Saturday, June 23, 2012

Bears, Paintings, Progress

Here are some projects from spring semester of this year, as well as some studies and sketches of the projects.

This project of the dancing bears was for a short story project in my illustrating literature class. This is an illustration of as scene from Brilliant Sillence by Spencer Holst:

"Two Alaskan Kodiak bears joined a small circus where the pair appeared in a nightly parade pulling a covered wagon. The two were taught to somersault, to spin, to stand on their heads, and to dance on their hind legs, paw in paw, stepping in unison. Under a spotlight the dancing bears, a male and a female, soon became favorites of the crowd. The circus went south on a west coast tour through Canada to California and on down into Mexico, through Panama into South America, down the Andes the length of Chile to the southernmost isles of Tierra del Fuego.
There a jaguar jumped the juggler, and afterwards, mortally mauled the animal trainer, and the shocked showpeople disbanded in dismay and horror. In the confusion the bears went on their own way. Without a master, they wandered off by themselves into the wilderness on those densely wooded, wildly windy subantarctic islands. Utterly away from people, on an out-of-the way uninhabited island, and in a climate they found ideal, the bears mated, thrived, multiplied, and after a number of generations populated the entire island. Indeed, after some years, descendants of the two moved out onto half a dozen adjacent islands, and seventy years later, when scientists finally found and enthusiastically studied the bears, it was discovered that all of them, to a bear, were performing splendid circus tricks.
On nights when the sky is bright and the moon is fully, they gather to dance. They gather the cubs and juveniles in a circle around them. They gather together out of the wind at the center of a sparkling, circular crater left by a meteorite, which had fallen in a bed of chalk. Its glassy walls are chalk white, its flat floor is covered with white gravel, and it is well-drained, and dry. No vegetation grows within. When the moon rises above it, the light reflecting off the walls fills the crater with a pool of moonlight, so that it is twice as bright on the crater floor as anywhere else in that vicinity. Scientists speculate that originally the full moon had reminded the two bears of the circus spotlight, and for that reason, they danced. Yet, it might be asked, what music do the descendants dance to?
Paw in paw, stepping in unison, what music can they possibly hear inside their heads as they dance under the full moon and the Aurora Australis, as they dance in brilliant silence?"
~Spencer Holst - Brilliant Silence







Acrylic black and white painting of David.


Master Copy of a Rembrandt painting.


Next three paintings are some more paintings from Life Painting 1.






~Danea

Monday, June 18, 2012

The most giant of updates

Hello all, It's been awhile since I've updated here on the blog, and I do apologize for that. For the next week or two I plan on posting every to every other day in order to get this blog up to date and up to speed without posting everything all in one giant post. That would be way to long to go through.
For this post, here is the pieces I promised to update with so long ago from fall semester. The prelims have been sitting here for so long and now here are the finished pieces. Enjoy.

Best piece of the fall semester that came out of Conceptual Illustration. This is suppose to illustrate an article on genetic dating.


Final in Landscape Painting.


Final in Conceptual Illustration. It's suppose to illustrate a headline that said "Enjoy baking cookies with your children".


Landscape of a Lake in Lakewood, Colorado.


Watercolor painting in Life Drawing 4.


A sculpture for conceptual illustration that illustrates overpopulation, specificly to the Walia Ibex.


Landscape of the Golden River.


Conceptual Illustration for an article on the over population of the American wild boar.


Skull studies in life drawing 4.


Hope you enjoy. The next post will be from the Spring semester. Either prelims, finals, or both :).