Rooster- 8" x 10" - acrylic on bristol paper
Wednesday, June 30, 2010
Rooster Revisited
Labels:
Black and White,
From the Archives,
Illustration,
Retro
Tuesday, June 29, 2010
"Tree" cover
Cover for Hilari Bell novel "Tree"
Art by Greg Newbold - unpublished acrylic on illustration board
Labels:
Awards,
Book Cover,
Fantasy,
Illustration,
Spectrum
Monday, June 28, 2010
Cover for "Wheel"
Cover for "Wheel" a novel by Hilari Bell
Art by Greg Newbold - unpublished acrylic on illustration board
Labels:
Awards,
Book Cover,
Fantasy,
Illustration,
Spectrum
Friday, June 25, 2010
My Artistic Pedigree Back To Howard Pyle
As I mentioned in a previous post, I can claim my artistic lineage all the way back to Howard Pyle. During my first summer of MFA work at the University of Hartford, one of our instructors, Alice "Bunny" Carter informed us all that we were now all descendants of Pyle. One of my students recently asked about it, so for all of my students, here is your chain that now links you back to the "Father of American Illustration", Howard Pyle.
Howard Pyle (seen here circa 1898)
Taught Walter Everett (seen below as a young artist)
Who taught Henry Pitz
(below is a charcoal drawing of Pitz by Ben Soloway-1960)
Who taught Al Gold (no picture available)
Who taught Alice "Bunny" Carter
(Artist, Author and Professor at San Jose State University)
Who taught me.
Everyone's pedigree goes further and deeper to other sources through other teachers, but it's fun to look at my connections to this most revered of all illustration teachers.
Labels:
Artistic Pedigree,
Golden Age Illustrators,
Howard Pyle,
MFA
Thursday, June 24, 2010
Life Drawing
"Mei" -18" x 24" - Conte crayon on smooth newsprint
Life Drawing by Greg Newbold
I am back teaching figure drawing as well as head painting this summer term at BYU in the illustration department. It's a lot of fun to be able to draw from life every day so I am looking forward to drawing alongside the students. Yesterday we had a terrific Asian model named Mei. She was rock solid holding the poses while simultaneously giving really good lines. She was a lot of fun to draw. We are concentrating on short drawings right now in this class with lots of gestures and poses under an hour. I really want the students to learn to capture the essence of the figure and pose in a short time frame. It's so disappointing when you see a drawing that someone obviously spent a lot of time on but is lifeless or the anatomy is all wrong. The philosophy in this class is to capture the life of the figure rather than laboriously rendering the figure. I spent about thirty five minutes on this drawing.
Labels:
Drawing,
Life Drawing
Wednesday, June 23, 2010
Train Poster
Frontrunner Commemorative Launch Poster
Acrylic on illustration board - 24" x 30"
Labels:
Illustration,
Retro
Tuesday, June 22, 2010
Chutin the Bull
These two cowboys conversing provided the inspiration.
Chutin' the Bull - Acrylic on masonite - 13"x19"
By Greg Newbold
Labels:
Illustration
Monday, June 21, 2010
Fort Worth, TX Rodeo
The twisting starts right out of the chute.
About three seconds in, things start to get hairy.
The cowboy takes one on the head.
A rodeo clown draws the bull away from the fallen cowboy.
Labels:
Life Happens,
MFA,
photo reference,
shooting scrap
Friday, June 18, 2010
One Frog
Una Rana - mixed medium - approx. 18" x 12"
I have done a lot of work for educational clients over the years and it can be a challenge to create an interesting illustration that still allows for the type and titles, etc. This one was for a Spanish language reading textbook, a poem about t lazy frog that just lays around imagining animals that it would rather be and picking their shapes out of the clouds. The poem went in the right hand area of the pond and the title in the clouds on the upper left. Nighttime lighting can also pose problems but I think this one gives a nocturnal feel without being colorless.
Thursday, June 17, 2010
Unburdened
Unburdened - Oil on canvas - 24" x 32"
by Greg Newbold
Reference photo- one of several that I chose to work from
I rarely if ever work from a single photo
I use information from many pictures and create a composite.
Unburdened final drawing - black prismacolor on paper
Labels:
Gallery/Fine Art,
MFA,
oil painting
Wednesday, June 16, 2010
Walter Everett
Everett's brilliant shape design is evident in
this black and white scene of nuns and children.
Look at the great value control he achieves
in this street market beggar painting.
Young Walter Everett in studio
Walter Everett-Canoe Scene typical of work
he did for magazines like Ladies Home Journal
Everett-Pan Sketch
Final painting for Pan
My real computer is in the shop today, so as I was poking around on my laptop for things to post, I found the work of Walter Everett (1880-19460. I was reintroduced to his work by an instructor at Hartford, Alice "Bunny" Carter as she was giving us all our "geneaology" back to Howard Pyle (I'll share my direct artistic lineage back to Pyle in another post). Everett was a student of Howard Pyle as well and though relatively forgotten today, enjoyed quite a nice career as both an illustrator and instructor at the School of Industrial Arts in Philadelphia. Everett's later work is characterized by a near posterization of shapes and colors, utilizing mostly value and color to define the form. Most of his work was reproduced in black and white, but as you can see, he was an excellent colorist as well.
Thanks Bunny for access to these images.
See more Walter Everett work in another LNA post here
Tuesday, June 15, 2010
51st Sketch Goes Color
Photocopied sketches were pasted on a board and painted over - 18" x 5" - acrylic
Each color comp is 3" x 4"
I got a good feel for color options in a short time
I also often do this exploration using Photoshop to
add color to my drawings instead of acrylic.
Labels:
color comps,
Process,
Technique,
Thumbnails
Monday, June 14, 2010
51st Thumbnail
Thumbnail sketch #51 - 2" x 3"
The revised drawing - 4.5" x 6" black prismacolor
After less sleep than I wanted and a mad scramble to get to thumbnail 50, I finally hit on a design I liked for my project. I actually redrew number 50 and made a few adjustments to get to what I thought I wanted. I knew Howard Pyle Pyle was a genius illustrator, but it became clear to me why he was also considered the the greatest illustration teacher ever (Harvey Dunn, N.C. Wyeth, Frank Schoonover, the list goes on and on). If a single principle of design could have such an impact on me, I can understand why he was so revered and why his students made such rousing success. The next step was to do color comps for a final painting. I'll post those next time.
Labels:
Artists,
Howard Pyle,
Technique,
Thumbnails
Friday, June 11, 2010
50 Thumbnails
Sheep Shearing thumbnails
One of six 8 1/2" x 11" pages I filled with drawings
Labels:
Artists,
Drawing,
Howard Pyle,
Process,
Technique,
Thumbnails
Thursday, June 10, 2010
Dog-Fish
"Dog-Fish" by Greg Newbold
Acrylic with metal foil - 9" x 9"
Labels:
Illustration,
Process,
Technique
Wednesday, June 9, 2010
Tom and Jack
Ballad of the Jealous Lover of Lone Green Valley
by Thomas Hart Benton
Here Jackson Pollock modeled for the harmonica player.
The Pollock we are all familiar with
Benton created abstract works throughout his career
including this one called "Organization" from 1944.
Pollock's "Moon Woman Cuts the Circle"- circa 1944 is surprisingly
similar to Benton's above work from the same time.
Labels:
Artists,
Jackson Pollock,
Thomas Hart Benton
Tuesday, June 8, 2010
Who Moved My Cheese?
Angry Mouse - 3 1/2" x 2"
Monday, June 7, 2010
Banjo Pig 3
Sunset Serenade - 6" x 7" - pencil with digital elements
I felt a little bad about the demise of my last Banjo Pig, so here is one seen in happier times. I scanned a crackle texture that I was experimenting with and composited it over my pencil drawing with digital color. See the ongoing Banjo Pig battle at Guy Francis' blog.
Labels:
From the Sketchbook,
sketchbook paintings
Friday, June 4, 2010
Painting Cows
Red and Black - by Greg Newbold
oil on masonite - 11" x 18 3/4"
Michael Workman painting a small demo
Everyone's cows in a row
Thursday, June 3, 2010
The Choice Between...
The Choice Between (Good and Evil)
20" x 16" - oil, collage paper and foil leaf on masonite panel
On each of our contact periods, our University of Hartford MFA class had an assignment based on that particular trip. For the NYC assignment we were to create a piece based on a photo shoot done at the home and studio of Ted and Betsy Lewin. The Lewins are both exceptionally talented and successful picture book illustrators and were gracious enough to let 40 people invade their delightful Brooklyn brownstone. My painting resulted from a combination of several photos and the concept of good versus evil. I experimented with a number of techniques including torn and cut paper collage as well as foil leaf. the painting was laid in initially in acrylic and finished off in oil. Ted is in black on the right and friend and fellow MFA talent Chuck Primeau is on the left.
Labels:
Illustration,
Technique
Wednesday, June 2, 2010
Hambanjo
Hambanjo - 5"x6" - felt pen and digital color
So I figured what's the point of pigs and banjos if you can't combine the two. What you get is a deluxe Hambanjo. As for the rest of the pig, go ahead and speculate, but I see that Mr. Wolf can pluck and snack at the same time. Follow the further adventures of the dueling banjo war on Guy Francis's blog "So, Cat Tacos?"
Tuesday, June 1, 2010
Banjo Pig Blues
Banjo Pig - 5" x 6" - felt pen, digital color
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