9×6″ Watercolor on sketch paper
Playing around with watercolor paints in my sketchbook.
9×6″ Watercolor on sketch paper
Playing around with watercolor paints in my sketchbook.
4/2013 – National Arts Program
4/2012 – National Arts Program – Best of Show
4/2011 – University of Kentucky Seniors Exhibit
Though they appear simple, there is still a process behind the creation of these stick figures.
It all begins with the quote. When it’s time to sit down and draw I start by pulling up my list of quotes and read through them to find one that jumps out at me. That generally means that as I read it a composition of some sort comes to mind. Continue reading The Birth of a Stick Figure
While in school working toward my art degree I just didn’t seem to quite fit in with either my teachers or my fellow students. As a business-student transfer I was just a little too uptight and logical. And as a minimalist it was really hard for me to throw everything into my artwork. My natural tendency is to do the least necessary to share my message. Continue reading I’m Not Eccentric Enough To Be An Artist
Considering my artistic background, the question only makes sense. “Why do you draw stick figures?” After supporting myself as a portrait artist, it can seem like a huge step backward for me to focus on drawing only stick figures.
You would think that with me drawing a picture a day, with no ending time specified, that I might soon run out of quotes to base my drawings on. My concern, however, is that I will never draw near to the end of my quotes list. My work will never be finished. Continue reading Where do the quotes come from?