MICHAEL WHELAN

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atomic-raven:
“ theartofmichaelwhelan:
“ TIME PASSING (2007) by Michael Whelan
Oil on Panel - 26” x 16”
As a native Californian, I really enjoy the change in seasons that I experience living in New England. There is even beauty to be found in the...
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atomic-raven:

theartofmichaelwhelan:

TIME PASSING (2007) by Michael Whelan

Oil on Panel - 26” x 16”

As a native Californian, I really enjoy the change in seasons that I experience living in New England. There is even beauty to be found in the shadows of the leafless trees against the pale gray winter sky. However when I finished this Portals painting in March, I was definitely ready to start seeing more of the sun!

As an oil painter, I really want to know how this was done.

To be honest, this one was painted then sold before we got to have it in our own house, so I don’t remember much about it. I do recall that the painting grew from a desire to revisit the sky colors I had used in an earlier painting in acrylics titled “Twilight Path”, which I still have hanging in my studio and look at every day.

The stone ruin amid the trees was suggested by an experience I had when I came across a stone fireplace and chimney in the middle of woods in Massachusetts. To stand in those woods and realize that a house used to be there gave me a weird feeling, like visiting Momson VT ;-)

It was painted in oils on a panel, probably a Gessobord ™ panel. I laid in the stonework first just so I knew where the sky wrapped around the edges, so to speak.

After defining the general shape of the stone ruin, I followed my usual practice of painting from background to foreground, creating shadows by glazing dark tones over the underlayer of sky colors.

I remember that it felt important to me to get the right feeling in the moon and sky at the horizon. Once that had been safely rendered the rest was fairly routine painting.

Whenever I felt the need to insure a realistic feeling to my tree shapes I’d take a walk outside and look at the trees in our neighborhood.

Michael Whelan

(via atomic-raven)

Source: michaelwhelan.com

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  • 8 years ago > theartofmichaelwhelan
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Q:Hello Michael! I just wanted to drop a line to tell you how much of an inspiration your work has always been to me. I was in highschool when I first saw your book The Art of Michael Whelan at my local library. It blew my little mind. Ever since I've always had the dream of become an illustrator of fantastical and surreal imagery. Much love - thank you for doing what you do!

theliminal-deactivated20181216

Thanks! I have lots of avenues to explore yet, so I’m hoping that wherever the roads of my imagination take me it’s someplace you enjoy visiting :-)

Your message is very encouraging, so thanks for taking the time to send me your thoughts.

–MW

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  • 9 years ago
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You’ve mentioned being involved with movie concept art. Was there a movie you wish you’d worked on, or one that came out that had work you wish you’d been able to try?

I’m continually floored by the imagination and skill I see in movie concept art, so I don’t feel there’s much I would have been able to add to most movies I’ve seen. But one exception did come to mind, and that is the film adaptation of Stephen King’s THE MIST. Though I felt the last creature in the film was perfect, strange, and all I could hope to see, I was rather disappointed in the other monsters. I’d like to have designed them myself or worked with a master artist like Jordu Schell to come up with some truly bizarre and insane critters for the earlier sections of that horror flick.

MRW

(This question came from onionvolcano. Silly admin that I am, I replied to him privately before forwarding the question to MW and, of course, Tumblr ate all record of the post. Stupid, stupid Tumblr. Thanks to Derek for graciously messaging the question to me again. ~MJ )

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  • 9 years ago
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Q:You paint so many marvelous ammonites! Do you collect them, and if so, have any favorite specimens/species?

vantid

Yes I do indeed collect them, and I do have a favorite species: Dactylioceras. That is the species I am most fond of collecting. My favorite in terms of looks is pictured on a t-shirt I have, and it is labeled “Crioceratas Horridum” ––but  it doesn’t appear in any of my books so perhaps it isn’t real. It’s a cool looking, spiny thing though.

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  • 9 years ago
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What to do for 10,000 followers? We’re rapidly approaching our next milestone on Tumblr, and to celebrate I’m putting together special content including an interview with this guy. I’m sure all of you have interesting questions for Michael as...
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What to do for 10,000 followers?

We’re rapidly approaching our next milestone on Tumblr, and to celebrate I’m putting together special content including an interview with this guy. I’m sure all of you have interesting questions for Michael as well.

You can submit those questions through our Tumblr ask box or the contact form on the website.

We’ll take questions submitted in whatever format. Be creative and you shall be rewarded!

Mike Jackson

Source: facebook.com

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  • 9 years ago
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Q:Hello! Today I bought the 1982 "Music From the 21st Century" compilation and noticed that the cover is a gnarly Whelan illustration. I have never seen this one, do you have an original image that you can share with us? Thanks so much!

divine-winds-deactivated2018120

Great question!  That was TIME AND AGAIN, originally commissioned by ACE for the book by Clifford D. Simak.  It was a very early cover c. 1975.  Many album covers featuring Michael’s art were licensed under secondary rights.  This was definitely an obscure one as I hadn’t see it before.

The illustration was also collected in Michael’s first book </em>Wonderworks</em> (Donning 1979), which is long out of print but there are copies still floating around on the secondhand market.  


image
image
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  • 10 years ago
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Q:Hi Michael, Sorry to stop you from being so productive to read this, but I am a graduate illustration student fighting to find a comfortable and reliable way to paint in acrylics. Every night after slinging acrylics around in my studio for hours I end up on your site's "FAQ" section trying to gleam into your process and expierence. After six months of experimenting and hunting down process knowledge I wondered if you had a short hand process list that you go by to execute your works in acrylic?

jacob-a-sweet

The question copied below is one that I get asked a lot, because most of my work is done in acrylic paint and the medium is notoriously difficult to paint with if you are trying to attain realistic effects. The short answer is that there is no single simple solution, and each artist must experiment and find his or her own way of forcing the stuff to work in a way way that suits the vision of the art.

Unfortunately, I can’t say I have a set way of working. Unlike the Hildebrandts [for example] who apparently developed early on a reliable and consistent method for handling the paint, I never know in advance how a painting is going to get made before I get started. I adapt my working procedure and process to fit the subject, the surface I am working on, and my mood at the time I am working. I’m not trying to duck the question; the point is I rarely know precisely how I’m going to go about completing a work until I get into it and start messing things up. 

The writer Anne Lamott, in her how-to book for beginning writers, suggests that the core of her creative process is essentially a two-step process: creating a “shitty first draft” and then editing and correcting it until it seems finished. Needless to say, the closer and more accurate the first step, the less involved the latter step will be. 

Painting can be much the same procedure. One starts with an approximation and speedy lay-in of the important elements, then proceeds to refine the parts and the whole at the same time until all the errors are corrected and things appear to be finished, at least to the eye of the artist. Sounds simple, doesn’t it? ;-)  

Much of that process depends on drawing skills and how clear the finished image is in your mind before you even begin. If the initial drawing-in of the essential shapes is accurate, it will save a huge amount of work later in the game, whereas second-guessing and correcting errors can turn the painting into a long trial of patience and frustration. Believe me, I speak from experience!  Even when I THINK I have a rock-solid mental picture of where I’m going with a painting I can find that major course-corrections are necessary and it can add a huge amount of effort to make the changes, alas. Acknowledging this, I usually find it well worth the time to draw out things in advance and do at least one color concept sketch of my idea before beginning the final painting. I’ll often do a full scale contour drawing of the major elements in the composition on tracing paper, which I will lay over the painting as I am working on it to check that I’m not going astray as I get into it.

But back to the medium itself:

I think much of the “problem” with acrylics is that they are so damned versatile: one can use them like watercolors and paint in thin delicate washes, or apply them with with a trowel, spreading  thick gloppy paint like mortar or stucco. They are available as intense watery dyes [formulated for airbrush artists but usable in any number of other ways] as well as in stiff pastes – and in every textural gradation in between. So how does one choose?  Well, only the artist can say. Which modality of acrylic paint appeals to your instincts and creative nature? Do you like thick defined brushstrokes or invisible gradations of tone? and etc.

This is an important question, because the handling of the paint is for the most part determined by the form in which you are using it. The techniques called for when painting with tube colors, for example, are entirely different from the way one handles airbrush colors or matte gouache-style acrylics. Different brushes, different surfaces, different ways of layering paint etc. To go into all the different ways it is handled would require a book, and I can’t cover all those bases here, even if i had the time to.

But I can say this: for the most part, my preference is for fluid jar-type acrylics; I rarely use the tube paints, which i find too cumbersome for anything except highlights and textural passages [painting rocks and concrete, etc.]. [[Side note: acrylics are very tough on brushes of any type -synthetic or natural. Starting from tube colors I found I was ruining the brushes just trying to thin the globs of paint down to get them to flow enough to be usable, so I eliminated that step by starting with fluid paints to begin with.]  I generally try to have a close idea of where I am going in a painting before starting, which usually requires a small comprehensive sketch in paint which i use as a guide for the full scale rendering. I work from background to foreground, painting in the environment, as it were, and then painting the objects and figures into that environment as I get further into the painting. That way the things IN the environment take on some of the colors of the environment, helping them to look a little more real as a result.

When I began to use a acrylics I quickly saw that the speedy drying time was the main problem with those paints: the paints dried even as I mixed them. My solution was to buy small mixing trays and pre-mix the gradations I thought I would need in advance, and work from those mixes while painting. Originally I used muffin tins and mini-ice cube trays for my mixing wells, until I discovered the 30-well plastic mixing trays made by the “Dr. Ph. Martin’s” dyes company, which suit my needs well. I store the trays with the mixed paints in flat Tupperware containers. They will stay wet and usable for weeks that way, though they can spoil and get funky in the summer if left too long. Right now I have about seven different Tupperware-style flat containers containing different palette mixtures for all the paintings I have going on. There is always one such container which is dedicated to color gradations in grays: a warm, neutral, and a cool set of values going from black to white in 6 to 9 steps. I use that one almost daily, especially for my value studies.

When a painting is done I’ll use the leftover paint to do a sketch or I’ll simply dispose of the paint, wash the container and re-use it on another project.

Well, that’s a short overview of my setup, which i hope will help you some in your experimentation. Best of luck!

Michael

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  • 10 years ago
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Q:I've been in love with Michael's cover for Melanie Rawn's SUNRUNNER'S FIRE since I was a teenager. I saw several other prints for Rawn covers in the store, but not SUNRUNNER'S FIRE. Was there ever a print of this illustration, and is there any chance of a re-issue?

ninjaeyecandy

Michael painted some amazing covers for Melanie Rawn.  The Dragon Prince and Dragon Star trilogies are fantastic books, and I highly recommend them.

There were actually two versions of the cover illustration for SUNRUNNER’S FIRE.  

image

DRAGON FIRE (1989) has been issued before as a print from Glass Onion.  It was also released as a collectible framed print from the Franklin Mint years later and printed in the 2005 calendar. While it isn’t currently available, there’s a good chance it will be reissued because Michael’s dragons are very popular.

image

LORD PROTECTOR (1989) was never issued as a print, but it was published in the 2004 calendar.  

Notice the anatomical differences in the wings.  Michael changed directions after submitting concepts to DAW.  He wanted to be consistent with previous cover illustrations.  I believe he finished LORD PROTECTOR later, but I have the same year for the copyright on both pieces so they were done in close proximity.

If you forward your contact info through the form on the site, I’ll be glad to make a note of your request and let you know if/when DRAGON FIRE becomes available again.

Thanks for the great question!

~MJ

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  • 11 years ago
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Q:An honor and much respect to you, Michael. There are so many questions, as I am one of the numerous fans of yours familiar with your art work (I have bought The Works Of Wonder Books TWICE, one for viewing and the other for safe keeping) , that I am very eager to ask, so I will ask one: Is there a genre that really fires up your inspiration? I love all genres, and science fiction adventure is among my favorites. Thank you, sir. Cheers.

fingerfrets

In truth, the whole universe ‘fires up my imagination’, actually. But if I had to choose one subject  to paint – to the exclusion of all else– it would have to be the human form. Human anatomy and physiology, and the beautiful variations and expressions thereof, has always been my paramount fascination.

Michael

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  • 12 years ago
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Fine artist of Imaginative Realism and illustrator of science fiction and fantasy. Winner of 15 Hugo Awards (SF's Oscar). Inducted into the Science Fiction Hall of Fame in 2009.

Michael Whelan.com


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