Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Pear In Place

This is basically the same image from a couple of days back. I erased the bottom shelf and some of the sides and moved that up to better contain what was to be the pear. Then I had to add stone work to top and bottom to fill in.

I'm really not that pleased with the rough stone background. I don't feel it fits with the look of the arch and pear but I don't know yet what to replace that with, if anything. Perhaps simply moving to larger blocks to reduce the business?

Also want to raise the viewing angle to give a peek onto the shelf. That will allow me to better show a curve to the stonework behind the pear and add shading appropriate to that curve.


4 comments:

  1. I LOVE the rustic stone background with the arch and pear, combining the simplicity of the pear, the clearly planned architecture, the humility of the stone. A believer might say the pear is a humble but elegantly planned construct, available to cathedral builders and stone carriers alike. Praise be. - Joyce

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  2. The size of the pear as drawn leads the viewer to see this as tiny cubby or wall niche, so yes I agree-making the stones in the wall larger/less busy will help establish its size as a niche; right now the stones compete with the pear and one isn't sure of the size of either one.
    I'm also thinking that maybe the pear needs a bit of imperfection and subtle quirkiness like in your original sketch ~ not so vertical and symmetrical and with a bit more grounding of shape at its base so that it "sits" firmly on the ledege ~ right ow it appears to be balancing as if on a single point.
    When I squint at this sketch I can still see the depth of the niche and the roundness of the pear and think you really have a wonderful subject and composition for your workshop; I can already see this piece glowing in egg tempera in my mind's eye!
    ~ gretchen

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  3. Wow, that's a very thoughtful comment, Joyce. Thank you. I am getting rather hooked on stone work, feeling the need to just get out and look at buildings and walls and such.

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  4. The background stone work came from an exercise on drawing stone walls by simply laying in wandering lines and shaping them up into stones and spaces between.

    As I envision this just as you say, a small and indented shelf that needs a background that supports the dimensions. I am thinking maybe stucco but still open to more thoughts at this point.

    Thanks for the suggestions regarding the pear. I do see what you mean. When I re-sketch and change the viewing angle I'll keep those thoughts in mind.

    Something tells me that after a week of Old Masters Design that I'll be bubbling over with ideas!

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