Wednesday
Feb012012

New month, fresh ideas

Examples from two sides of my work, from the last day of January. I've been working on some fresh thinking about approaches to designing rooms, primarily kitchens, with more than one style of cabinetry. My manufacturing partner, Premier Custom-Built Cabinetry, Inc., and I are excited about the prospect of bringing these ideas to the design community and the market. I don't always end a work day feeling a sense of accomplishment, but I felt pretty good when I hit the "render" button in AutoCAD to let the computer produce this six hour rendering of one of my concept kitchens. I was able to really relax and enjoy doing my sketchbook entry when I went downstairs for the night. Although I am often racked with self doubt, the combination of doing art and design, both as serious pursuits, is sometimes immensely rewarding to me.

Glasgow multilingual concept kitchen, copyright 2012 Premier Custom-Built Cabinetry, Inc.

 

chair with Rad Davis and vintage ashtray, Karisma Graphite Aquarelle and watercolor pencils

 

Monday
Jan302012

An interval of calmness

When events and emotions conspire to induce sadness, discouragement, heartbreak, exhaustion, I am grateful for the solace of my love of drawing and my ability, at times, to find some calm and comfort in doing it. Here is the evening clutter on my chairside table up in the studio loft, where I've retreated to find my way back to center. Tomorrow is a fresh day.

silent companions for a quiet evening, 11 9/16 x 8 1/4, 8B Mars Lumograph and watercolor pencils

Sunday
Jan292012

Sunday morning shadows

I love the morning light in our house. For the past ten years, we've lived in a 160 year old former church in a small village alongside the Susquehanna River, a brooding two story block of brick and stone with ten and a half foot high ceilings on the first floor, and double that upstairs in the former sanctuary. Large but widely spaced double hung windows break through the masonry at regular intervals along the east and west walls, parallel to East Market Street as well as the building's spine. It is a wide building, and the windows in the living and dining area and adjoining kitchen, while opening onto views of the brick patio and side yard, face west, away from the rising sun. The light that filters in during the early hours is indirect, so the inner reaches of these rooms are layered in shadow, even as hints of a brilliant morning beckon through panes of glass. It is this zone, where colors are soft and subtle, thick with the dark, with the profiles of objects emerging from shadow, that I am captivated by. It is only with reluctance that I turn on lights to chase away the delicious ambiguity of these quiet interiors. The Japanese writer Jun'ichirō Takizaki wrote a gem of an essay in the early 1930s entitled In Praise of Shadows which was translated into English, making the case for the aesthetic richness and mystery that lurk in the darkness, and saying it with far more eloquence than I could hope to do, at least in words. 

living room with Talbert Rhodesian, 11 9/16 x 8 1/4, Derwent Inktense pencils

Saturday
Jan282012

Three Rhodesians

Maybe I'll take time later to write about these, and might even give it another whirl with a more detailed drawing before I move them off the table, but for now, here is a quick Saturday morning pencil drawing of three very different variations on the Rhodesian pipe shape, from three of my very favorite pipe carvers.

Thursday
Jan262012

Before work

It's time for another day of painstaking (for me anyway) Glasgow cabinet series illustration work, which won't look anything like this unruly sketchbook page done by my evil, undisciplined alter ego. But if I don't let him out for a little exercise every day, BAD THINGS happen.

Suzanne Crane coffee mug and Rad Davis long shank hickory nut, Prismacolors and Mars Lumograph 8B pencil