These croquis are all made with a 5-minute interval. They are all in pencil and black & white. They represent a character each, with a focus on movement. From how the hip, shoulders and feet are placed, to what angle the neck is in.
These are all from the same session, and consist of 3 different models.
These four pieces are all in black & white and made with pencil. These are all ranging from short to long duration in the process of creating each and every one. They are made with very different techniques.
The landscape in the top-left-corner is with a simple covering, soft technique. This piece in specific have focus on the depth-of-field, and how objects are placed, how far from the viewer.
The chipmunk directly adjacent to the landscape, is consisting of furs, and therefore made with many separate pencil strokes. Though it is made without a exact order, the focus rest on describing the animal with a pencil.
Though the statue in the lower-left corner, is vague and with a soft light, it describes strives to describe the felling of soft and hard material. It is an experiment on how easily, or with how much effort this difference can be fathomed.
The egg, and last piece, is made of a lot of different strokes, and in utilizing this specific technique, there is a focus on hard light & shadows. The eggs oval structure is perfect for such an observation.
These six drawings all have that in common that they are colored. Separated in pastel and aquarelle, three of each.
In the upper-right-corner there is the first outlines of city, in a variety of neon colors, a piece that goes well with the similar one, just below it. Describing the other piece of the city, is that the two goes well together. Both have a similarity in colors, and though they are so alike they still represent different views of the same city.
The piece in the upper-right-corner depicts a pastel drawing on a blue background, it’s focuses on the combination of the colors.
Just below is another pastel portrait; this is of Robert D. Junior. The focus lies within creating light, using only two main colors.
The fifth piece in the lower-left-corner is an aquarelle and a showpiece from a textile design. It sets a role model in the matching environment and focuses on the colors of the design. While visualizing the field-of-view, not only through size and perspective, but also with a change in the color scheme.
The final is a portrait of a lady. A somewhat quick piece, that depicts quite easily, this stern character, and how she is described with this large mix of colors. It provides a contrast through the great variety of colors, and the brown background.