The following painting was such a let down for me that today I am resigning from my career as an illustrator and am taking up agribusiness and I have ordered my first pair of llamas:
(APRIL FOOLS)
Kind of.
The painting is in fact, a terrible let down. And I may, or may not have illegally acquired a pair of llamas.
The reason the painting is such a let down for me was not just that it fell short of some internal artistic goal, or that the story I had hoped it would tell didn't communicate well; it was mostly that it failed to truly convey awe-struck I was upon beholding a particular waterfall in Switzerland a few years ago.
I hiked up it for several hours one day. There was something about the thunderous roar of the water and the way the water coiled down the mountain that made me think of some vast, terrible dragon. It was an awesome force of nature. One wrong step on the slippery, moss-covered rocks and I would be ground up and eaten.
My little sketches might one day have been found and they would have pieced it all together. (Sir, we've deciphered it. It was aliens, aliens riding dinosaurs that got him.)
Something about this place put the image of this dragon snaking his way down the mountain into my head. I would later scribble down a tiny thumbnail of this to remember it and since then have made several unsuccessful attempts to paint it.
This time I have decided to try it from a slightly different angle.
By flipping it horizontally. NOBODY WILL SEE THIS COMING.
Actually there is more than that. My favorite thing in representational art is story, and in particular when a piece of art draws you in and makes you tell the story yourself as you walk around inside of it.
In the previous attempt my story was rather one dimensional. (Warrior with sword fight big dragon! Painting smash!) At the time I felt it was interesting but on further consideration I wish that I had thought a little longer about it before painting it.
In this one I wanted to do something a little more fun and hopefully more interesting. Since it was tax season the following story seemed to dovetail nicely with the original theme. (The title is the key... More on that next time..)
The Plan: Pencil and acrylic on paper, then sealed in matte medium and the color painted in oil. 18 x 24 inches.
In general I hate to retread old ground and would always prefer to plow on to someplace new, but this time, I am really excited to see where this leads.
Original Waterfall Dragon post here: http://muddycolors.blogspot.com/2012/08/dragon-watercolor-and-final.html