Monday, January 23, 2006
Scribble
I guess there has to be an element of obsessive-compulsive disorder going on in anyone who makes images.
Hopefully though, most image makers know when to leave a drawing alone, whether they think it is finished or not.
Which leads me to these drawings.
Several years ago I was living with hugely talented pot smoking maniac (he was a very very fine illustrator).
We ended up going our separate ways, and one of the reasons was our interests in art were fundementally different.
I started doing these quite obsessive, laboured abstract scribble drawings, and he thought I was completely insane - could not comprehend why I would spend days crosshatching the white off the page when there were naked girls to be drawn (mind you, I'm kind of understood where he was coming from).
Anyway.
I did about 7 or 8 in 3 different sizes.
The medium sized one is the image above.
This is a detail
And this is the largest one I did - it's a rough panorama of the finished thing.
It's about 4 metres across and about a metre and a half in height.
It took me about a year to complete on and off and represents to me, the most obsessive I've ever been when it comes to my art.
I'm not sure if the work I put into it is something I'm proud of, but I am very pleased with the final image.
People inevitably ask what it is and I really have no idea.
I called it Stormfront in the end, deciding it looked a bit like rain clouds.
Someone I can't recall described it as "meditative" which I liked.
At the moment there are tradesmen polishing the floors in my house so I'm staying with a friend almost exactly opposite my place on the other side of the valley.
This was taken about 6 o'clock this morning.
It's going to be another hot one...
obsession rendering subtle tones- tre' cool.
ReplyDeleteI am not kidding, These drawings are perhaps so far my favourite pieces by you...and you know how much I like your work!....Here I love the boldness, the energy and the vision.
ReplyDeleteAh Mr Grillo that means a great deal to me.
ReplyDeleteIt took a leap of faith on my own behalf to discard "characters" as it were and do this strange textured thing, but it certainly felt right at the time.
I shall get back to them at some stage I imagine - the big one was the last one and it kind of knocked it out of me for a while.
Elliot, you are an artist in the true sense of the word, meaning you've got some screws loose. Seriously.
ReplyDeleteI mean that in a positive way though- these cross hatch things are great.
It would also be nice to switch countries for a couple of weeks,- over here it's nothing but ice and snow.. I yearn for the sun.
elliot.
ReplyDeleteInteresante tu blog y por sobre todo los dibujos.
Saludos desde Chile.
Marco Antonio Sépúlveda
Marco - I don't speak your language but I sense you are making a positive comment.
ReplyDeleteI shall visit your many blogs later today!
Wow Elliot. That is amazing. I'm not surprised the large one took it out of you. It feels like it had a rhythm running through it. I'll say it again. That's amazing.
ReplyDeleteDonnachada - That's me, Mr Rhythm!
ReplyDelete(and thanks man, really).