WE'VE MOVED!

WAIT, NO. HIDE SOMEWHERE ELSE!

Starting February 2014 this blog will be out of action.

But DO NOT DESPAIR. We've just moved, and you can still find the same riveting and informative posts that you have come to expect on our new blog:

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

An Announcement for an Announcement


Hi guys! Quick post today as I am drowning in oil paintings at the moment. These are a few teaser images today from this year's sketchbook which will be available this September.


This year's sketchbook will be a little different than previous year's books and will be leading up to something a lot bigger that I hope to release in 2014.  I've been doing some writing.  (More on this soon.)  



"What do you mean, 'some writing?' You have all the grammatical abilities of a three-legged goat.  
You couldn't write your way out of a paper bag Gerard!"



I hope it all works out.  More details next time!

Tuesday, July 09, 2013

Current Projects Post #2: Color





I am back with my second post on my recent work, which has primarily consisted of larger-format oil paintings. 

Last week we covered the underpaintings, and this week I want to share some of the color progress shots.  
Also, I promised to deliver on a no-solvent, fast-drying palette for oils. And when I make a promise; I deliver.  Unless it's about those llamas. Just don't worry about those llamas.  




For the Ents Marching painting, I am going to work background to foreground since the blue sky is such a prominent feature of the image. I really like deep blues and for some reason I rarely use them.
  




A while back I emailed Gamblin asking them about a solution for my dilemma of finding a solvent-free, faster-drying palette. They were super helpful and said if I just use their products then all my problems would vanish like refined mineral spirits into the air. I would lose weight, I'd be fun, sexy, and my life would be one long beer commercial.

Then they sent me a super helpful list of the drying rates of all of their oil colors.  I found that I could actually build a palette out of colors that dry faster naturally.  And if I were to add walnut alkyd medium, I could have everything dry overnight, without the aid of solvents or other drying agents.





I also spoke by phone with the elusive M. Graham about his mysterious walnut alkyd medium. He told me it was safe. In fact, it was "salad grade" safe. You could literally eat it. Though he didn't recommend that because it had a "mild laxative effect."

I see.  Haha. Well, Mr. M. Graham, I'm not asking if I can eat your products. I want to paint with them and your little jokes are not very funny."

But so far he has been right (not about the laxative part. I haven't tried that yet. Not saying I haven't snuck some into other people's food, just that I haven't personally consumed any yet.)  But he was right about the overall safety of the product.  I have been using it for about a year now and have had no adverse effects. And surprisingly it works as advertised.

So the secret so far is this:
Build a palette based on colors that all dry in under 4 days, and walnut alkyd medium. The walnut alkyd medium speeds the drying time up a little bit faster than 2x the usual speed, depending on the humidity in the air.
If you want to speed it up further, you can place the paintings under a car windshield, or a heat lamp.  Or light it on fire.  But you need to be careful with all of those.

For sky in the Ents piece, I am using these Gamblin oil colors:
Pthalo blue - (4 days to dry)
Cerulean Blue Hue - (4 days to dry)
Payne's Gray (4 days to dry)
Titanium-Zinc White (3 to 4 days to dry)

With the medium it probably took about 24 hours until it was touch dry.



The reds are a bit more tricky, as most reds are very long drying colors. (Alizarin, the Cads and the Quinacridones are all at least 6 day dryers) Which mean you are stuck with Iron Oxide based reds.  Still, you can get a surprising range with them.  


For Smaug I have used:

Raw Sienna (4 days)
Brown Pink (4 days)
Hansa Yellow Deep (4 days)
Transparent Yellow Earth (3 days)

And these all dried very quickly.  Later on, when I don't need as many layers, I can switch into a broader palette and take advantage of Alizarin's cooler tones. But the above colors, which all dry overnight, are perfect for these early color layers.




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LPG Update: The Lamp Post Guild has just launched Cory Godbey's The Art of Personal Work and Chris Koelle's Graphic Storytelling courses! For more info check out: http://lpg.pathwright.com

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Current Projects

I have recently took on 2 private commissions for some larger format oil paintings and today I'd like to share my initial stages from them with you.





For those of you who have followed along these last few years, you will probably know that finding a good working method in oil (that doesn't turn me into a werewolf or raise the dead) has been somewhat challenging for me these past few years.  I wanted to find a way that would allow me to work quickly, and in many thin layers, somewhat like watercolor; but that did not involve solvents or harm the archival quality of the painting. 

It has only been in the past year that things have finally begun to really make sense to me, and that I have finally become comfortable taking on larger oil paintings. 


The first of these is for Greg O'baugh, and the scene may he is commissioning, may look familiar to some folks...  
 


Yes, this is Smaug. Greg actually purchased the original watercolor of Old Smaug at Illuxcon a few years back.  Since then he has asked if I might be interested in repainting this one, and this time in oil, without the aid of any of my digital trickery.






Usually I would be very apprehensive about something like this. Wether traveling, painting or reading, I usually don't like to retread the same ground twice.  There is still so much to do and explore and learn that seeing a place twice seems like a wasted opportunity.  But this image is different. This one is a challenge, and one that I have always wanted to do as an oil painting.




For many years I have been secretly convinced that I can't do traditionally what I can do digitally.  And no matter how many of you have told me in exasperation to JUST DO IT, I have always had great reservations.  So now this is a chance to finally give this one the treatment it deserves.

I hope to share more of the work-in-progress shots as this develops and I look forward to hearing what you think when you compare the two separate approaches.

The second image is also Tolkien themed and is being commissioned by Dan Perkins.  It is of the Ents marching up to break the dam above Orthanc and will be 30" x 50" on panel. 


If the characters in this digital color comp look familiar, it is because they are mostly from my 2012 Sketchbook.  The 2012 sketchbook was done chiefly as studies for a series of larger oil paintings like this one that I hope to keep producing over the next few years. 


Part of the reason that these scenes are painted so much larger than my other work is because of the lack of solvents. The only medium I will be using with the oil paints, is walnut alkyd oil, (and that only sparingly.)


I hope you will follow along and when these are finished let me know what you think about the conversion from watercolor and digital to oil.

Next: The Color Phase and a no-solvent, fast-drying palette

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

TLC Workshop Details



For those of you who have signed up for the Seattle TLCWorkshop August 16-18, here is a preview of
what we will be up to!

(And if you haven't signed up yet and are interested, check out the TLCWorkshop site for more details.)  


with Justin Gerard and Cory Godbey
(with Special Guest Appearance by Iain McCaig!)




The Project:
For this course, we will be illustrating a scene from one of the following two stories:

Beauty and the Beast 

Alice in Wonderland 

...with a focus on a monster and a maiden. We will be exploring visual storytelling and how to create interesting dynamics between our characters.




What you need to do beforehand:

READ: Familiarize yourself with your story and pick a scene or idea it that is interesting to you.

IMAGINE: Spend some time thinking about your characters and how they relate to one another. Are they in conflict with one another? Are they helping one another? Place yourself in the scene as if you are part of the story.

DRAW: Put together some thumbnails and rough sketches of your ideas. They can be stick figure layouts, or Da Vinci portraits. Wherever you are in your development when you get here, Cory, Justin and Iain will be helping you to take it to the next level.

PREPARE: To rock.

THE FORMAT:
Cory and Justin will talk through their processes, both traditional and digital, as well as demonstrate how they work. Each day Cory and Justin will cover a new part of their illustration process and then the class will work on their illustrations together.
And the-force-of-nature-that-is Iain McCaig will also be spending an afternoon with us showing his hands-on approach to character and creature creation.




Materials Needed:
We will be focusing heavily on drawing and character design in this course. While painting is not the focus of the course, Cory and Justin will be demoing how they work in color and attendees are encouraged to work alongside them.

For more information, visit the site here!





Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Some Sketches for You


The new sketchbooks are shipping out right now! This past weekend (after some time to recover from a phenomenal time at Spectrum Live in Kansas City) I took some time and did some drawings in the first 30 orders.


The topics for these sketches ranged from men in strange hats...


 to ancient dragons...


to orcs with limited table manners...


To crocodiles who mean well...


And even into reliquaries of great power...


And finally, (as always) to princesses.  



Thank you guys for the support and the renewed interest in these. I love working on them and I'm looking forward to getting started on the 2013 one soon. We will be doing something a little different and a little bigger for 2013.  Stay Tuned...

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To see sketches from previous sketchbook releases check out:

2011 Sketchbook Sketches Post

2012 Sketchbook Sketches Post

To order one check them out at:
https://www.etsy.com/shop/JustinGerard


Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Sketchbooks are BACK!

The sketchbooks have arrived!  They will be up for sale Tuesday, May 14, 2013, at 11AM EST here:




And as I mentioned in a previous post, the first 10 orders of each book will be receiving a sketch in the front!  

To get an idea of what these sketched-in editions generally look like check out:

The 2011 Sketches

The 2012 Sketches

May the fastest refresher win!
One final note: I will be shipping these AFTER I return from Spectrum Live!  So please give me a little extra time to ship these before setting up any artillery batteries.  


Some images from the new edition of Sketchbook 2010: The Silver Age:













Saturday, May 11, 2013

Running a Little Late...

Guys! The sketchbooks are running a little late. I know you are probably as angry as I am. I have personally killed 12 Sasquatches, 30 camels and a Ford Pinto in anger over this outrage. I cannot even imagine what you all have been doing in your anger. Please accept my apologies for the delay!
 
The books will be up on my store TUESDAY morning! Watch for it here and on my Muddycolors tuesday post!







Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Spectrum Live and Updates

Many things are happening... The first is Spectrum Live in 2 weeks. Will you be there? WILL YOU BE THERE?



 WE WILL.

Second, due to increasingly hostile demands, I am currently having my 2010, 2011 and 2012 sketchbooks reprinted. They are being printed as we speak, and will be available for order sometime next week.  Please, no violence! I can get you the goods!  



The 2011 and 2012 books are the same as the previous printings.  However, the 2010 is special.  This time I am printing it on much high quality paper, and am also including a number of extra spreads of many of the sketches and sepia paintings that have not been seen before.  (And that I had always wished I had been able to put in the first printing.)  




As soon as they come in I will announce it on my blog and put them up on my etsy store. I am going to do sketches in the first 10 orders of each book! BE PREPARED. 










And third, TLC Workshops are running an early-bird special in conjunction with Spectrum Fantastic Arts Live! If you register for the Justin Gerard/Cory Godbey workshop before the event is over on May 20 you will receive 10% off the regular tuition price. Contact Tara Chang at TLCWorkshops1@gmail.com if you have any questions. Check it out here.

The workshop is going to be a ton of fun. Why? Because I will be there and Cory Godbey will be there. That is twice the action, twice the intensity, twice the sensational juggling. To get a preview, or to judge wether or not Cory and I really exist in the real life, come visit us at booth #513 at Spectrum Live. 

Friday, April 19, 2013

Fox Princess Development Work


The following is some development work for a piece I am working on for Spectrum Live next month. 



Digital Color Comp


This color comp was a little break from other work I had been doing recently which mostly involved dwarves, wizards and other assorted hairy men. I wanted to do something different for a bit. 




Princess study on toned paper


I liked the direction it was heading, but then it just felt too empty. There was not enough narrative interest and my brain started to go numb from boredom. Beauty should be its own excuse to paint, but it is already beautiful outside right now; i needed to add something more.  

I realized it was missing the key element: 


Rat ninjas.



Early digital face gestures 


The ninjas made me feel a lot better about everything. Now there is a good tension along with (hopefully) something beautiful. They add a nice contrast to our princess and now I wanted to know more about her, where she is going, where she has been, and why they want to nab her. What will happen next?



Tight drawing on heavyweight bristol.  


If you are going to be at Spectrum Live in May stop by and say hello to see how the final color version turns out!

Tuesday, April 02, 2013

Gandalf Oil




A little while back I did a quick sketch of Gandalf in anticipation of the opening of The Hobbit. At the request of a collector I did a finished oil version of it and wanted to share it.


 Oil on panel 
11" x 14"

A little side note for anyone who has followed along with my misadventures in oil these past few years: You have probably heard me complain many times before that I couldn't seem to work in oil without using solvents, but that if did use solvents, that I would always end up having this allergic reaction where I would grow fangs, claws, and an unruly beehive haircut. I would then of course go roaming about the neighborhood howling at the moon, ravening for meat-flavored things.  

This oil was done without the use of any solvents whatsoever. It was done using only walnut alkyd oil, and using only oil pigments that tend to dry faster. (siennas, umbers, pthalos, etc.) So far I haven't grown a single beehive haircut, which is pretty exciting.  



Early sketch on toned paper

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Baron Von Fiddleworth

For Christmas this year, my girlfriend and I exchanged oil paintings. At the time, I was into fruit bats and World War II documentaries.  So naturally, this is what I came up with for hers:


Baron Von Fiddlesworth
9" x 12"
Oil on Panel

We had agreed that we would exchange 8" x 10" sepia paintings so that it wouldn't be too much panic on each other during the holidays. For hers, I did what I think everyone would agree is a completely reasonable amount of cheating and and painted it 9" x 12".


Digital Sketch

But she did a clearly unreasonable amount of cheating by painting mine in color. Which I think everyone can agree is pretty messed up when.  Hers is also amazingly gorgeous. You can see it herehttp://anniestegg.com/gallery/#/antiquated-thoughts/