Thursday, January 22, 2009

Stephen


Stephen is a great model (this was from yesterday's alla prima class). He doesn't move; in fact, he's so professional about it that when a bug crawled over his forehead, he politely asked someone what was on his face and could it please be removed. (When *I* even slightly suspect that some INSECT might be on me, I go into hysterical flailing and screaming.)

He also has a wonderfully textbook masculine face: square jaw, strong neck muscles, low brow, all nice paintable angles.  Back in art school, we once had him for a figure model, and he is amazing: he's in excellent shape and has pretty much no body fat, so you can see not only every muscle, but even every tendon.  I remember that painting his shoulder area was like an anatomy lesson. (Don't get too excited, girlz, he's gay.)

Though I'm pleased with how the portrait turned out, nevertheless I didn't get a likeness, and it was the mouth that missed the likeness. Drat!

More art on my website: jalapfaff.com

8 comments:

Kelley Carey MacDonald said...

I think this is great. What did Sargent say about portraits? Something like "a portrait is a likeness with something funny about the mouth".... mouths are so mobile, so revealing... they're impossible to nail down, so just generalize!

http://www.onpainting.wordpress.com said...

Great head study, Jala.

Marian Fortunati said...

Love how you've got the clear cut dark-side light side down pat.
It's so difficult to actually get a likeness in a class period. I'm happy if it even approximates a likeness.

Funny story too!

Jala Pfaff said...

Kelley - That is absolutely hilarious, and I'm going to remember that line now forever (and use it whenever my portrait likeness fails).

Bill, Marian - Thanks very much. My teacher says it's good enough if it looks like a human being in a single class period, let alone a good likeness. Oh well. She's also a stickler about not EVER polluting one's shadow side with light. I'm glad she's so strict about that, it helps keep me mentally organized (well, somewhat) while painting.

Mary Sheehan Winn said...

beautiful and well done. You are right about the angles in his face.
Yeah, why is it always the mouth that looks weird?

Jala Pfaff said...

I know, the mouth just always seems to be off somehow! He has the greatest facial planes, I look forward to having him model again for us.

Dewberry Fine Art said...

wonderful handling of shadow and light. This has a powerful intensity. Love the shadow that his nose is casting and the way the eye sits in that pocket of light.

Jala Pfaff said...

Dori, thank you! I also really liked how his eye was in that little light triangle.