A caricature is merely as series of corrections until no further corrections are necessary. Once there are no more adjustments to be made, the caricature is complete.
...one needs only to learn when to stop correcting things.
Richard Ewing. All rights reserved.
Richard Ewing. All rights reserved.
Richard Ewing. All rights reserved.
© Richard Ewing. All rights reserved.
Thank you, and enjoy.
Wednesday, November 9, 2011
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
This all have a wonderful sense of mass. I keep on coming back to the one on the bottom. There is something about that head with the big ears that keeps me engaged. Perhaps it is the serene expression...any ways it is a lovely drawing
ReplyDeleteThe small shapes, the rectangles, the swirls the lines...like small metal plates which change the very essence of the organic human surface into something completely different but still recognisable...as a 'Ewing' caricature! Cool.
ReplyDeleteA nice set of work. I agree with Alice the bottom one is like the engine of an old propeller airplane with the "small metal plates" (to quote Rod), of the face spinning around the nose.
ReplyDelete