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I recently got to create this really fun wedding invitation for a client (names blacked out for privacy). They sent me an image for reference and asked for something very similar. It took a while, but we finally got to a design that we all liked.


I haven't done a whole lot of digital work in the past, but I'm starting to fall in love with it. I did another one recently as cover art for a musician in LA, but I'm waiting on the song to be released before I post it. While doing that one, I realized how badly I needed a tablet, as I did most of it on my phone. After a lot of research, I ended up purchasing a Dell XPS 2in1. Now I have a laptop and a tablet. I was able to create the artwork above in DesignDoll, Photoshop, Illustrator and Autodesk Sketchbook.


 
 
 

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I saw Austin, TX artist Ping's oil paintings at a local art festival and was instantly drawn to it. There is a certain softness to her paintings that is strangely comforting. That's what gets you. You see her work and think how sweet and cute it is. So you get closer. Only then do you start sensing an underlying sadness or creepiness that can be disturbing...but in a good way. My favorite work is her girls, particularly their faces. I could stare at them forever.

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Check out her work at a local show or at http://www.facebook.com/pingirvin or http://www.craigirvin.com/ping. Shoot her a message at ping@craigirvin.com to purchase her art.

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Q: Who are your favorite artists?

A: Paul Klee, Henri Rouseau

Q: How does art influence your life?

A: Helped me meet my husband, artist Craig Irvin  www.craigirvin.com

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Q: Describe your art training.

A: Painted since I was a child, graduated from Yunnan Art College.


Q: What makes your art stand out from other artists' work? 

A: My colors and design creativity.


Q: What's your favorite subject to draw or paint?

A: Horses, birds and girls.

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Earlier this year, I completed a painting of my client's two cats, Grady & Jynx. It was a fun little painting where we decided to "posterize" it as opposed to doing blended realism. I was pretty happy with how it turned out. My client enjoyed it so much that he contacted me to discuss another commission.


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He sent me photos of his mom and we chose the one that would be best suited for a charcoal drawing. Drawing a portrait is very personal. Every detail is scrutinized in a way that doesn't typically happen in day-to-day life. When I draw someone, I feel like I get to know them. I read their expression to discover what's going on behind it. The more I know about my subject, the better I'll be able to depict her accurately.


Without prompting from me, my client shared this information:

"This picture is of my Mom when she was 19. She had taken a number of snapshots someplace, and this was one of them. On the back of one she wrote "As  I Am, 11/15/1939". She had a wonderful spirit - loving, caring, but also witty and clever. She raised my brother and me by herself from 1958, when I was 4 and my brother 9. She and my dad divorced that year and she never re-married. She passed away in 2016 at the age of 96. She is the greatest person I've every known! Just a little back story that I thought you might like to know as you draw her."

It's so great when the title is giftwrapped like this. I feel honored to have gotten to know her.


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This is a 16"x20" charcoal drawing on toned paper. It was completed on July 19, 2018.



 
 
 
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