On Reference

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May 30th, 2010
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Dead prostitute.  Nazi death camp.  Armored Horse.  It’s not a list of possible band names, but the last three things I’ve had to hit Google Images for in the past coupla weeks.  I’d say there are only two reasons why someone wouldn’t use references for their artwork — One:  Plain laziness; or Two: He has enough faith in his artistic prowess that he can draw straight from his head and put it down on the board.

Either way, I hate you.

The big misconception very early on, and I’m guilty of this myself, is that the finished art is supposed to be painfully faithful to the reference material — which, of course, isn’t the case; otherwise you’d be better off simply photoshopping the images into the panels or going full-on fumetti.  No, the ideal way of using the reference material is to stare at it, absorb it, digest, and then put on paper what you, as an artist, believe to be the key components of what you saw.  Sure, that sounds easy enough, but what you learn very quickly is that what you leave out is just as important is what you put into the drawing.  There is such a thing as over-rendered.  Temper it.

To draw from Asterios Polyp, as something is recalled, the brain has a chance to refine it.  In that sense, every memory is a re-creation, not a playback.

Why all this talk about the use of reference and such?  On my desk is a stack of authentic crime scene photos from the Autumn of Terror.  Wolfgang and the 1888 team just recently ran a successful funding campaign over at Kickstarter and everyone’s stepping into place to get the cogs running on the book.  The bastards have done it!

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Went to the mall the other week to get sleeping masks for me and Jad coz we’re going to bed at sunrise more often these days.  It’s frustrating how them clerks don’t know if they sell them along with the bed linens or in the cosmetics section.  Turns out it was in neither and I found them in the toiletries.  Go figure.

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PLUCK chugs along once a week at Zuda.  Lately got to draw a splash page showcasing Trugg One-Eye, as well as a sequence featuring many a half-naked lady.  Gabe White is a good man.  Home stretch for JUDAH pitch as Ian Areola joins the team as colorist.  After he colored the JENNY STRANGE pitch, I simply had to work with him again.  That project, however, is on hold as we wait for Zuda to officially post their new submissions policy, given that they ended their competition format a month or so back.  Got other pitches waiting to be worked on, so the Fort Bastard docket for 2010 is pretty much closed as far as new projects go.  You know who you are, and you are Saints of Patience.

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Wedding preparations are officially underway.  It’s fun and exciting and scary and stressful, but if you can’t mentally see me dancing through this journal entry, you don’t have a soul.  Yeah.  Jocular Johnny finally got one to stick around.  Learned from what came before.  Absorbed it.  Digested.  Built something better. Built something stronger.

Like I said… Reference.  It’s good for you.

Back to work.

6 Comments

  • Jad

    Of course I’m harder better faster stronger.

  • johnamor

    I always knew Daft Punk had the universe figured out. Cheers, babe.

  • Alex Cipriano

    Drawing from imagination requires a lot of talent. And a lot of us don’t have that. Sure, anyone can draw a truck, but it would look a lot more “realistic” if we drew it and knew how it actually looks like and how it works.

    Just don’t do a Rob Liefeld or a Greg Land.

  • Lloyd

    you just have to present it with something that has YOU in it…references are just reminders on how it should look..

  • Jad

    More than anything, I think, even if I’m only speaking from a writer/musician’s point of view, the best piece of flexible information you get from a reference is perspective. How someone else saw it. How someone else did it. Ways that you didn’t think of, and ways exactly the same as how you thought it would go. Perspective – without references, you don’t have any.

  • johnamor

    That’s a nice way of putting is. Coz aside from looking at still photos, I’ll look at how Romita or Immonen tackled a certain pose or body part, and then work it out myself, drawing bits and pieces from how they did it.

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