Live Drawing at
Parallel Play “Mostly Bach”
June 18th, 2016



Parallel Play is a “fresh vision for collaborative, live music and art experiences” created by artist Peggy Gyulai and violist Deanna Badizadegan. It is a monthly event and the first Parallel Play, titled “Mostly Bach”, took place on June 18th, 2016. During the evening Deanna Badizadegan played viola, Ryan Lee played violin, Peggy painted in oils and drew on paper, and I drew on paper with a mix of media (acrylic ink, charcoal, crayon and oil stick). I also created a live iPad sketch of Deanna and Ryan practicing earlier in the day before the event.

In this video you see snippets of me creating the iPad sketch and then live drawing on paper during the actual performances. The audio includes excerpts from:
Handel Halvorsen Passacaglia
Bach Two Part Inventions (arr. Violin and Viola)
Bach Sonata for Solo Violin in A Minor, Andante
Bach Suite No. 6, Prelude and Allemande

Hazel and Justin playing Music of John Ireland

This video depicts me sketching Hazel Keelan, violin, and Justin Schrum, piano, as they practice in my studio for their June 18th Something New with Sight and Sound: The Music of John Ireland performance of the work of English Impressionist composer John Ireland. It took place in the Community School of Music and Arts (CSMA) at the Finn Center, Mountain View (see Palo Alto Weekly and San Francisco Classical Voice articles). They mixed in some audience participation through a new app and artist Caroline Mustard did some live iPad painting.

The two iPad sketches I made while they played in my studio are shown here (below). They were both created using the Procreate app on the iPad Pro with an Apple Pencil. The video replays show the brush stroke by brush stroke replay of drawing.




Portraits of David Bowie


Thin White Duke
2016, oil paint, acrylic ink and paint, and oil stick on canvas
26″ x 60″



London to Berlin
2016, pigment ink, acrylic paint, pastel and oil stick on canvas
32″ x 26″

A Tribute to David Bowie

These two portraits are dedicated to the memory of David Bowie, a great artist of life as well as a great musician. They will be exhibited in a group show at the Smash Gallery titled A Tribute to David Bowie, June 4 – July 2. If you’re in San Francisco while the show is up, please visit during the show hours: Wednesday through Saturday, 12pm – 5pm. The gallery address is 210 Golden Gate Avenue, San Francisco, CA 94102, cross street is Leavenworth Street. Click here for a map.

About Thin White Duke

Thin White Duke is based on Bowie’s character of the same name, that he adopted around 1976. There was a beautiful and elegant simplicity in the black and white understated yet stylish clothing of this character: plain white shirt, baggy black trousers, and a black waistcoat. At the same time his music of that era, such as the iconic song Golden Years on the Station to Station album, has such colorful and complex energy. It was this dichotomy that I wanted to express in the contrast between the more colorful and complex oil paint background and the simple predominantly black ink depiction of his character.

About London to Berlin

London to Berlin started with the building up a multi-layered, multi-textured digital collage background using Corel Painter 2016 painting software, the Wacom Intuos Pro Medium pen tablet and an iMac. The background collage includes a 1973 Ziggy Stardust poster advertising a Bowie concert in the Rainbow Theatre in Finsbury Park, North London, part of his The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars tour (see this funny Youtube video of fans queuing up outside the theatre on that tour). The Rainbow Theatre is very close to where I grew up in North London in the 1970s. The music of David Bowie, Marc Bolan, and others formed the soundtrack of my youth…

The background also includes a torn-poster wall I photographed in Amsterdam and a graffitied section of the Berlin Wall before it came down in 1989 – both symbolic of Bowie’s time in Berlin with Brian Eno when he recorded the albums “Low” and “Heroes” at the Hansa Tonstudio (“Hansa by the Wall”). Thus the underlying imagery of this artwork embodies the title London to Berlin.

The portrait of Bowie in London to Berlin is loosely based on a combination of Bowie’s Ziggy Stardust character from the early 1970s, and from when he performed the song Heroes on Dutch TV in 1977 on a program called “Top Pop”, which looks like a copy of the British “Top of the Pops”, which I watched every week as a teenager.

After completing the digital portion of the painting I printed the background on Breathing Color Lyve Canvas using an Epson 9600 wide format inkjet printer with UltraChrome Pigment Inks and then continued working on the artwork with acrylic gels, inks and paints, plus pastels and oil sticks.

What Bowie Means to Me

The music of David Bowie was part of the sound tapestry that formed the soundtrack of my youth growing up in North London, going to see punk bands playing at the Marquee Club on Wardour Street in Soho, seeing legendary rock bands like Led Zeppelin and The Who, while also dancing to ’50s Rock ‘n’Roll which was (and is) very popular in the UK. I remember the excitement of late 1970s London – a sense of “anything is possible”! Bowie captured that sense. His ever-changing personas and characters, and his eclectic and evolving musical and fashion styles, reflected a sense of timeless freedom and a spirit of originality that still echoes to this day. It is this spirit that moved me, and that I resonated with, as I created the two paintings shown here.

Photos from the Opening Reception on June 4th, 2016





Dance Through the Decades
at the Verdi Club Centennial


Peggy and I Dance Through the Decades in celebration of the Verdi Club Centennial.
6m 20s

The Verdi Club is a historic Italian-American club a block from our art studios. We know it well from the “Tuesday Night Jump!” Lindy Hop weekly swing dance. We choreographed this dance performance to a custom sound track I put together, spanning the decades. We wanted to share some of the variety of styles of music and dance that people have enjoyed in the Verdi Club over the last one hundred years.

The celebration was attended by the Italian Consul General, Mauro Battocchi, and San Francisco Board of Supervisor Malia Cohen, representing District 10. Listen to the very end of the video to hear Malia’s reaction to the dance performance! MC Karl Kriedel said the next day “Last night was one to remember for the ages. Thank you for helping make it great.”

Here are some photos from the celebration:


Historic Verdi Club neon sign lit up


This shows Peggy and I in front of a photograph in which we are featured as dancers and which has been placed in the new Verdi Club bar. The photograph was designed, taken and printed by our friends and former 1890 Bryant studio neighbors Eszter+David. The photo was shot in the old Verdi Club bar and also includes our artist friend Warren and Jose.


Big Red (1972 Buick Centurion Convertible) parked outside the Verdi Club with a happy birthday balloon!


Verdi Club member Shannon in front of a photograph of her grandparents getting married in the club

Before our performance Sarah Lamb sung a beautiful Verdi aria (Caro Nome from the opera Rigoletto), accompanied by her mother, Cynthia, on piano. Big thank you to Annette, Karl, Sarah, Cynthia, Jason, Veronica, and the whole Verdi Club board, team, volunteers and staff who contributed to making the evening so special.

May 14, 2016

Open Studio Art Exhibition
Spring 2016

At my Spring Open Studios 2016 we had the pleasure of live musical performance from pianist, Noam Eisen, and singer, Emily Day, who together lead the popular Cosmo Alleycats dance band. In addition to Noam and Emily’s performance. At one point bassist and singer Pam Brandon, featured in my Luxomatics painting, joined in. I gave a short live iPad portrait painting demonstration using the new Earth brushes in Procreate app on the iPad Pro. here are photos from the reception:


Tango instructor, performer and choreographer, Christie Cote and I dance in front of my painting, Moment in Time, in which she is featured.


Bassist and singer, Pam Brandon, and I in front of my painting The Luxomatics at Club Deluxe, in which she and her band are depicted.


Noam and Emily perform as I do a little solo improvisational dance!


This artwork, The Luxomatics at Club Deluxe, based on a live sketch I made of my friends, The Luxomatics, playing, as they do every Sunday from 6 to 9pm, at the wonderful, atmospheric Club Deluxe, will be on display for the first time tonight.

The Luxomatics at Club Deluxe


The Luxomatics at Club Deluxe
2016, pigment ink, oil stick and crayon on canvas, 59″ x 36″

This artwork is based on a live sketch I made of my friends, The Luxomatics, playing, as they do every Sunday from 6 to 9pm, at the wonderful, atmospheric Club Deluxe, a local’s music bar icon at Haight and Ashbury in San Francisco. The musicians depicted are, from left to right, Sandy Clifford (harmonica and vocals), Justin Berthiaume (drums), Danny Eisenberg (piano), Byron Burchard and Pam Brandon (bass and vocals).

It is being displayed for the first time at my Spring Open Studios Art Exhibition – please come by if you’re in the area.

Here are some details of the final (large) artwork:

These (below) are views in the club when I made the original drawing:

The original 15″ x 10″ sketch made with Caran D’Ashe Neocolor I and II crayons and some red wine on Canson 140 lb cold press watercolor paper.

And a view of the club from across the road:

Las Vegas “Painting The Night”

“Painting the Night” at a corporate event in Las Vegas. Portrayed Elvis as an Elvis impersonator is performing on stage, with my painting projected live on three 40′ wide by 20′ high screens above the stage.

Jeremy — thank you so much! Everything was absolutely amazing, you were such an amazing part of our success.“​ ~ Alana C.


In action during the event (photos by David E. Merrell)


The final painting. Each of the main Las vegas performing characters depicted – Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Marilyn Monroe, Barbara Streisand and Elvis Presley – were painted live as “they” appeared on stage.

Click here to see more examples of my live event painting performances.

Face-Off! The Rhoda and Jeremy Portrait Sketching Playshop
RileyStreet Art Supply


Quick demo sketch I created of one of the students.


During this three hour playshop on February 27th, 2016, at RileyStreet Art Supply Store in San Rafael, California, fellow artist Rhoda Draws, and I shared our tips and techniques for hands-on live portrait sketching using traditional sketching media – no pixels in sight! The next playshop in Rileystreet is tentatively scheduled for November 19th, 2016. Please see my class schedule for latest details. Enjoy these photos from the class (photos taken by myself, Rhoda and the RileyStreet store manager Bente). Big thanks to the students who participated in this playshop.



The classroom – surrounded by art materials and art.





A demo sketch I made of Rhoda (with her sketch of me in the background)


One of my demos sketching a student (below): explaining how I go about composing; what I look for; how I make decisions on the paper; how I choose to use line, color and shading; and deciding when to stop.





Rhoda did a demo, sharing a technique starting with water-soluble crayon line work, then adding water washes and finally black brush pen accents. She then modeled for the class.







You can see the wonderful results here!


The final project was self-portraits. Rhoda and I both shared our process and technique, and then, using mirrors on mini-easels, everyone had a go.















The final group photo with everyone holding up their self-portraits.


..and, of course, some dancing had to break out! ….


Jin


Jin
2016, acrylic and some ink, applied with gravity, knife and brush, on canvas, 20″ x 24″
Painted completely from life in a series of sittings over two days

I painted this portrait of my friend Jin using predominantly acrylic paint on canvas. I prepared the canvas with an acrylic wash and dripping intense pigment ink from various directions (rotating the canvas as I did so).

Half way through the portrait I asked Jin to write down his Korean name on a piece of paper and then I brush painted the Korean characters of his name on the right of the painting. There are three characters arranged vertically. The top one is his family name, Shim. The lower two characters are his first name and mean “let his light shine through”, which is exactly what I strive for in my portrait!


Time lapse video of the painting in progress and Jin explaining his name in the portrait and his first impression of the artwork.

It is always fascinating drawing or painting from life in natural light, as in this portrait. The light changed continually so the resulting artwork is not a depiction of a single view but instead is literally a response, mark by mark, to a myriad of momentary views, none the same as any others. This depiction of myriad of views is something that can’t be reproduced or experienced when working from a static single photographic reference, a single captured moment in time. This is why I love drawing and painting from life with natural light whenever possible. The difference in experience in drawing or painting from life, versus from a photograph, is far greater for me than the difference, for instance, of using digital media versus traditional media. In this particular case no pixels or photography of any kind were used in any part of the painting process, just good old fashioned hand-eye-brain coordination with application of various media onto a canvas.

Mayor Ron Dellums


Mayor Ron Dellums
2006, Mixed media on canvas, 30″ x 40″

This portrait of Hon. Ronald Vernie “Ron” Dellums, former Congressman (1971 – 1998) and Mayor of Oakland (2007 – 2011), was commissioned by members of Gamma Chi Lambda Chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc. as a gift in association with his receiving the Alpha Phi Alpha Living Legend Award in recognition of his service in government. It was initially unveiled at a Living Legend Award ceremony in 2006 and finally presented to him on his 80th birthday celebration in 2016.


Mayor Dellums and his portrait at his Alpha Phi Alpha Living Legend Award ceremony, San Francisco, 2006


Mayor Dellums presented with his portrait during the celebration of his 80th birthday, Oakland, 2016