Art House Co-Op’s “The Sketchbook Project” Moleskine sketches, p04-07
For pages 4-7, I decided I was going to compare and contrast graphite with charcoal. I’ve done a lot of graphite work over the years but never got a grasp of how to use charcoal in a way that approximated my graphite results. I’ve always wanted to sit down and do a piece in both mediums – one familiar and one not – and see what happened. The results are surprising!
First, I will not be using the even numbered pages for content. I want to capture any brainstorming process on the even pages and do the art on the right pages. I want to remember not just the artwork but also the process if any that went with it. I’m finding the whole aura of Moleskines very creative. Marketing savvy or not, I’m hooked!
The theme is “It’s not easy being green”, so I’m taking a strong figurate liberty and just sticking to ideas related to green, so it’s a little easier that way. Also, my scanner causes some serious ghosting of the pages of the Moleskine sketchbook. Very light weight paper indeed!
NOTE: Click for enlargements
this is very cool doug. where do you get your ideas from, is this all just from thin air or do you draw from other things you’ve recently seen? i’m trying to find ways to kickstart an inspirations wave. a method to just pull ideas out of the blue at will. is there such a thing?
Inspiration for this kind of drawing is very much like jazz. I come up with a simple visual structure or theme. In this case it was some random letters I composed in Illustrator before hand. An analogy from music is fitting, especially jazz. In jazz, what the improvisor is doing can seem totally random, but it’s not. The improv is tightly wound to the chord progression. At any turn in the music, there is a simultaneous near-freedom but it’s locked to a fixed structure. But, the musician has to know his scales and “what works” by ear before he is able to improvise. Then when you get good at improvising, you know ahead of time what might and might not work. So, there was just a little bit of structure here, a few outlines of letters, and everything else you see here is improvised.
This process works for art but it also works for graphic design and logo design. I do exactly the same thing at one point or another. Logo design is much more limited in freedom of course. It’s like a fixed melody you can embellish (business objectives) as opposed to complete freedom with an improvised melody line (artistic objective).
Brainstorming is something I very much want to cover in another post, but yes, there are method for “inducing” the pulling of ideas right out of the blue. But the blue is based in objective information we have at hand, like dreams, whether we are fully aware or not. It’s a process that taps into the subconscious.
Do a bit of research into “mind mapping” and grab Freemind (do a Google on that) to play around with. I use Freemind, and also pen and pencil methods of mind mapping – been doing that since about 2000 when I learned about it.