Friday, November 22, 2019

Doodle No. 35 Rooftop Conversation

Remember Cat Planet? This is different planet that also has cats. Sure, you can only see one cat here, but there are more cats on the dark side of the planet. The scale in the right should give you a sense of how big everything is. 


I did something different with the colors on this one. I had a cognitive shift in how layering colors works. I layered colors on the opposite sides of the color wheel, and I’m telling you, it was pretty dicey there for a while because when you mix pink and green, you get brown. Half way through the coloring, I thought it was almost certainly past the point of no return, a total color failure,  At that moment, I took my Kepler dog for a walk to get away from it for a while. When I returned to this drawing, I decided it was salvageable. In the end, I got it right where I hoped it would be when I decided that mixing pink and green was a good idea. 


5” square. 

Drawn with archival Prismacolor black ink, Faber-Castell Polychromos pencils, Finetec and other mica watercolor paint on Aquarelle Arches hot-pressed 100% cotton 140 lb paper. 


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Tuesday, November 19, 2019

Doodle No. 34 In one hole and out the other

This shows another version of the PoincarĂ© model of hyperbolic space with microbes, space junk, aliens, and a few plants. 
Some are real. 
Some imagined. 
Some are totally unbelievable. 

I’ve worked in these colors before. 
I suspect I’ll use them again because they match the furniture. 

5.75” diameter circle.


Drawn with archival Prismacolor black ink, Faber-Castell Polychromos pencils, mica watercolor paint on Stonehenge 250 GSM 100% cotton paper. 


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Monday, November 4, 2019

Doodle No. 33 Tribert Makes Thymine



The design of this is based upon the PoincarĂ© model of hyperbolic space. Ask a mathematician about it. It’s probably their favorite model of hyperbolic space. 


5.75” circle
A lot of people photograph their oakk in brings of flowers with real flowers. I don’t paint flowers. So I thought these Polyhedra seemed appropriate. 



NFS 
Thanks for looking.