Sunday, November 30, 2014

The hourglass of Dali

After my Duchamp sketch below, I immediately made another Dali Sketch. The earlier drawings of Dali was actually the VERY FIRST portrait I drew in my entire life. And it's now quite embarrassing to look at... (See Dali [1] and Dali [2], although Dali 2 was more a cartoon than a drawing.)



So I started searching for photos of Dali again. The reason why I am so obsessed with him is that there are a lot of interesting photos available, from being young and handsome, to becoming more mature (with his mustache growing ever longer). 

My friends (the very few who bother to know who Dali is)
disagreed that he was handsome. Now look at this.


And This.
(It could possibly make a good Calvin Klein Commercial)



And he got crazier....



.....crazier



.....and yet, crazier....




As I keep searching, I found some rare photos of Dali during his last years. They touched my heart, so deeply that I couldn't help but made another sketch of Dali after midnight...


If you think of Dali, you think of his signature mustache and his huge eyes, full of life, full of energy, full of confidence. It made him a very unique person, very Dali. However the Dali here looked almost vulnerable. He was probably in his seventies. And the intense power in his eyes, that once made him the most fascinating person to look at, has left him.


However rich, however beautiful, however invincible you are,
you will have to face the eventual decline of life. 
Time is cruel, and it's just as cruel to me as to you.
Everybody is equally helpless.


Dali's most famous painting, "The persistence of memory" was about time. If it's the first time you look at this painting, I resist the urge to tell you the academic interpretations of his work. Surrealism is to be felt, not to be explained anyways.

Salvador Dali, 1931
The persistence of memory, oil on canvas

This is probably one of the last pictures of Dali I can find online. His mustache now grew all white. His fierce stare was nowhere to be seen. Dali , for the first time, looked calm and relaxed in a photo.


To balance out the unusual seriousness of this post, I decided to make a cartoon of this picture. XD


Everybody will eventually be memories of the others, 
but every breath you take is a miracle of yourself.
So make it count.


Saturday, November 29, 2014

THE VERY CREEPY MARCEL DUCHAMP

Drew Marcel Duchamp last night, left it on the table when finished and freaked me out before I went to bed....hahaha (I guess it means I did a pretty decent job? lol)



There were so many interesting things about Mr. Duchamp I don't really know where to begin.

First of all, He could look very creepy in pictures...


*VERY VERY VERY CREEPY*

He was famous for making a very mean parody of Mona Lisa. He gave the classic beauty a mustache and wrote L.H.O.O.Q. underneath.

In French, L.H.O.O.Q reads "L-(L)ASH-(SH)O-O-KU", which sounds very much like "Elle a chaud au cul", meaning......

"She has a hot ass"

I guess you can imagine why the academics were not very happy....lol


He dressed himself like a woman, and called her Rrose Selavy. In French it sounds like "Eros, c'est la vie" (Eros, this is life)............

Let's meet Ms. Selavy........



No matter what do you think about Mr. Duchamp, you have to thank god for creating interesting people like him, so that the world can be full of surprises :)

 

Thursday, November 27, 2014

Pablo Picasso, the eternal kidult

Survived past 91 years old, Picasso was undeniably the most famous, most successful, and probably the richest artist of all time. He started to get famous when he was still in his twenties. People at his time were already crazy about his works.

You can find a lot of photos of Picasso online. And if you study them one by one, it's not difficult to realize the consistent playfulness in his eyes, no matter how old he got, and how seriously he posed. The picture I chose to draw was very likely taken under bright sunlight, that forced Mr. Picasso to frown. Despite all seriousness, you do not see a hint of sadness. (He was probably just putting his game face on :p )





If you look at his less serious photos, do you see the kid inside of him? 



"It takes a long time to grow young." 
"Youth has no age."

-Pablo Picasso



Wednesday, November 26, 2014

My sketchbook's VIP, Dear Mr. Vincent Willem Van Gogh

Whatever list that I am making cannot be complete without him.








Everyone who knows me understands how much I love him, so much that I traveled 10,000 km to where he lived and died in France.




He's also the reason why I love sunflower, and making it the header of my blog.
"Seek the sun", as in keep looking on the bright side of life, like a sunflower.

(tho our dear Vincent seemed nowhere near being "cheerful" :p )


Monday, November 24, 2014

Sketch of my new hero - Mr. Oscar Wilde

It's not the first time my friends said I might have "met" more dead people than living ones in Paris. No it was not (completely lol) true.

I did make some effort to get to the tombs of some awesome people that I like a lot. But my collection was not complete because I missed Pere Lachaise, where rested the soul of Oscar Wilde, among many other brilliant minds.

I can still remember it was a gloomy late afternoon in early October. The wind was chill, the sky was dark with layers of gray roiling clouds. The cemetery was just closed when I got there. Disappointed, I decided to linger a little longer. The neighborhood was so quiet that I felt slightly uneasy being the only person standing in front of the firmly closed iron gate. And suddenly, a vast throng of crows rose out of nowhere... 

OUTSIDE Pere Lachaise, Paris


OK. Enough of ghost story setting :p 


Now back to Oscar Wilde. I have to confess the first time I have come across the name was when I watched "Paris Je t'aime", 24 hours before I was on the plane flying to Europe this Sep. The witty quotes definitely caught my attention:

"How can a woman be expected to be happy with a man who insists on treating her as if she were a perfectly normal human being"  
*I really really love this quote

"This wallpaper and I are fighting a duel to the death. Either it goes or I do."
*Can you imagine someone cracked this joke when he was on his dying bed..?!

This was widely believed to be Mr. Wilde's last words, when he was dying painfully in a tiny cheap hotel room in France. 


Oscar Wilde vs Alexander Payne playing him in Paris Je t'aime

Before I googled his picture I actually expected Mr. Wilde to look a lot crazier because he said "life is too important to be taken seriously". To my surprise, he looked perfectly like an intelligent English Irish gentleman (I later read that he disliked being identified as an English). 

So here is my sketch of my new hero :)

I guess I now have every reason to visit Paris again in the near future.




Thursday, November 13, 2014

Profile of an old man

Everything about this old man is so beautiful that I have to make him one of my sketchbook collections (among the interesting artists). The wrinkles, the bridge of the nose, the eyes and how the light hit the face are all so perfect. It seems to me he jumped directly out from the canvas of a classical painting (if you're interested, keep reading). The white beard is beautiful too but I decided to omit the details in my drawing. I will let your imagination fill in the blanks.

Errrr.....No I am not lazy, I'd call it artistic exclusion of the unnecessary....*ahem* :p





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There seems to be something magical about old men with white beard. Artists love them. This is a painting by Rembrandt in 1630. I know it's going to make my drawing look extremely stupid when it's shown right next to the work of a Dutch master best known for portraits. But I am just going to show you how beautiful an old man can be.

This is an interesting painting because Rembrandt did not sign his work (he normally did!). The painter remained anonymous until X-ray revealed a self-portrait of the young Rembrandt hidden underneath the paint... tricky artist :p [Read here]




Monday, November 10, 2014

(Supposed to be) Andy Warhol

He's supposed to be another mad artist but he doesn't look quite mad down here LOL.

But I always love his eyes, so intelligent they look almost cruel.




Friday, November 7, 2014

Young and handsome Dali

I feel slightly sorry for depicting our Dali as a mad uncle in the previous entry. The fact is, when Dali was younger and decided to look a little more like the rest of us. He was, indeed, a handsome Spanish.





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I started learning drawing not long ago and I am sure at some point in the future I am going to be embarrassed by the works I posted publicly today lol.

But well, if it happens it will only mean I am making progress right? Right?? :p

Thursday, November 6, 2014

Are you sure Mr. Dali???


"The only difference between 

me and a madman is that..."


The insanity in his eyes, is timelessly beautiful....LOL
 
If you have no idea who Dali is READ HERE. Simply speaking he was a prominent modern artist who was extremely creative with superb classical painting skills.  But if you google Salvador Dali you'd probably find more cross-eyed photos of him looking like my sketch above than his artworks. And yes his moustache was real. 

I love both his personality and his talents...well actually his personality more. I love drawing people who showed intense emotions: kindness, sadness, happiness and especially madness. I have a collection of mad people in my sketchbook and Mr. Dali is definitely one of my favourites. 

Oops did I just say he is mad...? :p