Friday, February 10, 2012

Nighthawks

A: Look at the following picture and read below:
B: Complete the assignment at the bottom of the page


I took this photograph while in chicago this summer. It is quite magnificant.

Nighthawks can be found at the Art Institute of Chicago.
Text from "Sister Wendy's American Masterpieces":
"Nighthawks has become an icon. It is easy to understand its appeal. This is not just an image of big-city loneliness, but of existential loneliness: the sense that we have of being on our own in the human condition. When we look at that dark New York street, we would expect the fluorescent-lit cafe to be welcoming, but it is not. There is no way to enter it, no door. The extreme brightness means that the people inside are held, exposed and vulnerable. They hunch their shoulders defensively. Hopper did not actually observe them, because he used himself as a model for both the seated men, as if he perceived men in this situation as clones. He modeled the woman, as he did all of his female characters, on his wife Jo. He was a difficult man, and Jo was far more emotionally involved with him than he with her; one of her methods of keeping him with her was to insist that only she would be his model.
"From Jo's diaries we learn that Hopper described this work as a painting of "three characters." The man behind the counter, though imprisoned in the triangle, is in fact free. He has a job, a home, he can come and go; he can look at the customers with a half-smile. It is the customers who are the nighthawks. Nighthawks are predators - but are the men there to prey on the woman, or has she come in to prey on the men? To my mind, the man and woman are a couple, as the position of their hands suggests, but they are a couple so lost in misery that they cannot communicate; they have nothing to give each other. I see the nighthawks of the picture not so much as birds of prey, but simply as birds: great winged creatures that should be free in the sky, but instead are shut in, dazed and miserable, with their heads constantly banging against the glass of the world's callousness. In his Last Poems, A. E. Housman (1859-1936) speaks of being "a stranger and afraid/In a world I never made." That was what Hopper felt - and what he conveys so bitterly."

Assignment:
  1. Print the following picture in your sketchbook.
  2. Answer the following questions in your sketchbook and follow the directions that follow. Who are the Nighthawks?
  3. Who were the models for the nighthawks?
  4. Using only black and White shapes draw Nighthawks in your sketchbook.
make sure that you can tell what is happening in the picture with the shapes.

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Calvin and Hobbes

Sketchbook for 9/27/11
1) Draw Calvin and Hobbes : smoothly shading and using all 10 values.
2) write notes about Bill waterson, John Calvin and Thomas Hobbes in your sketchbook
3) Answer How are Calvin and Hobbes (the cartoon) like the theologians?


Created by Bill Watterson

Bill Watterson is the author of Calvin and Hobbes, an immensely popular comic strip about a hyperactive, imaginative 6 year-old and his relationship with his plush tiger Hobbes, who comes to life when no one is looking. Watterson, who studied political science in college, began his career with a brief, unsuccessful stint drawing political cartoons for the Cincinnati Post. In the year following its debut on November 18, 1985, Calvin and Hobbes was picked up by over 400 newspapers. It received both popular and critical acclaim, with Watterson winning the National Cartoonist Society's Reuben Award in both 1986 and 1988.

Watterson saw his work as an art form, and he battled to be allowed to structure his Sunday cartoons in ways that differed with the norms of the time; as a result, in many of his cartoons, the panels overlap or contain internal panels and action takes place on the diagonal. Similarly, Watterson never agreed to allow the sale of merchandise based on his Calvin and Hobbes characters, for fear that it would compromise his artistic integrity. Like Gary Larson of The Far Side, Watterson ended his comic strip at the height of its popularity. He retired in 1996 at age 38 and, tired of daily deadlines and working in small panels, took up painting. Watterson has published several anthologies of Calvin and Hobbes, and the comic strip continues to be reprinted in newspapers. from http://www.answers.com/topic/bill-watterson
If the names Calvin and Hobbes ring a bell, the popular 6 year old and his stuff tiger are named for theologians John Calvin and Thomas Hobbes. for more information on John Calvin and Thomas Hobbes see the links below
John Calvin

http://www.ccel.org/c/calvin
Thomas Hobbes

http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/hobbes-moral/