12
Feb 10

0110 FanArt: Tails

Ink on Bristol, colored in Photoshop.

This weeks fan art brought to you by the fail sega system. I introduce the one and only, sad sidekick that always kept up; Mr. Tails (from Sonic the Hedge Hog).

Honestly, during the war of Sega and Nintendo, my family invested in the Nintendo system. So, my experience with Sonic and friends were limited to sleep overs and afternoons after school at friend’s homes.

Was Sonic the Hedge Hog that quality of a game, though? I mean let’s be honest; Super Mario, Zelda, and Punch Out were time well spent in comparison.

But I am sure that there are still some die-hard Sega fans out there; still betting on this horse and holding their breath for the next time Nintendo will throw Sonic a bone and introduce him as a secret character on a upcoming game.

(Yeah, it happened. Do you think lightning strikes twice in the same spot?)

So sad watching celebrities fall.

And think, what came of Tails? Did he start a successful crack habit to forget Sonic’s abandonment? Maybe he is turning tricks–two tail for the price of one–somewhere on the sunset strip?

No, I think Tails had always been a survivor and a believer. I say he probably found a job to get by and waits for Sonic to give him a call, faith untarnished. I think, he still thinks there is a future. He will most likely start a family and one day bring his son out into the field to show him how to fly, like dad once did. At this time he will tell his son of the past adventures, the fame, and the reason why he tail practices still because he misses it all. And his child will convince him that he has the potential to start again. And that he never needed Sonic. And the child’s statement will ring with truth. And Tails will set out to start a new adventure game.

But that night, on the way back home, he’ll get hit by a truck and die suddenly.

And Tail’s son will be wrecked by the idea that his father’s sudden death was only coincidence, which he can not accept. So he creates a new religion to convince himself that death is predestined and there is a plan. He renames himself Tails the Savior, demonizes Sonic, and sets Nintendo as the institution of Hell. He grows extremely rich by donations to his church from those desperate looking for answers.

Tails the Savior’s faithful are mostly past Sega fans.

The fans come and go. It is the side kicks that will do anything to make you look good in hopes to share a little of the spot light.

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10
Feb 10

Foot in the Door 4

This is my contribution to the Foot in the Door 4 show at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts.

Charlie and I decided to add something to the show and in the spirit of the show–just being for fun, for the community, and to gather artwork together without any judges, panels, or applications (just with in a foot square)–I decided to try a couple of applications and techniques that I hadn’t in the past; gold leaf and resin.

Of course, I purchased the faux gold leaf rather then the real stuff. The real stuff tends to be on the expensive side.

Gold leaf is putsy and annoying. The leaf was thin and wispy and hard to manage. It was the glue provided that didn’t like. The glue was too watery and runs past the area I originally applied to, when putting the leaf on top of it. Kind of like jelly spilling over the side when putting the bread on top to finish a sandwich.

In the end it worked out. I think it is going to take a bit of more trial and error to get used to the gold leaf. Maybe I’ll try effectiveness of some other glues.

I was fortunate to have the tutelage of Charlie in the application of resin. He has been using resin on his art for awhile now.

And it all would have gone smoothly, if I hadn’t caught the painting with my sleeve, when walking past it, a couple of hours into it drying.

The painting with tacky resin flipped, landed on its face, onto some news paper.

Fuck.

I managed to peal most of the paper off. But couldn’t get it all off. I burned the remaining and poured another layer of resin over it.

Charlie said he liked it better with the burned paper, but I think he was just being nice.

Ah well, live and learn.

Be sure to join me and Charlie on February 18 at the MIA for the opening reception of the Foot in the Door 4 show.

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08
Feb 10

020810 Demoniacal Project

Artist: Doug Forbes

Charun: His name was imported from Greek Charon, although it is uncertain whether Etruscans had a native name for a god of the underworld before this. As suggested by alternations in the Etruscan language such as θu “one” changing to θunśna “first”, lev “lion” (from Greek leōn) and Apulu (from Greek Apóllōn), words ending in -n after u were disappearing from the language which is why we see his name spelled Хarun and later Хaru. The Etruscan Charun was fundamentally different from his Greek counterpart. Guarding the entry to the underworld he is depicted with a hammer, his religious symbol, and is shown with pointed ears, snakes around his arms, and a blueish coloration symbolizing the decay of death. In some images he has enormous wings. He is also depicted as a large creature with snake-like hair, a vulture’s hooked-nose, large tusks like a boar , heavy brow ridges, large lips, fiery eyes, pointed ears a black beard, enormous wings, discolored (pale cream, bluish or greyish) skin, and snakes around his arm.

sources: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charun

Demoniacal Project:
The idea behind the Demoniacal Project is a simple one; have the talented poet/writer Tom Lewis create a description and poem of an obscure demon and then collect a bunch of visual artists to find inspiration in the text to illustrate how the demon may look. Subscribe to NotAsPretty blog and look for the Demonical project every second Monday of the month.

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25
Jan 10

Video: sketch: Sad Face

I am still experimenting with what I want to do with the video aspect of creating my art. This is just a simple marker sketch of a Sad Face. Do you think I should create a bunch of these to post? Are they cool or too simple and you want something more?

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23
Jan 10

The all new Not As Pretty Blog

Welcome to the new Not As Pretty Blog.

When I started the Not As Pretty Blog, it was just a simple “all about me and my art” blog. But over the months it has matured into a project blog for me and other featured artists. And hopefully, in the near future, I’ll sign on more admins and flesh out this idea.

If you have noticed, me and a number of other artists have started a number of projects, Fan Art Fridays, the Demoniacal Project, and a few solo projects.

And I am excited to hear the word of the idea of my blog is spreading and more artists are interested in joining in on existing projects and starting new ones. So exciting!

It turns out that I am not the only artist that treats their craft like a crack habit.

So, lets get this show on the road.

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22
Jan 10

Friday Fan Art: Willy Wonka

Willy Wonka: Doug Forbes

Artist: Doug Forbes

Willy Wonka: Josh Van Heuveln

Artist: Josh Van Heuveln

Artist: Charlie Forbes

The Friday Fan Art Project is a simple one; create your interpretation of the chosen Character and post it on the NotAsPretty Blog. We do it for the hell of it. We do it for fun. We do it because all good artists treat their craft like a crack habit.

Last Friday Fan Art: Mario

This weeks featured artists are:

Doug Forbes
DougForbes.com

Josh Van Heuveln
myspace.com/joshvanheuveln

Charlie Forbes
myspace.com/charliecharm

Be sure to visit their website to view more of their work.

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18
Jan 10

Shred Til You’re Dead flyer: Zombie Boardshop

Client: Zombie Board Shop
Project: Shred ‘Til You’re Dead V

I have been working with Shawn Solem, owner of Zombie Board Shop and thought I would show you a sample of the latest work I did for his shop.

I started with a sketch and moved into ink. This same process I show in my Fan Art: Mario.

I scanned in the image, worked a little Photoshop magic, and finished with what you see here. I decided to keep the colors to a limited palette to allow the red to pop out more and also to convey a sense of lack of hope.

More of my illustrations can be seen at my website, DougForbes.com.

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13
Jan 10

A sketch

Today’s random sketch brought to you by my patience waiting for late friends at the bar.

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11
Jan 10

0110 Demoniacal Project

Artist: Charlie Forbes


Artist: Doug Forbes

Sending Pishachas from the Field

This is no seraph,
Dipping down,
To kiss the blessed—
This one has teeth.

Small child in the field,
Digging brown earth,
Pulls up a claw and spits
Blood over wheat stalks.

So we beat the grasses
To drive out all devas.
No help:
“You are possessed by demons.”

The old men describe them as gods,
But they wail and devour flesh.
In their presence resides possession
By the undesirable hunger.

That night we encountered
Ancient flesh-eaters. Perceiving
The dripping claw, the gods wept
with ancient abhorrence.

We listen to our elders:
“The demoniac must speak
The language of a child, and
Feed the appropriate goddess.”

“Each field possesses a goddess.
But this demon will devour
Before she may settle her soft foot
Upon the bosom of the growing earth.”

“They feed on the weakened children in the field.
Where the Pitris reflect emaciation,
Your uncooked ancestors are devoured
By these horrible Pishachas.”

So we enacted the rituals of our elders.
We departed the field as devas,
We struck the ground and beat the grasses
incessantly, threatened the demon.

And offered rotting meat
In seven baskets,
To send away the Pishachas,
The demons with awful fangs.

These rituals we performed,
These ablutions we conducted,
The prayers were made, for
The Pishacha will not leave the grave

Of our fathers, because of their nature—
Except that these words are spoken,
But for these good actions, enacted
By the pure-souled.

If satisfaction is offered in person
To the voracious demon,
Demand that it refuse flesh,
That it spare the child in its talons.

Then killing comes out, comes out
of the fields. Such action when threatened,
at last teaches the Pishacha
respect for the gods.

Written by Tom Lewis

Commentary

The ghoulish, flesh-eating Pishachas arise in ancient Hindu mythology. They are first described by the eleventh-century Kashmiri folklorist, Kshemendra Vyasadasa. His translation of an older chronicle of Indian history was described as based on “goblin language” (actually a derogatory term for “low” dialects spoken by North Indian common people). The origin of the name “Pishacha” is obscure, but we find Manvas, Nagas, Pishachas, among others, in the list of ancient Kashmiri tribes. These people were known for exorcising their fields before attempting to cultivate them.

Haunters of fields of the dead, these demons eat human flesh, can change shape or become invisible, and are acknowledged masters of possession and insanity among their human victims. Welcome neither in heaven nor in hell, Pishachas can only be killed with a blessed sword, but exorcism rites can dispel them from a given area, if performed correctly.

sources: Wikia Education: Pishacha, Early Kashmiri Society & The Challenge of Islam
A History of Sanskrit literature (1900).

Demoniacal Project:
The idea behind the Demoniacal Project is a simple one; have the talented poet/writer Tom Lewis create a description and poem of an obscure demon and then collect a bunch of visual artists to find inspiration in the text to illustrate how the demon may look. Subscribe to NotAsPretty blog and look for the Demonical project every second Monday of the month.

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09
Jan 10

My Palette: Oil Paint

A few of you have asked my what I use to paint. The simple answer is oil paint.

As for brands of paint, I typically go Utrecht Paint. You can’t beat their prices and for the most part, they have good pigments. Grumbacher and Winsor & Newton are good paint as well, but using them frequently will assuredly break your bank.

Side note: Winsor & Newton makes a “student grade” paint called Winton. Student Grade means, we paid the easter bunny to shit colors in a tube to sell to you at low low prices. Although they are pretty colors, they paint like shit. The staff at Art Materials try to pedal this shit knowing very well what it is. Where is your damn integrity Art Materials staff?

I cut the paint several different ways, when applying it to the canvas. Cutting it with Turpenoid gives a watery look, almost like working with watercolor. I have two, a clean and a dirty, to avoid contaminating the lighter pigments with the darker ones when switching. Linseed oil is pretty much the binder for the pigments, so adding it tends to make the paint more translucent (and takes forever to dry). Sometimes, when covering large areas with paint, I combine both linseed oil, mineral spirits, and the paint) Stand oil is just like linseed oil, just thicker–like honey. I rarely use it to paint directly, but to cut the harder paint to a consistency I like to work with (burnt umber always seems to come rock hard).

Below is a shot of my palette and how a typically set up the paints. My palette is just a scrap slab of acrylic I got from a sign company’s dumpster, and has been with me for 15 years now. Like most painters, I am quite proud of the paint build up on my palette over the years.

The way I paint, the oil takes about 24 hours to set-48 hours to dry. To avoid ruing my paintings by an itchy trigger finger when they are still wet, I tend to work on 4 or 5 paintings at a time, and switch them out, when they need time to dry.

So there you have it. Probably more information then you were asking for. But I’m a provider.

Also: a rant on art supply stores in Minneapolis area.

Utrecht Paint (Hennipen by MCTC ) I shop mostly at Utrecht paint store. Good damn prices. The dudes there are very cool people (and totally willing to work with you to order anything you need for their next shipment to avoid shipping prices–A+ service in my book, for sure). They are a meat and potatoes art supply store. If you are looking for something more obscure, then you should go to Wet Paint.

Dick Blick (pick a suburb) They carry shitty amateur supplies. Unless you are looking for a starter kit. As a matter of fact, that’s what I call them, “The Starter Kit Store–where grandma buys you your inspiration birthday gifts”. But they are all you got out in the suburbs besides Micheals Craft.

Art Materials (Lyndale + 27th) They have a lot of stuff you don’t need, little of what you do need, and their prices are stupid high. There are only a hand full of nice employees there; most of them are shit bags. They do have good sales on stretched canvas and illustration board.

Penco (Washington and something north of Hennipen ) Simply, they have a shitty location. Artists moved out of the warehouse district 20 years ago. They should, too. Maybe head to North East Arts District–y’ know, where all the artists moved to?

Wet Paint (Grand Ave in St. Paul) They have stupid-insulting high prices, but carry really good product. I go to buy stuff there that I can’t find anywhere else. Their staff are really awesome people that care about what they sell.

Side note: I hate the outside signs on the Wet Paint store. They are cheesy. Even Dick Blick wouldn’t stoop so low. They are a high end quality art product store, and they should look that way too. The signs are like forcing the Monopoly guy in a corn flower blue polyester leisure suit. *egch!

Class. Wet Paint, you symbolize class. Look the damn roll for Pete’s sake. A humble opinion.

And a good rule of thumb, be sure to see if Home Depot (or other local hardware) carry what you are looking for. You would be surprised how much product they have in common and you will assuredly find it at a cheaper price at a hardware store.

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