Tag: indiaink

  • A Fragment of Departure

    A Fragment of Departure

    I wanted this piece to feel like a fragment of a larger, untold story. It is composed from the exact vantage point of an unknown observer looking through the brush, watching two figures stand at a crossroads on a path. You are witnessing a fleeting, high-stakes moment, but the context is deliberately stripped away. Is one figure looking back because they finally spotted you? Are they standing forlornly as someone else prepares to disappear into the heavy tree line? Or are they simply frozen in a moment of sharp indecision? Leaving those questions unanswered is the entire point; it forces the viewer to fill in the blanks.

    To build this sense of atmospheric suspense, I used a complex multi-medium approach on hot press paper. I started with an India ink wash to establish the deep, heavy values and the overall mood of the environment. From there, I used a mix of Pigma pens and Pitt pens to layer the finer, sharper architectural lines of the massive tree trunks and the dense foliage. I relied heavily on stippling in the canopy, using rapid dots of vibrant purple and green to make the air itself feel like it is vibrating. Finally, I used a white gel pen to pull out the stark, sharp highlightsโ€”catching the light on the foreground rocks, cattails, and the edges of the figures to create a punchy contrast against the dark background wash. By blending the fluid ink with the rigid precision of the pens, the process itself becomes a balance of control and chaos, keeping the image grounded in texture while letting the narrative remain completely elusive.


  • Summer Dusk

    Summer Dusk

    Today I am sharing a new 8×10 study that explores the specific atmosphere of late summer. I wanted to capture not just the intense colors of the season, but the underlying moodโ€”a suggestion of the mysterious melancholy that often accompanies the heavy heat before autumn arrives.

    To build this atmosphere, I completely shifted my mark-making, relying on a stippling technique using Pitt pens and acrylic markers on cold press paper. By applying the color in thousands of distinct dots rather than smooth lines or washes, the surface of the piece seems to physically vibrate. The bright yellows, greens, and warm oranges create a visual “heat haze.”

    To introduce that feeling of mystery, I leaned on contrast. The cooler blues in the shadows of the house and the solitary, undefined figure standing in the yard anchor the piece in a quiet, slightly unsettling stillness. It is an exercise in letting the optical mixing of colors dictate both the light and the emotional weight of the scene.

    Technical Detail:

    • Shuttle Art acrylic brush pens
    • India ink
    • Dip pen
    • 9ร—12 140lb cold press

  • Heat on the Water

    Heat on the Water

    Recently, I shared a highly saturated, small-scale study of a boat docked on a blindingly bright summer day, done entirely with Zebra Sarasa gel pens. That initial piece was all about capturing the raw, vibrating heat and light from an old reference photo.

    Today, I am sharing the larger, translated version of that same scene, completed this time using India ink.

    It is always a fascinating process to see how a composition shifts and breathes differently when you change both the scale and the medium. While the gel pen study was built on tight, scratchy, directional strokes, moving to India ink allowed for broader, smoother washes of color.

    You can see how the vivid yellows, reds, and oranges of the boatโ€™s interior feel a bit more grounded and painterly in this version. However, I intentionally kept that fragmented, graphic, mosaic-like texture in the water to maintain the harsh, rippling reflection of the summer sun.

    Taking a piece from a small, experimental study to a larger ink format is a balancing actโ€”trying to refine the forms without losing the initial, spontaneous energy that made the sketch work in the first place.

    Technical Details:

    • India Ink
    • Strathmore heavyweight mixed media 350lb 9×12
    • Liquitex white acrylic ink

  • Old Live Oak

    Old Live Oak

    I spotted this shack while driving. It was anchored by an old live oak with heavy, sprawling limbs. The wood was grey and tired. The tree was the oppositeโ€”covered in a vibrant green moss that felt alive against the weathered boards.

    What I found most interesting was this dimension of time. You have a structure slowly surrendering to the elements while the tree just keeps reaching. Itโ€™s a quiet, roadside dialogue.

    I used a mix of ink and acrylic for this piece. I also made a specific choice: I stopped correcting myself. If the ink bled or a line went wide, I let it stay. Usually, these are called errors. Here, the errors were the effort. They belong in the work, much like the rot belongs on the shack. Itโ€™s an honest way to record a moment.

    The ink defines the twisting architecture of the oak. The acrylic adds the weight to the sky and the moss. It is a rougher, more experimental process than my usual work, but it captures the grit I was looking for.

    Technical Details:

    • Acrylic swipe
    • Sakura Pigma pens
    • India ink with drip pen
    • 9×12 140lb cold press press
  • The Lure

    The Lure

    On the outside, itโ€™s just weathered wood and rust. But when the door cracks open, the mask slips. This illustration is about that moment of realizationโ€”when the familiar peels back to reveal something sickly and wrong underneath.

    The colors inside are too bright, too vertical. They vibrate against the rot of the doorframe.

    Technical Details:

    • Acrylic swipe
    • Sakura Pigma pens
    • India ink with drip pen
    • 9×12 140lb cold press press
  • The Throat โ€“ Physical Version

    The Throat โ€“ Physical Version

    This is the final, physical state of โ€œThe Throat.โ€ My goal was to capture the sensory experience of claustrophobia, but the transition to paper added a layer of grime and texture that the concept was missing. The way the red wash sits on the page makes the air in the hallway feel thick, heavy, and hot.

    It transforms a mundane domestic hallway into a trap. The sharp perspective tries to pull your eye immediately to that pitch-black doorway at the end, but donโ€™t rush. Let your gaze slide slowly down the hall instead. Along that saturated path, past the silent clutter and the shapes near the floorboards. The real tension isnโ€™t waiting at the destination; itโ€™s right here, holding its breath in the corridor.

    Technical Details

    • Medium: Acrylic swipe, Sakura Pigma pens, Drip Pen w/ India Ink
    • Surface: 9ร—10 Fabriano hot press
    • Dimensions: 9ร—12

  • Physical Illustration: The Weight of Lastness

    Physical Illustration: The Weight of Lastness

    Continuing the visual narrative of the Kauai-ooโ€™s final moments, this second piece shifts focus to the act of looking outwards, a posture imbued with profound symbolic weight. The composition emphasizes the birdโ€™s gaze beyond the immediate frame, a silent witness to an empty horizon where no response awaits its call. Through this outward orientation, the illustration aims to capture not just the physical state of being alone, but the immense existential burden of that isolation, the quiet horror of confronting a futureโ€”or lack thereofโ€”where oneโ€™s existence has no continuation or reflection.

    The interplay of shade and light becomes a crucial visual language in conveying this sense of finality and dread. Deep shadows often encroach upon the form, symbolizing the encroaching darkness of extinction and the heavy, suffocating weight of being the last. Conversely, areas of light, perhaps stark or distant, highlight the birdโ€™s solitary presence against an indifferent backdrop, underscoring the stark reality of its situation and the ultimate, inescapable nature of its end. These elements combine to evoke the universal human experience of facing moments of absolute powerlessness and the deep, visceral fear that accompanies the contemplation of finality and irreparable loss.

    Technical Details

    Medium: Acrylic swipe, Sakura Pigma pens, Drip Pen w/ India Ink
    Surface: 9×10 Fabriano hot press
    Dimensions: 9ร—12