I feel like I have to
keep reminding myself of a lot of the influences that seem ingrained in me but don’t
have a constant and obvious presence at the forefront. There’s a lot of
passions that have always been there but somehow it’s easy to forget about
them, possibly because I just don’t see them enough in daily life.
I usually remember to
keep up the detail and complexity but occasionally I’ll see something that
reminds me I need to keep taking it to the next level if I can. It’s easier to
forget about the colour combinations, delicacy and textures that excite me.
I’m always seeing
images that remind me of things I need to do more and I’m starting to become
more conscious of the idea that maybe I can’t do some of those things, or at
least the same way that other artists do them.
The most obvious
non-ingrained influence that I have to keep reminding myself of is the lovely
and elegant but seemingly effortless linework of artists like Carlos Nine,
Lorenzo Mattotti and Christophe Blain or sculpting of Bernini and Dino Cunsolo.
It was age 12 or 13 I started to want less sharp, unvaryingly thin and angular lines,
in favour of something more wavy and curvy like the way the wind blows around
things.
This style has grown
a bit more popular and I’m glad about that. Even artists a bit further removed
like Blutch and Sergio Toppi have that full and free flowing quality.
There’s a fairly new
artist called Loic Locatelli that also really impresses me but he and a lot of
the aforementioned drawers are far more sketchy and loose than I want to be. I
really like the sculptural solidity of my best work but I want more of a free
flowing feel to go along with it.
I’ve also been
reminding myself of colourful monsters more that used to thrill me as a child.
All those toys and Halloween masks with very varied designs and colors. Also
been thinking about the gardens and buildings I dimly remember long ago that
have a large place in my subconscious but don’t get drawn enough. Just
remembering all the things I want to see more of. The solution to all this is
usually as simple as drawing more.
5 comments:
Interesting isn't it, how we tend to conflate the music with its presentation? The shoegaze influence, one would never have guessed from your work, especially not the heavily inked stuff. Would love to see that reference emerge in your work somehow, that would really make it unique, totally change the slightly 'metal' vibe it can have at first glance. Nice post.
I think some of my older ink wash work has a bit of that influence.
For shoegazing/dreampop the sound and visual presentation seemed like a perfect match that people seem to understand instantly, it came together pretty much as soon as those genres arrived. It's similar but obviously different from the imagery of early ambient and psychedelic music.
And of course metal music has embraced shoegazing and dreamy ambient extensively over the last decade but there hasn't been much in the way of monsters and hellscapes mixed with shoegazing imagery.
Alison Scarpulla has some horror and pagan imagery but it's mostly focused on the mystical countryside thing. There is a wolfman in one of her Wolves In The Throne Room images.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/aliscarpulla/
I'm influenced by you.
Thanks.
I don't think i ever have been directly influenced by the music i like to listen to, nor do i think a painting or drawing convincingly translated a piece of music. Having some inspiring music while at work definitely helps you to keep going, but they're entirely different dimensions, IMO.
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