Friday, May 19, 2006
Here is a stack of sketches I've been penciling out during lunch and so on. I actually had about 5 or so other ones, but after looking at them they just didn't seem like anything to post. I already have enough people laughing at me as it is.
This is just a figure study with a little bizarro chapel thing, I guess. I need to include figures in more of my architectural sketches to help give them more scale.
I love little doodles that turn into something worth saving. This is another that'll be added to my "micro" art collection. I, for some reason, consider doodling to be micro art. It must be cause it is usually small.
If I was to have a favorite color, which I don't, it would most likely be yellow. I like the way the structure in the foreground looks like it is slicing through the air, or something like that.
This is an idea I need to take to the next level (among the many other ones I have mentioned). It is basically a box lifted off the ground by three arms. I think it would make a nice little beach house or something along those lines.
You will have to decide what is going on here. Well, no you don't. It is just random thoughts scribbled onto one page. Scribbling and doodling is what I do. Posting things on here gives me a chance to look at things I have done, and to show myself how stupid a few of my thoughts are. I don't post those, at least I hope I don't.
Posted by Mark at 8:17 PM Categories: Architecture , Art :: |
Monday, May 01, 2006
Earlier I showed one of my quick models made from old business cards. Since it was fun, Evan wanted to do it to, and Kuper followed. I started just letting them stack the cards, and bending and folding them so they could stack easier.
I was lucky enough to get a couple of shots of Evan's cards stacks before Kuper knocked them over. The next day I decided to let Evan use the glue and make something like I did. I mad another as well.
Mine model is on the left, and Evan's is on the right. The only thing I did for him was fold the two corners up on the first horizontal level, and I folded the long vertical for his "door". I think he did a really good job, and not a bad design for a 4 year old. I wonder if he will want to do it for a living like I do?