This workshop shows how I use gouache and the spontaneous madness that is my creative process. I’ve experimented with various mediums, hungry to try everything.
I love watercolour for its fluidity and quick drying times, but I’m not able to change a painting mid-way. Oil has incredible results with the smoothest blending, but it has longer dry times. Gouache checks every box for me. It can be watered down and used like watercolour, and the hybrid acrylic gouache gives extra coverage when I need to make big changes, which is important to me. I follow wherever the paint takes me; if it takes me in another direction part-way through the painting, I won’t resist.
This workshop will focus on conceptualising on the fly. To avoid muddying the colours, I use either watered-down gouache or watercolour for skin and base layers, which helps me out later because it’s easier to blend into this base layer.
Gouache is like a relationship: over time I’ve got to know and understand that certain paints will dry darker or lighter on paper than it looks straight out of the tube. Because of the variety of which the colours dry, it’s helped me to loosen up and see the beautiful variety in tones that gouache’s unpredictability may offer. Perhaps our unpredictability is what makes us a great pair…
1 Spend time conceptualising the artwork
I don’t often conceptualise much at the beginning of my pieces unless I’m working with a client. My initial sketches have more movement and interest when I allow myself to work on the fly. But because this piece is for a cover, I create a rough initial concept and then a rough sketch. This two-headed person has been in my mind for a while.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der December 2020-Ausgabe von ImagineFX.
Starten Sie Ihre 7-tägige kostenlose Testversion von Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierte Premium-Storys sowie über 8.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der December 2020-Ausgabe von ImagineFX.
Starten Sie Ihre 7-tägige kostenlose Testversion von Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierte Premium-Storys sowie über 8.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
Jan Wessbecher
Dominic Carter talks to the visual artist about creating his own comic and why sketchbooks are great for creative experiments
Kyounghwan Kim
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Slawek Fedorczuk
Dominic Carter talks to the concept artist about what keeps him motivated and the advantages of using physical sketchbooks.
Raquel M. Varela
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Estrela Lourenço
Estrela is a children's book author and illustrator. Her work is influenced by her background in character animation and storyboards for clients such as Cartoon Network, and she channels comic strips like Calvin and Hobbes.
Daria Widermanska
Daria, also known as Anako, has been drawing for as long as she can remember. Inspired by Disney and classic anime, she loves creating new characters and often finds that a single sketch can spark a unique story.
Allen Douglas
Allen has been painting professionally since 1994 for the publishing and gaming industries. Inspired by folklore, he distorts the size, relationships and environments of animals, and calls his paintings 'unusual wildlife'.
Thaddeus Robeck
Thaddeus has been drawing from the moment he could hold a pencil, but it was the 2020 lockdowns that gave him the time to focus on honing his skills.
DRAW FASCINATING SYMBOLIC ARTWORK
Learn how JULIÁN DE LA MOTA creates a composition from his imagination with a focus on crafting figures, volumetric modelling, and light and shadow
First Impressions
The artist talks about his journey into the mythological world