December 06, 2011
What children’s drawings would look like if painted realistically
Rian van der Merwe in Elezea:
The Monster Engine is one of those projects that make me love the Internet for its ability to expose amazing creative talent to a worldwide audience. Illustrator Dave DeVries started with a simple question: What would a child’s drawing look like if it were painted realistically? In his own words:
It began at the Jersey Shore in 1998, where my niece Jessica often filled my sketchbook with doodles. While I stared at them, I wondered if color, texture and shading could be applied for a 3D effect. As a painter, I made cartoons look three dimensional every day for the likes of Marvel and DC comics, so why couldn’t I apply those same techniques to a kid’s drawing? That was it… no research, no years of toil, just the curiosity of seeing Jessica’s drawings come to life.
The Monster Engine is the 48-page outcome from that curiosity, and it looks wonderful. He describes the process as follows:
I project a child’s drawing with an opaque projector, faithfully tracing each line. Applying a combination of logic and instinct, I then paint the image as realistically as I can.
More here.
Posted by S. Abbas Raza at 06:15 AM | Permalink






















Comments
much like the tiny art director...
http://tinyartdirector.blogspot.com/
Posted by: cordelia blue | Dec 6, 2011 2:44:20 PM
For an artist anything may be taken as source of inspiration: a leaf, the shape of a stone, a photo in a newspaper, an ink stain... Of course that also a child's drawing... I would take this drawing to cartoon flat line image that will keep the fresh childish look than to complex 3D nightmarish imagery of the gifted illustrator Dave DeVries.
Posted by: Mirel | Dec 7, 2011 6:00:32 AM
Children's unselfconscious eyes can produce amazing imagery, realistic as well as abstract.
When my son was in the second and third grade of elementary school, the school district drastically reduced art and music programs in a budgetary cut. Unhappy with the cuts, I joined a group of volunteer moms called "Picture Ladies." We were given 90 minutes a month to interact with the kids for art projects. Our approach was to introduce them to different styles of painting, mostly modern masters. Thirty minutes were devoted to a short introduction to the life and work of an artist. The remaining time was given to the children to produce a drawing or painting executed in the same style as the featured art. We showed them Monet, Picasso, Mondrian, Klee, Pollock, Joan Miro and some others. The results were amazing! The children's output compared very favorably to the originals.
Posted by: Ruchira | Dec 7, 2011 11:21:49 AM
Superb! I landed here searching for children's illustration and found the amazing link. I can't resist to share some of my renders - I took sketch of some persons and later i rendered them after one year. you can read the full story at my blog.
Posted by: scorpydesign | Dec 24, 2011 4:31:39 PM
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