I used to draw. A lot. In high school, I fancied myself an amateur artist, and away I went, sketching girls, monsters, and fantasy settings.
My work was juvenile. Unpracticed. Untrained.
But still a lot of fun.
Most of these are drawings I doodled between 1994-1995. Mostly while in school…while I should’ve been studying. I still have the originals in my house.
A tower in the woods. I drew this one during a loooooooooong math class.
Knight on horse. I really could’ve used a better reference photo of the horse. I just kinda BS’d it.
Demon guy. 20 years later, he became the basis for the antagonist in my fantasy book series. Here, he just kinda sucks.
Every teenage boy likes to draw boobs, right? This drawing might’ve been competent had I not given her spheres instead of actual breasts.
Same girl. Different angle. I like the mug. And the knife.
He’s mildly ok. The background is pretty boring. His necklace should probably be beneath his sleeves…realistically speaking.
*
Fast forward 20 years…
After a long layoff, during which I played too many video games, airbrushed cheesy T shirts, and pretended to be an author, I started drawing again. But this time I tried to take things more seriously. I wasn’t just avoiding homework or ignoring math class. I began doodling as a passion, not just to pass the time.
I used grids to help me get back in the feel of drawing faces. For this girl, I almost left her as-is. She looks pretty intense, right?
Changed my mind. Finished her. Added some blue.
She probably needs a sandwich. But I like the feel of her pose. And the grass she’s sitting in.
Now look what you did. You pissed her off. Smooth move.
More grid work to help with her mouth and eyes. She’s the heroine in my fantasy novel series. You’d be serious, too…if you were in her shoes.
An intense warrior woman. For no reason other than I felt like it. Look at her shoulders. She’s pretty much ripped.
I decided to step things up and invest in a few quality tools. Charcoal sticks, high-quality pencils, blending tools, powdered graphite…
…and with the powdered graphite, I went nuts. This fearsome girl stands five feet tall on a giant canvas.
And now it’s time to step away from simply drawing faces. Full bodies. More expression. Abstract elements paired with realism. Also…no underwear.
*
Anyway…I hope you enjoyed this little sketch timeline. I’m trying to get a little better with each piece I create. And a little darker, too.
Love,
J Edward Neill
Like this:
Like Loading...