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rob

Homeless person with a digital camera

by Henk ter Heide on Monday June 30, 2008

Drawings by Celia Calle, distorted art by jdyf333 and landscape paintings by Rob Ijbema.

Celia Calle’s drawings
I’m somewhat at a loss how to describe this next site. Here is what Celia says about it:
Dismiss any preconceived ideas of fine art as you step into the mindset of Celia Calle. Calle’s art aesthetic is strangely alluring and undeniably powerful. Her awesome images are ominous, commanding, sometimes warped, but always spiced with a generous injection of humor, in keeping with the artist’s effervescent personality.

Art by jdyf 333
Does a homeless person with a digital camera strike you as a bit contradictory?

While searching for interesting art sets on Flickr I came across this picture.
Unsafe Harbor
Unsafe harbor by jdyf333

Whether I go and look at the rest of the set isn’t determent by my liking of a picture but by my feeling that the set could be interesting. If this picture is the best of the set I’m probably not interested. But if it’s the worst it’s quite possible I’ll publish the set.
In this case I didn’t like the set at all and that would have been the end of it if it wasn’t for the fact that this artist publish 16,648 photos. That peaked my interest enough to have a look at his profile.

Apparently this woman(?) lived a large part of her life on the street. Always drawing and painting. It’s not clear to me how she saved all her work and if she still homeless. But she has published a large part of her work on Flickr.

I’ve looked at a portion and to be honest I must say that I actually don’t like it. Although she has some original work it’s most repetitive. Repeating drawing or pictures with slight variances.
But for anyone (never mind a homeless person) to upload 16,000 picture in the four years of Flickrs existence she really must love what she is doing.
So here’s to passion.

Painting wales diary
My country man Rob Ijbema lives in Wales and paints lovely pictures of the landscape.

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Allowing for mistakes (Drawing: Towers)

by Henk ter Heide on Monday July 30, 2007

A botched experiment

This was supposed to be the fourth part of my five part series about drawing a dark color around a lighter one. But the fourth experiment was something of a failure.

I was curious whether it was possible to draw on top of the hair spray I use to fixate my drawings. And if so what would happen if I would draw stars on fixated blue.
It turns out that it is possible to draw on top of a fixate drawing. But yellow stars on top of blue fixate or otherwise are invisible. To bad.

Yellow on black

But it got me thinking about something else. I wanted to draw black rectangles and color them yellow.
There are two problems with that idea. Firstly black stains very easily. So if I were to start with the rectangles and then come back to color them the whole drawing would be ruined by a lot of stains.
Secondly black isn’t really black. When you mix it with yellow you get a green like color. So if I would start with yellow oblongs and then draw black around them, the lines would turn green.

How nice that it is possible to draw on top of fixate.

Towers
Towers

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License to fail

Don’t know if you noticed it but this drawing is riddled with mistakes. Lines are crooked and not in line with each other.

I’ve always been afraid of making mistakes. Afraid to the point where I rather do nothing then make even the smallest of mistakes.

There must be something in my youth that explains this fear. Maybe a teacher or one of my parents who gave heavy handed punishments if I made a small mistake.
The problem is that I can’t remember anything of that nature.

The last few months I’ve been wondering whether it is possible that this has something to do with autism and I think it has.
People with autism tend to get fixated on little details and forget the big picture.

For instance last week I commented on the weblogtoolscollection site on a post about keyboard shortcuts. I told them that I had found that ctrl-<number> a highlighted piece of text will give you a header (in WordPress).
A few hours later I realized that I had made a mistake. It shouldn’t be ctrl-<number> but cntrl-<number>. I had forgotten an “n”.

This time I was able to put it in perspective. The abbreviation for “control” is both written with an “n” and without an “n”. So it isn’t really a mistake and it doesn’t bother me all the much. But until a few weeks ago something like this could bother me for weeks, even month.

Now I know. But up till last September I never knew I had autism. I never knew I tended to fixate on the little details and forget the big picture. I didn’t know I had to put situations in perspective and force myself to look at the big picture.

Better drawing

I’m learning that mistakes in a drawing aren’t necessary mistakes.
In my drawing Sideways I made several mistakes. If you look closely there is one yellow circle that’s a little red. Couldn’t cover that one up.
There are also several circles that are in the wrong place. I had to draw extra circles in places I didn’t plan to cover these mistakes up and it actually made the drawing a lot more interesting then would have been the case without the mistake.

For this drawing I planned to make mistakes. So instead of using a ruler to get all line straight and in line I drew them by hand. That way the lines aren’t perfect but they are a life.

Featured on See me draw

Rob Gonsalves draws wonderful pictures that have the same magical feel as drawings by Escher

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