I wasn't sure which part of the forum to put this in, as it didn't quite fit any...so, I hope this works.
Well, for once, I am making a positive thread! I still have questions for you, of course.
I was worrying about getting an expensive thank you gift to give to my SO when I go and visit him (in 9 days--eep!). I was given the cool idea that I could hand-make my SO a gift. So, I really like to draw (pencil or ink) and paint (watercolour or acrylic) and thought I could do something artistic for him. I very much want it to be something he does actually display at his house. I'm on a time limit for bringing the gift and there is also a local arts festival I want to enter something in before I leave (I say I will do something every year and usually get too busy or flake out). School and the job hunt have left me feeling not so creative, so I was hoping for a spark of inspiration. Without getting into a huge art debate, my style leans toward realism, but it is definitely not hyper-realistic and is much more fantasy/ aesthetically oriented than abstractions--I have been influenced by anime and cartoons in my younger years, but the style is definitely its own. I specialise in really delicate line-work.
Any ideas?
I thought a landscape would be a great standby that most people like, but then we were talking about art in his local community and he was complaining that the artists do too many landscapes and he could just "step outside and see the same thing", so I was kind of unsure (that said, I would be doing a west coast landscape with an ocean, rather than a prairie landscape, as he would see).
There are lots of roses out and I could easily and enjoyably work on a still-life, but I wonder if the subject would be too "girly" for him to actually hang up at his house.
Part of his family is Dutch and he seems really proud of the heritage, so I thought of illustrating a scene from a Dutch folk-tale, but I worry that that might involve quite a bit of research into costume and such.
He likes old black and white art house films and old Buster Keaton comedies, so there is ink drawing potential there, but they don't really fit with my style or what I am trying to express to him, perhaps.
Lastly (I think it is impossible for me to write just a little!), he has expressed several times that he wants me to draw him, but that would be something more for us to enjoy in-person.
Well, for once, I am making a positive thread! I still have questions for you, of course.
I was worrying about getting an expensive thank you gift to give to my SO when I go and visit him (in 9 days--eep!). I was given the cool idea that I could hand-make my SO a gift. So, I really like to draw (pencil or ink) and paint (watercolour or acrylic) and thought I could do something artistic for him. I very much want it to be something he does actually display at his house. I'm on a time limit for bringing the gift and there is also a local arts festival I want to enter something in before I leave (I say I will do something every year and usually get too busy or flake out). School and the job hunt have left me feeling not so creative, so I was hoping for a spark of inspiration. Without getting into a huge art debate, my style leans toward realism, but it is definitely not hyper-realistic and is much more fantasy/ aesthetically oriented than abstractions--I have been influenced by anime and cartoons in my younger years, but the style is definitely its own. I specialise in really delicate line-work.
Any ideas?
I thought a landscape would be a great standby that most people like, but then we were talking about art in his local community and he was complaining that the artists do too many landscapes and he could just "step outside and see the same thing", so I was kind of unsure (that said, I would be doing a west coast landscape with an ocean, rather than a prairie landscape, as he would see).
There are lots of roses out and I could easily and enjoyably work on a still-life, but I wonder if the subject would be too "girly" for him to actually hang up at his house.
Part of his family is Dutch and he seems really proud of the heritage, so I thought of illustrating a scene from a Dutch folk-tale, but I worry that that might involve quite a bit of research into costume and such.
He likes old black and white art house films and old Buster Keaton comedies, so there is ink drawing potential there, but they don't really fit with my style or what I am trying to express to him, perhaps.
Lastly (I think it is impossible for me to write just a little!), he has expressed several times that he wants me to draw him, but that would be something more for us to enjoy in-person.
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