 2009, by Fred Hatt

Weeping, 2009, by Fred Hatt

Christophe Nayel is an artists’ model with a specialty.  He has a remarkably expressive face and can hold facial expressions for a long time.  He did the pose above this past Monday morning at Spring Studio‘s three-hour session, twenty minutes between breaks.  He squeezed a wet tissue over his eyes to simulate tears, and made the expression real enough that his nose and eyes reddened.

Quite a few professional models develop the ability to hold challenging poses, and some of them can stay in stressful positions while maintaining a placid expression, but Christophe is the only one I know who contorts his face this way.  For an artist, it is both a treat and a challenge.  Most artists trying to capture facial expressions refer to photographs.  That’s how Norman Rockwell did it.  Getting it down directly from life is not so easy.  Some of the artists in that Monday morning class really got the feel of it, but many others weren’t even getting close.

Here’s Christophe in a more typical artists’ model’s pose, full-length and with a close portrait made during the same pose, showing a relatively neutral face:

Triumphant, 2005, by Fred Hatt

Triumphant, 2005, by Fred Hatt

Triumphant face, 2005, by Fred Hatt

Triumphant face, 2005, by Fred Hatt

In the standing figure above, his hair was being blown up by a fan, which somehow makes that drawing.

Christophe is from France.  Like many models, and like myself, his creative interests and efforts range broadly.  He’s a singer, songwriter, actor, painter, and film editor.  As a musician, he uses the stage name D-XRISTO.  He began modeling in New York on September 10th, 2001, a time that imparts a fateful aura to any kind of beginning.  You can check out some of Christophe’s work on his MySpace and YouTube pages.

Here’s one of my first detailed portraits of Christophe, from 2002:

Ruminating, 2002, by Fred Hatt

Ruminating, 2002, by Fred Hatt

In the above image he’s not contorting his face, but you can see how much feeling comes through anyway.  At a 2006 session he held a grin for three hours:

Smile, 2006, by Fred Hatt

Smile, 2006, by Fred Hatt

Christophe also models with costumes and props.  On Monday he mentioned that for an upcoming costume session he’ll be bringing his genuine NYC Police Officer’s uniform and his saucy French maid outfit.  But it is his expressions I find so compelling.  Here is a quartet of sketches from a session at Figureworks Gallery, showing a range of faces that is both hilarious and terrifying:

Crying, 2007, by Fred Hatt

Crying, 2007, by Fred Hatt

Sneer, 2007, by Fred Hatt

Sneer, 2007, by Fred Hatt

Stupor, 2007, by Fred Hatt

Stupor, 2007, by Fred Hatt

Cracked, 2007, by Fred Hatt

Cracked, 2007, by Fred Hatt

I can tell you these aren’t easy to draw.  When I was working on the set above, I remember feeling my rendering of the sneer failed to capture the level of acidic disdain Christophe was conveying.

Christophe should have posed for Franz Xaver Messerschmidt, or maybe Goya or Bacon or some other artist specializing in the extremes of the human condition.  But I value him because as a model he brings something unique, difficult and engaging.  When Christophe is the model, I know I have a chance to make strange and compelling images.

All drawings in this post are 70 cm x 50 cm, Caran d’Ache aquarelle crayons on Fabriano paper.

2009/05/18

Anatomical Flux

Filed under: Figure Drawing: Anatomy — Tags: , , — fred @ 23:50
Facial Vessels, 2009, by Fred Hatt

Facial Vessels, 2009, by Fred Hatt

Last week I attended “Sketch Night” at “Bodies: The Exhibition“, at the South Street Seaport in New York.  This is one of those exhibits of real human cadavers, preserved by a process called plastination or polymer preservation, and variously dissected for educational display to the general public.  The Sketch Nights give artists access to the exhibit after hours for purposes of anatomical drawing and study.  The ticket price was a bit steep – more than twice as much as a session with a live model at Spring Studio.  There were introductory presentations by the Director of the exhibit and by well-known art and anatomy professor Sherry Camhy – very nice, but after all that a good chunk of the three-hour session was already used up.  We were allowed to go anywhere in the exhibit and choose the displays we wanted to sketch.  Most of the art students chose the full-body specimens showing skeletal and muscular systems (arranged mostly in corny sports poses), but I was more drawn to the exhibits that show the various patterns of flow in the body.  The drawing above was made from two separate pieces, one showing the veins of the face and head (in blue, as per the convention of anatomical illustration), and the other showing the arteries, in red.  I combined the two into one.

This is a sketch of the back of a full-body dissection showing the major nerves, which look tough and fibrous:

Nerves of the Back, 2009, by Fred Hatt

Nerves of the Back, 2009, by Fred Hatt

My favorite room in the exhibit is the one where blood vessels have been preserved and all the other tissues stripped away.  These figures look like my most manic scribbly drawings multiplied and exploded into three dimensions.  The arteries branch out treelike, the veins meander vinelike, and the capillaries are fuzzy like moss.  This quick sketch comes nowhere near the actual complexity of the specimen:

Torse Vessels, 2009, by Fred Hatt

Torso Vessels, 2009, by Fred Hatt

On some people the veins on the inner surface of the arm are close to the surface and make bulging pathways (not on my arms – I’m a phlebotomist’s challenge!).  Here’s an arm specimen that shows these veins clearly, with the mostly deeper-lying arteries.  In this image the palm of the hand is facing us:

Arm Vessels, 2009, by Fred Hatt

Arm Vessels, 2009, by Fred Hatt

There’s a room about embryology, with various specimens including placentas and conjoined twins, and a series of tiny translucent fetuses, with a red staining used to reveal bone development:

Fetal Bone Development

Fetal Bone Development, 2009, by Fred Hatt

Here’s the diaphragm, the dome-like muscle that aids in breathing.  Seen from the front at a low angle, it looked to me like an exotic caravan tent.  That’s the spine in the back:

Diaphragm, 2009, by Fred Hatt

Diaphragm, 2009, by Fred Hatt

Anatomy training for figurative artists tends to stop at bones and muscles and surface anatomy, but having an intuitive sense of the internal processes and flows can really enrich one’s feel for the body’s fantastically dynamic and complex structure.  Anatomy is an endless study – you’ll never know it all!

There’s one more “Sketch Night” scheduled this season at “Bodies: The Exhibition” in New York, this Thursday, May 21.

All drawings in this post are aquarelle crayon on gray paper, 70 cm x 50 cm.

NOTE:  Tomorrow I’m starting on a demanding freelance job, so I probably won’t find the time to make another blog post for at least a week.  Have patience – there will be more to come.

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