02 January 2021

Sad Sack

My dad, a veteran of World War II (and Korea), would occasionally call somebody a "sad sack." I always thought he just meant that was a depressed person, maybe somebody down on his luck. Today, however, I was curious enough to look up the expression.

The earliest instance of "sad sack" is from an article on "Soldier Slang" in the Bergen Evening Record (Hackensack, New Jersey) of 17th August 1942:

SAD SACK, n.—A sloppy soldier; the possessor of an important hangover; a born basic (q.v.); a Benny (q.v.). Civilian equivalent: a drip, a jerk.
BORN BASIC, n.—A soldier whose inherited mental equipment dooms him to a career of menial duty, forbids promotion.
BENNY, n.—A lout; a stupid, generally loudmouthed, slovenly born basic. It is an epithet applied to soldiers who talk too much.

The expression was then apparently popularized by a cartoon series by George Baker, and was shortened from "sad sack of shit," a common military term. Under the auspices of the cartoonist, it became more of a reference to an inept, blundering person (or soldier). Baker started drawing "The Sad Sack" series in June of 1942, depicting the misfortunes of a private in the U.S. Army.

I say all of this because I was about to call today's post "Sad Sack" without really knowing to what it referred; I decided, after my last drawing of the goofy, giddy, happy guy, that I needed a sad one to match, sort of like the drama and comedy masks, so I did an online search for "sad man" looking for a model, and went to work.

I greatly admire the paintings of my friend, Phoebe, who uses watercolor with a mastery I hope someday to achieve, so I tried with this painting to do it a la Phoebe, with the cooler tones of watercolor rather than the brighter Daler Rowney inks I've been using, working at subtle shadings that melt into others without sign of a line. Not knowing how or in what order she applies her colors did stymie me a bit, but I feel like I was somewhat effective in finding her style.

Here's my Sad Sack. I'm not sure he's done; maybe the background needs to change color so as not to look so much like his face? I'ma ponder it.


Gel pen, pencil, watercolor, Uniball Vision pen, Signo white gel pen, on 140-lb. Fluid watercolor paper, 9x12 inches.

31 December 2020

Goof, or goofy?

Today I felt like just doing something random and maybe wonkier than I've done for a while. My friend Phoebe in art class remarked, back a few months, on a fleeting likeness between my guy in "The Earth is wobbling on its axis" and her husband's best friend, who is also a twin. She shared a photo of him and I said then, "I might steal him, he's cute and already a little wonky looking." So today I did just that. I hope, if he sees it, that he's not offended by the liberties I took with his already expressive face. She never mentioned his name, so I guess he will be
"The Goof."


Daler Rowney inks, pencil, watercolor, Uniball Vision pen, white gesso,
white gel pen, stencil, bubble wrap, on 140-lb. Fluid watercolor paper, 9x12.

I used a crimson Daler Rowney ink for the background, but it came out really pink, which didn't suit the portrait, in my opinion, so I have since gone back and added another layer of magenta. It did take out some of the interesting background effects, but I feel like it is more effective with the image itself. Here is the revised version.


What do you think?

30 December 2020

Readers

 I decided this afternoon to do another in my "People Reading" series. At first I was going to redo one with which I was dissatisfied and try to do it better; it was one of the ones with a coat of gesso on the paper before I did the drawing and painting, which is great for texture but really wreaked havoc on my ability to get the kind of detail I wanted. It was a struggle, start to finish, and even though others liked it, I just couldn't. It felt plasticky and unsubtle, and I didn't like the way the paint beaded up on the gesso.

I started by making the background I had planned for that one—pale pink, with bright spatters of lime, turquoise, and orange. But after I pulled out the reference photo and started looking it over again, I decided that part of the problem was, I didn't like the subject! She was skinny and critical looking with flat, boring hair, and didn't look happy at all to be reading her book—in fact, she looked like she was on the verge of shouting at it and throwing it across the room. So I went looking for a photo of someone who seemed to be genuinely engrossed in and enjoying what she was reading, and painted her instead! 

This is "Emmaline reads."

As it turned out, that pale pink background really turned out to be a passive tool to light up everything on top of it. I'll have to remember that.

Gel pen, pencil, Daler Rowney inks, India ink, Uniball Vision pen, Signo white gel pen, white gesso, on 140-lb. Fluid watercolor paper, 9x12 inches.


29 December 2020

Choices

 I made no secret, all year, of the fact that Joe Biden was not my first choice for President. I initially had high hopes this was the election that would give us our first woman president, and I wanted her to be Elizabeth Warren. But the primary process wended its inevitable way towards the winnowing, and eventually it became clear that Biden was going to be our guy, like it or not. At first, I didn't, much; I thought he was too old, too centrist, too connected, too set in his ways to do the kinds of things that need doing right now in these United States if we are going to overcome the disastrous double fallout of the Trump administration and the Covid-19 pandemic. But with his selection of Kamala Harris as his vice president and his strong, steady, and resolute demeanor since the election, I have substantially shifted my attitude and now believe that he may indeed be the person best suited to be in office at this moment.

One of the things that has most reassured me has been his thoughtful and surprisingly innovative appointments to certain offices, the best of which has been the designation of New Mexico's U.S. Representative Deb Haaland as our next Secretary of the Interior. The 60-year-old congresswoman will be the first Native American cabinet secretary ever when she takes office next month; where better to place her than in charge of the country's land and natural resources, as well as making her the primary negotiator of treaty obligations between the tribes and the U.S. government, not previously famous for keeping its promises to indigenous peoples. Referencing the past four years of devastating environmental rollbacks, Haaland said in her acceptance speech, "I'll be fierce for all of us, for our planet and for our protected land." As long as Biden keeps appointing women like this to public office, I know we will be all right.

Since I'm giving Uncle Joe props, you'd think I'd be painting him, but let's face it, Deb Haaland is a more deserving subject of a portrait, given the disregard shown to indigenous women, to women of color, to women period, in this man's world. So here is my impression of a fierce but smiling advocate for the sacred lands that many of us who are not indigenous also hold dear.

Daler Rowney inks, pencil, Uniball pen, watercolors, India ink, white Signo gel pen, on 140-lb. Fluid watercolor paper, 9x12 inches.