Video: Time lapse of Drawvember day 22 “Angel”

This is the Haserot Angel, which I painted on day 22 of my Drawvember.

It’s a bronze sculpture of a life-size angel guarding the grave of Francis Haserot at Lake View Cemetery, Cleveland, Ohio, created in 1924 by sculptor Herman Matzen, who called it “The Angel of Death Victorious”.

The black tears that pour out of his eyes and drain down his neck appeared over time as the bronze aged. Definitely not the common angel! At first I was afraid by the pictures of it, then I was fascinated.

I chose to paint it (with both hands!) with a flat brush and black Sumi ink. The bristles are unfortunately worn out and the lines aren’t so sharp and thin anymore.

When I set out to draw and paint, I didn’t anticipate the camera app to crash 💥. Whatever happened I checked at some point and found the Home Screen instead of the camera running. I ended up with two videos which I patched together but some of the process is missing.

58-second time-lapse of my hands drawing and painting in black the bronze statue of an angel

Video: making of Inktober day 31 “crawl”

This is a leopard crawling up a tree. I drew this on the last day of Inktober to illustrate the prompt “crawl”.

I felt confident enough to forego any pencil sketch and drew directly with the Pentel black ink Brushpen, and it went all right! I then used the light grey ink Brush Writer from Kuretake for shadows.

40-second video of my hand inking directly and without pencil sketch a leopard crawling up a tree.

Video: making of Inktober day 19 “Dizzy”

This is trumpet player Dizzy Gillespie which I drew on the day 19 of Inktober 2020 to illustrate the prompt “dizzy”.

I chose a very dark photo as reference, so I could leave only a few blank spots on the paper for the highlights and plaster the rest with my black ink Pentel Brushpen, which ran out of ink right near the end!

24-second timelapse of my hands inking the dark partches and forming the trumpet player seen from behind.

Art: Cranes on pine tree (+ time-lapse)

I made a simpler version of “two cranes on a pine tree” which I drew for a friend last year.

I used black, grey and ink brush pens, drew on a watercolour postcard, and painted a gold outline with a thin brush and liquid gold ink.

Black, grey and red ink drawing of two cranes on a pine tree branch

Time-lapse

22-second time-lapse of my hand drawing in black, grey and red ink two cranes on a pine tree branch