Showing posts with label illustration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label illustration. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 26, 2019

Southwest Vacation

Photo by Dana Haynes
America the Beautiful! Man, there is SO much to see and explore... I've never been to Arizona nor Utah until last week. Our sweet, week-long Southwest vacation covered the Grand Canyon, Antelope Canyon, Marble and Glen Canyons, Lake Powell and Zion National Park. The winter storm made everything less accessible but more beautiful, and added to the magic.

Happy 100th Birthday to Grand Canyon National Park, founded on Feb. 26th 1919

Happy 100th Birthday to Grand Canyon National Park, founded on Feb. 26th 1919
Happy 100th Birthday to Grand Canyon National Park, founded on Feb. 26th 1919

Glen Canyon and Lake Powell, AZ
Sunset over the Navajo Mountain in Glen Canyon, AZ [part 1]

Sunset over the Navajo Mountain in Glen Canyon, AZ [part 2]

Glen Canyon, AZ





Marble Canyon and Colorado River


Zion National Park in Winter Whiteout. UT
Mule Deer in Zion National Park, UT

Zion National Park, UT
Zion Rocks


Sunday, September 10, 2017

Bella Venezia


I just returned from a magical vacation in Venice.  What a dreamy place. There are many drawings and memories to share. But for now, here's a slice of a 360-degree panorama of Venice from the rooftop of newly-refurbished Fontego dei Tedeschi - a luxury department store, former post office. The building was constructed in 1228(!) The renovated department store opened in 2016. Building exterior remained unaltered, as all of facades in Venice are part of UNESCO world heritage property. That's why the skyline of Venice looks like an old engraving. There are no new buildings. 

Here are the rest of my drawings >


Saturday, August 1, 2015

Notes from Cuba, Part 2: Streets of Havana

Previous: Notes from Cuba, Part 1: Havana Bay >




Here are more drawings from my recent trip to Cuba with Ronnie and Margaret, a group tour organized by Jim Richards & Marimar Travel.

Old Havana. Corner of Floridita bar and restaurant, famous for being Ernst Hemingway's favorite hangout spot.



Havana, for the most part, is devastated by neglect. You can tell that this was a rich, gorgeous, blossoming city at the beginning of the 20th century, with colorful, eclectic architecture that mixes Colonial, Baroque, Art Nouveau, Art Deco and Neo-Classical influences. But now the buildings are crumbling. There's no real estate ownership as such. The government owns everything. People have only "moral" ownership of their abodes. If they invest time and money in fixing things up, the government can come at any point and take it, so people don't fix anything. Neither does the government. Some of the buildings have deteriorated so much that all that's left are facades with piles of bricks behind them. People, whose housing approaches a near-collapse condition, get a letter from the government, stating that they can move to a shelter, or remain in their current place at their own risk. The tour guide told us that shelters are way worse, so people tend to stay, regardless...

Fruit vendors.




There is no proper septic system (can't flush toilet paper, even at the 5-start Hotel Nacional), and in many public restrooms one must manually flush with a bucket of water.

Government food store.

Government stores are a sad sight. I had a flashback to Soviet Russia of my early childhood in Moscow, when people stood in long lines to buy food or clothing by redeeming government-issued ration coupons. And the stores were nearly as empty as this one, above. Under a watchful eye of Fidel on the poster-a bag of rice, a few piles of vegetables...


Despite the circumstances, people are warm, kind and fun-loving. There is SO much live music, both on the streets and in bars, and dancing. At night, people are hanging out in cafes, like the one below, and line up along El Malecon, Havana's waterfront, which has been dubbed the "eternal bench of the city".
Street cafe along El Malecon in Havana.
"Guantanamera, Wahira, Guantanamera..."
Street cafe at night, and a classic American car.


Old cars are the only cars in Havana. Some are Russian-made models Lada, Moskvich and Kamaz tractors (another Soviet childhood throwback), others are American relics like the one above. Most of these cars are falling apart, but Cubans have no other choice for the past 60 years...The best-looking convertibles serve as luxury taxi rides for tourists. We took a ride in this pink beauty below.




In the next post: a trip to Viñales, cigar factory, and more...


p.s. You can see some photos from this trip on my Instagram >

Thursday, June 25, 2015

Notes From Cuba: Havana Bay



Recently, I spent 5 days in Cuba with my most favorite people, art mentors and friends Ronnie and Margaret.

We went as part of a larger tour group, and saw both, town and country life, albeit at the speed of the constantly moving tour bus. We stayed in Havana, with one night in the beautiful small town of Viñales. I hungrily seized those little pockets of drawing time that we got “on land” and will be posting some of the drawings in the weeks to come. Here’s the view of Havana Bay wall. Fishermen's boats take on a rather heavy meaning, once you find out that Cubans aren’t legally allowed to get into a boat, unless they have a fishing license or a permit, which pretty much makes Cubans prisoners of their own country. 


Havana Bay Wall and Fishing Boats

Here's Part 2: Streets of Havana >




Saturday, April 4, 2015

Scooter LaForge Fashion

Last Thursday, April 2nd, I went to the Society of Illustrators for their weekly Thursday Sketch Night, hosted by fashion illustrator Bil Donovan, and it happened to be "An Evening with Scooter LaForge", modeled by Arielle Harp and Kendall Weber (aka Sailor Moon). Scooter was on the model stand as well, for one pose. Here he is!

Scooter LaForge

We were told to look out for next week's Jimmy Fallon show with Madonna's performance: Scooter LaForge is dressing her back-up dancers, and this was a sneak peak of the clothing he's creating. I was so excited to draw, and my favorite accessory was this huge blue eye ball on a stick, covered with glittering spangles. I loved the graphics and shapes of Scooter's mish-mash-scribbly-patched-layered-torn-glittered-leather-plad aesthetics, which Ronnie (Veronica Lawlor) described as "gritty funkiness of the 1980s East Village". Check out her drawings in this eloquent post.  Also, look for Despina Geordiadis and Greg Betza posts with drawings of the event as well. At the end of the night, as Scooter, Sailor Moon, Ronnie and I were stuck on the subway platform waiting for the F for forever, we talked about our love of Picasso and Matisse, among other things. Scooter was holding a big black trash bag. With costumes. Just like that.


Anelle Miller, Executive Director of the Society of Illustrators, on the Model Stand








Sunday, February 1, 2015

Day 4 of the 5 Day Art Challenge: illustrations for Alan Lightman's book "Einstein's Dreams"

I accepted the Facebook 5 Day Art Challenge nomination from my friend and artist Audrey Hawkins. Day 4 is a personal project I haven't shared before, as I work on it intermittently: illustrations for Alan Lightman's book "Einstein's Dreams". The book is a meditation on the nature of time, and every chapter asks a "what if..." question.

• 26 APRIL 1905
“At some time in the past, scientists discovered that time flows more slowly the farther from the center of earth.”
-Alan Lightman, "Einstein's Dreams"

• 8 MAY 905
“The world will end on 26 September 1907. Everyone knows it.”
-Alan Lightman, "Einstein's Dreams"

• 3 MAY 1905
“Consider a world in which cause and effect are erratic. Most people have learned to live in the moment. It is a world of impulse.”
-Alan Lightman, "Einstein's Dreams"

• 20 MAY 1905
“People have no memories. For it’s only habit and memory that dulls the physical passion. A world without memory is a world of the present..”-Alan Lightman, "Einstein's Dreams"

Friday, November 14, 2014

Back to Vienna

"Ver Sacrum" Stamps with the Secession Building


The Secession Building. Ver Sacrum = Sacred Spring.
Vienna, in all its gilded Art Nouveau glory, is elegant and grand. The Secession building, which looks like a giant jewelry box to me, houses the Beethoven Freeze by Klimt. Since my hotel was nearby, I'd go by this white shimmering building every day and wave "hi" to it.


The Secession Building.
The Secession Building.

 ...


Vienna's most influential architect and "artist of buildings", modernist visionary Otto Wagner, has several landmarks in the city. This is his Karlsplatz subway station. The apple green color on every station was meant to signal a subway entrance. Back then the subway system was an innovation that people were just getting familiarized with. Wagner designed the very first entrances in Vienna, and he believed they should be beautiful.

Karlsplatz Station, designed by Otto Wagner.
Karlsplatz Station, designed by Otto Wagner.

...

Upper Belvedere is guarded by 12 fabulous sphinxes, and it houses Klimt's most famous painting, The Kiss. Yes, it's everything you expect it to be from up close and more! Unforgettable.

One of the 12 Sphinxes of Belvedere.
Belvedere Gardens
Belvedere Gardens with a Sphinx

...

Street Cafe and Waiters.
Volksgarden.
Volksgarden.
Volksgarden.

View of Vienna from the Albertina Museum Terrace. Full Moon in Twilight Hour.