Showing posts with label fairy tale art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fairy tale art. Show all posts

Thursday, July 26, 2018

New Works at Helikon for Hometown Heroes!

Informal Chat
Mixed media (watercolor, India ink, acrylic inks, UV protectant varnish) on watercolor paper mounted on birch.

This 8" x 10" painting is one of five pieces that I'll have in the exhibition, Hometown Heroes at Helikon Gallery  
The opening is this Saturday, July 28th from 6-10 pm!

Informal Chat was inspired by all of the magical faery-folk in tales and legends. I've always loved little guys, lanterns, owls, and the natural world, so this piece was a blast to create :]


Here are three more of the ready-to-hang works available at the show or through Helikon's site. These are wood cut-outs (mixed media works on watercolor paper mounted to hardboard). I used watercolor, India ink, acrylic inks, and acrylic gouache. The finished works are then cut out on a scroll saw and coated with UV protectant varnish.

Two of these cut-outs (the rooster and mouse; approx. 9" x 15") were inspired by folk tales, while the froggy-fellow (approx. 5" x 10") was inspired by the footman in Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.

Hope you'll join me and all the other dynamic Colorado artists for Hometown Heroes--plus amazing new figurative works by Ryan Morse Underneath in the Annex Gallery!

If you can't attend, or would like more information, just click on this link:

And all works (and more!) are available online through

Please support artists and the arts--it's more important than ever.

As always--Thank you!

Wednesday, November 8, 2017

My Art Book (and a Sticker Pack)!


My artwork from the past three years, compiled in a really nice, 96 page volume!

This past year brought a solo exhibition for me at Helikon Gallery. Along with the show, the gallery director and illustrator, Cayce Goldberg, designed this 96 page book.

I got to watch--and add my thoughts--as he worked on laying out the covers and pages. It was a fascinating process, and I've nothing but admiration for Cayce's skills as a writer and designer.

 
 Many of the page layouts feature the finished work along with the initial sketch and process photos...
 
...along with pages that show close-up details of my drawings and paintings (with my short commentaries about technique, or process, or thoughts about influences).
 
There are even great layouts of my sketches (and a few "portraits" of my friends) designed consistently by theme...

...including pages that deal with my fascination with Alice's Adventures.

It's a volume that pretty much covers my work and process, and I'm very proud of it.
 
The gallery even created a companion sticker pack to go along with the book and exhibition!

If what I create happens to resonate for you, both book and sticker pack are available here:
 
Your purchase helps me continue to make art, 
and I very much appreciate your interest and support--thank you!






Wednesday, November 26, 2014

The Old Witch, Part One

http://tomsarmo.com/
The Old Witch (detail).
This is the second image for a recent project. I'm in the middle of the third, and The Creature http://tomsarmo.blogspot.com/2014/08/httptomsarmo.html  was the first. I love drawing Frankenstein--same with witches--so heading to the studio has been a true pleasure lately.

Witches and apples in fairy and folk tales seem inextricably paired. And what's a magical person without a familiar? In this lady's case, it's a slightly tilting, crabby owl!

http://tomsarmo.com/
Disorganized (I am getting better), my prelims usually end up scattered in random sketchbooks and drawers. I know there were more, but these are some preliminary witch-head studies. The thumbnails for the composition elude me at the moment. 

The idea of The Old Witch has been with me for years, probably beginning with an old Aurora model I built as a kid, and...  
http://www.lambiek.net/artists/i/ingles.htm
...the amazing Graham Ingels' Old Witch
Growing up, a tremendous amount of images got seared into my brain thanks to the barber shop's comic book collection. This is only one of those pictures that scared the pants off me, thus never forgotten.

http://tomsarmo.com/ 
Dug up some more prelims--early versions of the venerable sorceress, and an idea for the text banner.



Once the witch's pose was settled on, a hand-selfie with apple was necessary.

http://tomsarmo.com/
But I'm getting ahead of the post.
http://tomsarmo.com/
I also worked on the border. Here it took on a Celtic spin...

http://tomsarmo.com/
...but changed my mind in favor of a cauldron. That doesn't last either. The bird skull finally takes shape here though.

Well that's it for Part One--more next post--and

Thanks, as always, for checking out my blog!

Saturday, March 8, 2014

William Heath Robinson: Some Rare Images

www.tomsarmo.blogspot.com
Illustration detail from a battle scene by W. Heath Robinson. 
From The Monarchs of Merry England, by Roland Carse, 1907.

Among my many influences, Heath Robinson's works have always been among the top three. 
The above detail shows not only his great skill as a draftsman and painter, 
but is as fresh and luminous as many contemporary digital illustrations. 

Now, I'm not one of those curmudgeonly critics who thinks good 
illustration ended with the Golden Age. I love it but 
am also fascinated by the amazing new works out there. 
Those will be for future posts. 

In the meantime, Heath Robinson's 
works deserve all the re-visiting they can get.  

Over the years, I've managed to collect some rare books that 
contain many of Robinson's lesser-known works. Seems a good idea to share a few;
therefore all of the pieces in this post are his.

Robinson's art is extremely eclectic, yet always retaining the stamp of 
his unique style and humor. Since I worry often about the variation in my own artwork, 
it's a comfort to see that Robinson's amazing talent and successful career 
was not damaged by his wide range of picture-making skills and interests.

Haystacks in the Snow
Since I've never seen this anywhere but in an old art catalog, not sure if it was a 
full color watercolor or originally done in black and white, but the piece is 
gorgeous nonetheless--worthy of Jean-Francois Millet.

This goofy little bird-man is from The Works of Rabelais 
which Robinson illustrated for Grant Richards in 1904.

I've always examined and learned from Robinson's full-color plates, 
but his pen and ink work is paragon, and his spot illustrations 
of goofy people burst with life and character.

This is a border decoration from 
the aforementioned Monarchs of Merry England...

...as is this jumping Medieval Scotsman.

This little piper kills me. He marches along on a 
sheet music illustration--the whole thing shown below:

This is a beauty--a stunning pen work full of tiny elves 
peeping out of the trees and faery folk cavorting in the air.

A Hag from Witches and Fairies

Collapsible Bishop's Hat, from The Bystander, 1920

A Very Tremendous decoration 
from The Water Babies, 1915

Also from The Water Babies

From The Bystander, lampooning a proposed 
tunnel under the English Channel, 1919

And last, another brilliantly lit watercolor...
The Black Prince, After Crecy, from The Monarchs of Merry England.

For more on William Heath Robinson visit http://www.heathrobinson.org/

Stay tuned for some future posts on some exciting contemporary illustrators.
And thanks for the visit!







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