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  This is my place to show and tell and share and think and... you get the picture

Outside The Box


Outside the commercial industry I spend time creating fine art. The example to the left is Vitreous painting. The process requires pigment, glass powder and 1500 degrees of kiln fired heat.

Hey...


...ask me about Amber's super photographic skills. Outside of her full-time job and life she is an amazing photographer. Rachel and I  simply love her work. You can find her at Look Here Photography in Greenville Ohio. I also have a great Yoga referral if you need one.    

Sketch

Posted on by admin Posted in Acrylic Painting, Large Painting, Painting, Painting in Progress, Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Artist: Michael Glass Title: Collection (Bee #3)Artist: Michael Glass Title: Collection (Bee #3)  Detail View 5/21/13: Done
5/19/13: Detail view. After the paint dries I will get a photo of the whole painting up. Yep this one is done. Next? Already have a sketched out idea. Painting a Bee5/11/13: While working on this painting I started thinking of a mental spot between technique, subject and realism. I also keep on asking myself: why not use a brush, try some oil, be conventional and predictable. My production time would be reduced if i were using graphite or water color. Maybe its the unknown that attracts me to dropping paint.

Bee and Dessert

Posted on by admin Posted in Acrylic Painting, Large Painting, Painting | Leave a comment

The bee has been jumping in and out of your art for the last few years. I’m spending time and focus on these little guys. What could go wrong? The more i sketch these insects the more ideas come out. I’m trying not to be too serious and have some fun with my paint. But I can’t help but think of these as contemporary portraits of the human condition. sleep work sleep work.

Oh yea and I’m dropping paint instead of using a brush or palette knife. These drops are dots. It reminds me of magnified news print, etching granite and stippling with ink. Control is flighty at best. I adapt. Build. Destroy. Rebuild. Correct. Persuade.

Title: Bee and Dessert
Medium: Acrylic on Primed Masonite
Size: 42×42″
Price: TBA

Painting by Michael Glass. Acrylic on primed masonite


Detail of Painting. Expand View

Detail of Painting. Expand View

Detail of Painting. Expand View

Sketch for a painting

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current painting

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Current Painting by Artist Michael Glass

Window Paintings

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Here is link last year’s windows: Click Here

A local online news outlet wrote a very nice article about The Coffee Pot and My art work: Click Here

Alla Prima Study

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Prep work for a series of paintings

Detail below

Sketching – pastels

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prep work for oil paintings.

sketching

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Supreme Court vs Deer

Posted on by admin Posted in Acrylic Painting, caricature, Editorial Comic, Illustration, Large Painting, Painting, political comic, Political Humor | Leave a comment

In a development that should shock no one, the U.S. Supreme Court this morning agreed to review the constitutionality of deer crossing signs. It is expected that the hot button topic of speciesism will enter into the conversation.

Creating Ideas for Illustration

Posted on by admin Posted in caricature, Creative Process, Drawing, Illustration, keystone pipeline, Obama, Ohio illustrator, political comic, Political Humor | 3 Comments

Some folks have been asking: What is your process for creating illustration ideas? It’s a complex task that I have taken for granted. For this article I’m going to focus on how the idea is created.

I needed to build an illustration that represented Obama and his latest attention in regard to the Keystone pipeline. In a nutshell, the President was against extending the pipeline and now he is for it. There is hope that the fossil fuel will get to markets quicker and boost our energy independence. Here is some insight on the story.

Wordplay

Once I have an idea of the written story, I start by penciling down words and phrases. This is more of brainstorming event. In the image, Obama and oil pipeline are listed as main bullet points. Obama is the focal point, or hero of the image. I often ask myself while designing an ad or building a piece of art, “Who is the hero of the story?” Obama=hero, image=story. I also have a “squirrel” list. Remember the dog from the movie Up? Squirrel! The squirrel list is a collection of impulsive words that shoot out of my head. There is a moment where simple shapes are sketched out adjacent to the writing. I write, I sketch and I write. The drawing becomes more frequent and words give way to lines. I constantly will ask “What if?”. There is no solid break from where wordplay ends and the next phase begins.

Elements

Describing this process is difficult at best. I draw a series of thumbnails. The miniature drawings may or may not represent ideas I have written down. The quick sketching is lose and akin to chicken scratch. Below are some examples of rough concepts that started to form.

1. Mama Obama Bird
I started thinking of fat colorful birds in a nest. The baby birds have oil logos and corporate colors on them. It’s a good start but felt generic. A BP bird? That’s funny. Mama Obama has a nice ring to.

2. Obama Birthday Cake
I had this quick thought of the President popping out of a birthday cake surrounded by oil executives. The birthday cake is in shape of oil barrel. Barrels and cylinders kept popping up in my notes. The concept is not exciting.

3. Big Gulp
I kept coming back to this. The U.S. consumer holds an obscenely large fast food soda. There is something about a 40oz iced drink in a hand of a person. Diabetes comes to mind. Big cup=appetite=consumer.

4. Obama as a Barista
The president is serving a small cup of coffee to a huge consumer. The oil connection is hard for me. Coffee? How? Coffee pot? I needed a quicker connection to oil. A pattern started to form in regards to food consumption.

5. Cafeteria Food
I had an idea of the hero serving food in a cafeteria environment. Large overgrown people with trays of mashed potatoes are displayed. Gravy represents oil. But just a tiny amount of gravy is being applied to the mounds of starchy heaven. Say what you want but that’s a huge emotional response in my book. If you ever want to crash a Thanksgiving dinner, consume all the gravy.

 Atmosphere

Here are some elements that kept showing up while I was drawing thumbnails

• Obama/oil
• Consumer
• Action: Serving
• Food
• Barrel

The following paragraph is what was going on in my head while I was sketching. It is condensed and I removed out the sighs, long pauses and finger tapping.

Guy with a “clothing barrel” suspended on him. That won’t fly. Guy pouring a barrel of oil. Maybe the oil can be poured on a griddle to make pancakes. Pancakes. Hmm. Mountain of pancakes. He is standing on pancakes tipping the barrel over. Big consumers carrying trays of pancakes. Consumer needs to be large. Hero needs to be small. Canadian flag on barrel. Nice reference. Its not maple syrup. Its oil. Nice connection. The oil is just trickling (remember emotional mashed potato moment?). It won’t satisfy the consumer. U.S. oil consumption is one of the highest in world second to that China. Sporks! Yes I must have Sporks darn it.

Result
Obama caricature is standing on a mountain of pancakes. He is pushing over a barrel of oil. The barrel is marked with the Canadian Maple leaf. The oil is trickling down the side onto the table. The huge consumers are seated around the focal point. It’s a good idea that is worth exploring.

Good Start : Eye level is standard issue blah. If I was feeling lazy, I would stamp this approved and move onto the final series of line drawings. The broken plates and straw came into play. The mouth and tiny ears fit the large obese figures. I like the visual flow. Love the spork.

Better: This is a better departure from the previous character sketch. Our hero of the story is the focal point. The eye level is unusual. The viewer gets a different perspective. This image will move onto the refinement stage.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

In short, I start with brief notes and quick drawing. As the thinking process advances, my drawing is more defined. Once the idea is acknowledged I move on to a tighter drawing. The tight drawing phase has been left out of this article. Perhaps I will save that for future content.  You can see a final image of the illustration here. For those interested in my illustration work I have a couple more interesting  projects on the horizon. Lets just say I’m going to be inspired by the great outdoors and adventure. Take care. Thank you for reading this.