Final Touches (for now…) on “The Curse of the Mummy” drawing.

I added some final touches on “The Curse of the Mummy” drawing from my monster series before I put it away for the next one.

Overall I lost my inspiration on this one early on. For final touches I reinforced some darks and shadows and added some texture to the tomb walls and wraps of the mummy. My drawing hand smeared the right side if the composition when reinforcing the darks on the left and center but I was not inspired to go back over it right now.

If I were to redo this one I would make it more of an abstraction and a light creature subtracted from dark.20181126_201419

 

“The Curse of the Mummy” Drawing Progress – Days 4 and 5

I took a couple days off and got back to this mummy drawing. This is progress  from days 4 and 5.

A challenge aspect of this composition has been achieving good fidelity of the face and the wraps on the face, of the mummy in relation to the dark background the creature is emerging from. I filled it in fully and obliterated it with the eraser multiple times before the latest iteration seen in this picture, which may not even be finalized. When looking back at the early, rough sketched versions with gesture lines and little detail, I might even prefer those versions to this latest more fully realized one.

I worked in more stark contrast between the illuminated tomb walls and cast shadows by both adding heavier darks and subtracting light with the eraser. I will focus on this part of the composition more fully before deciding on the detail of the creature, to hopefully better solve the aforementioned challenge.

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“The Curse of the Mummy” Drawing Day 3, from 11-13-18

This is progess after day 3, 11/13/18, of my new drawing called “Curse of the Mummy” from my collection of monster drawings I’m working on.

I continued to darken the majority of the composition since I want this to feel more like light subtracted from dark. I added bolder lines and more detail to the mummy to get a better idea of placement but this will likely get erased and lightened to add to the effect of the ambient lighting in the tomb revealing selective parts of the mummy.

The hands will eventually get a lot more detail to reveal the embalmed flesh and symbolize the curse of the mummy reaching and grabbing the viewer, up close and pronounced. The right hand still needs to be resolved as far as placement, proportion, and anatomy.

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“The Curse of the Mummy” Drawing-Days 1 and 2 from 11/11/18 and 11/12/18

I began a new drawing called “The Curse of the Mummy” from the monster collection of drawings I’m working on. They were inspired by the classic Universal monster movies.

For this one i have the mummy reaching out to grab the viewer from the dark hallway of the tomb smbolizing the curse that takes a hold of those that unearth the tomb. This drawing will be dark dominant with just enough lighting to reveal the features of the creature.

 

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“Dr. Frankenstein’s Monster”- Drawing Days 3 and 4, 11/8/18 -11/9/18

This is more progress from days 3 and 4 of working on “Dr. Frankenstein’s Monster” from the Monster Series of Drawings I’m working on.

I implemented some of the things and made some of the changes I touched on yesterday. The ground beneath the monster’s feet was darkened further  and more detail was added to anchor the creature and better pronounce the symbolism of it’s dark origin. The winding road from the castle was added faintly to createscale and distance as well as being symbolic of the monster’s twisted and treachorous birth.  A pine tree background was added in front of the castle and mountains to pay homage to the eastern European  terrain of the original film as well as help create grander scale.

After filling in more detail of the monster, I experimented and subtracted part of the outer layer with an eraser to give an electricity effect. I did not like the results so I went back and reinforced the fidelity and detail of the monster.

Finally, the chains still need to be resolved. They are nearly placed but will need a lot of detail yet, as they are a prominent, symbolic role in the story.

 

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Creative Therapy

During challenging times, partaking in creative endeavors can prove to be therapeutic and can help spark positive momentum when a person is lowly and in a dark place.

This idea is not the consumption of other people’s creations, but rather one’s own creations. During challenging times, in an attempt to avoid suffering, it is tempting to indulge in the consumption of other’s creations rather than manifest our own.  A few examples are overeating, watching hours of TV, or playing hours of video games.  When we engage in the creative process and attempt to create something rather than consuming something, we become proactive instead of reactive.

One fascet of the creative process involves imagining something and attempting to create that something from beginning to end.  The idea of this takes the person from someone who is at the mercy of the creator to becoming the creator themselves.  The therapeutic aspect of this is that the person once in a weaker position, is now empowered by becoming the creator, and they are now responsible for what happens rather than the victim of what happened.

The actual creative endevour or medium is almost irrelevant, as is the perfection of the actual creation. This proactive process, even if in need of refinement, and even if in a state of growth, is the catalyst for positive momentum since it is founded on someone taking action and attempting to see something thru from beginning to end. These two principles can then be applied to anything outside the creative process, so when that happens, the person begins taking constant action and creates foward momentum.

 

Monster Series-“Dr. Frankenstein’s Monster”-Day two rough sketch-11/7/18

This is “Dr. Frankenstein’s Monster” from the Monster Collection of drawings I’m working on, after day two.

I decided to make the chains more prominent as well as I laid the lightning locations in place, which will become more substantial as well. The castle will probably get a winding road to help create distance and scale. The prominent yet broken chains show the escape of the creature born in the dark of an ominous castle down a winding road toward the light.

The bottom right rocks that the monster is standing on will get much darker to anchor the focal point, which is the monster in this case. As you go toward the top of the image the lightning will illuminate the top portions of the creature. The darker bottom portion of the image represents the darkness of Dr. Frankenstein’s soul when trying to play God and creating an abomination. This is met by lightning, the very light that helped bring the dark creation to life. The illumination represents the glimpse of good and light in the creature despite its birth that took place in the dark.

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Being Productive During Unemployment and Gaining an Advantage from the Situation

Losing a job is a reality of modern life.  Being between work can be unsettling and stressful due to the financial uncertainty alone.  The psychological aspects of losing a job can lead to feelings of depression, despair, and inadequacy.  These components and others, combined can easily lead to counter productivity and a mindset of scarcity instead of abundance.  How can the narrative change and someone become productive and gain an advantage from this situation?

We are inundated with negative feelings the moment we lose a job.  Knowing that these negative feelings are inevitable and knowing that they surface when we first lose a job, we can then label the feelings as temporary and fleeting, rather than wallow in permanence with them.  The uncertainty associated with losing a job can be turned into a certainty.  By no longer having that job, we can now be certain that we have the time that would have been spent on the job to do things that are not part of the job.  If we make choices that do not support the negative feelings of losing the job and complete them during the time that we would have been on the job, we are being productive.  A good example is to make a list of the things you said you would do if you weren’t working at the job or if you had the time to do during work hours on the job.  This list can even be comprised of unfinished things that you would have completed had it not been for the aforementioned excuses.  What this list represents are things that are not associated with the job that was lost, so in turn, they are not bi-products of the initial negative feelings of losing the job and can be deemed as positive things.  By undertaking this list during the time you are no longer on the job, you are now taking that time and creating value, thus being productive.

 

Loss…

loss

 

Over the last two weeks I faced some losses. I lost an old friend, and I lost my job of nearly the past 4 years. I thought about what the losses were to me, the timing of them, and what they meant in the grand scheme of things.

When I lost my friend in an auto accident and heard the news from another friend, both of whom I had been out of touch with for some time, I was reminded that things that may have caused us to drift apart over recent years were truly trivial when considered in the context of death and impermanence. It wouldn’t do my friend justice just to wax nostalgic about them since the times we had together were not all that remarkable, and they happened in what seems like another time and place in my life. When thinking of what this loss was to me, I remember my friend who was a musician, and who I had the honor to work with on numerous occassions, was the type of person that never stopped believing their own ability, and never stopped pursuing their dream of becoming a successful musician, even at the expense of others labeling them delusional and even after other people’s criticisms of them for their lifelong pursuit. The loss of my friend was a reminder that there is nothing wrong and as a matter of fact it, it is what is all that is right about living, as far as pursuing your passion and always believing in yourself. You see my friend always maintained this atttitude and pursuit without harming others and from a positive place. They always celebrated their own victories as well as others and they never tried to better their own position by exploiting another. The only thing that haulted their pursuit was when they physically lost their life. This taught me that we must remind ourselves of what we want and be unapologetic about the pursuit without hurting others. It can be taken away anytime, so while we are here and able to pursuit it, it is our obligation.

The timing of losing my friend was a bit of synchronysity, if you will, since I lost my job of nearly 4 years, almost one week later. When I think about my job and the fact that my departure had to do with a soured family and business relationship, I took a step back when processing all the events. I first thought about the insignificance of the melodrama surrounding and even the financial ramifications of losing my job when compared to the death of a friend. Secondly, I thought about how outside of the financial and family reasons for taking the job, how the job itself was overall, not fulfilling on a physical, mental, or spiritual level for me.  With the death of a friend who epitomized the pursuit of their passion and dreams, and me losing the job, not to be too much of a cliche, but I took this as a sign.  Better yet, it was a gift from my friend, in passing, who instructed the universe to push me in the right direction.

So I am here sitting and writing this, and in a state of mourning, and unemployed. This seems dire but I couldn’t feel better. I see that it was my friend that made the ultimate sacrifice, and helped set me free to do what I should be doing.  Losing a friend and a job were losses on the surface, but were true gains in the grand scheme of things.