EMAIL CRAIG ELLIOTT

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16429 Lost Canyon Road
Santa Clarita, CA, 91387
United States

(661)299-9478

Drawing from the visual worlds of science and nature, the human figure, the grand tradition of American illustration, Japanese scroll paintings and woodblock prints, fantasy illustration, and great artists of Europe, Elliott’s work strikes the viewer at first with a powerful tableau and draws them in to experience the subtlety and beauty within. Beyond the pictorial impact of his work, themes personal to him such as body image, environmental preservation, and social and psychological repression weave themselves throughout his work.

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Blog

Fine jewelry site has launched!

Craig Elliott

A website entirely devoted to my collection of fine jewelry has just been launched and has gone live!  

craigelliottcollection.com

I use an unusual process to create these works, modeling the forms first in Maya, the program that animated films are made with. The 3D models are then made into real prototypes that are cast in metal.  These "metal masters" are cleaned up and and fixes or flaws removed.  Then the masters are used to make the final molds for lost wax casting.  All the jewelry is hand made and assembled and ships in its own specially sized box.  

-Enjoy!  

I've been called out on "A is for Artist" !

Craig Elliott

I have been written into a wonderful regular feature on the Tor website written by the talented illustration team of Kurt and Zelda. The theme of the feature is that they pick a few artists who's name start with each letter of the alphabet, and then introduce a different letter for each installment of the feature.  They, by now, have reached the letter "E" and have chosen me to be part of the five or so artists for that letter!  

Jump on over to the Tor website and have a gander at this installment and all the others if you haven't already!   

Dean Cornwell rocks.

Craig Elliott

I did a couple sketches from some Dean Cornwell paintings last night and I thought I would share them.

 I always love the strength of structure that he puts in the heads he paints and draws.  they are exaggerated in character and simplified in structure.  all the right stuff!  

 

Painting like a madman....

Craig Elliott

I've been painting like crazy after work and on the weekends to create enough work for my show in Paris later this year.  Here is a funny shot of the 7 paintings I am working on this week drying all at once. All this art leaves me little room to make more!  Sadly I cannot put them outside, because it is very dusty out here due to my neighbor having 20+ horses and goats etc.  

But what the hell. I'm having fun!  

Glass Jewelry now available in store!

Craig Elliott

My new line of glass cameo jewelry on silk ribbons is now available in the store area.  There are 9 designs, each centered around one of my fine art paintings.  Several of the designs sold out at their introduction for Comic-con this year, so this should prove a popular new item! All the cameos are signed by me and hand made.  Each cameo is somewhat unique, as the glass beads used in each are all different.   

All of the cameos are available for $25 with $4 shipping. 

Enjoy!  

-Craig

Comicon 2010 in the bag.

Craig Elliott

Comic-con 2010 has wrapped up, and I'm still putting away all my booth gear!  I wanted to thank all of you fans and friends who stopped by this year.  Special thanks to My friend Lana who possibly suffered a spider bite from a spider in my con equipment (and had to go to emergency), and my assistant Jackie and her friend Laura for helping me out at the booth on the weekend.

I introduced a new line of glass cameo jewelry as well as several new prints of paintings.  Keep an eye on the website for these items!  

Thanks again for all your complements and interesting conversation, and see you again next year!  

-Craig

Next stop Comic-con 2010...

Craig Elliott

I just finished attending and speaking at the Icon6 conference in Pasadena, CA and I'm making all my final preparations for comicon 2010.  If you are going to the con this year, come by the Craig Elliott Gallery booth# 4812 and say hi!   If you come by, also check out the work of my friend, Christian Alzmann, nearby at booth# 4816

New at Comic-con this year, I will have new prints, originals and a new line of glass cameo jewelry.  I will doing commissions again this year and my list fills up fast, so get on the list soon!   

See you there! 


 

ICON6 film panel speaker and exhibit

Craig Elliott

If you are going to ICON this year, stop by on Saturday July, 17th in the Huntington Ball Room from 4:20-5pm to hear myself and some of my fellow film designers speak about designing on The Princess and the Frog and art in general. 

Ian Gooding, Bill Schwab, John Mahoney and myself will all be contributing!  

"I like Craig Elliott's artwork..." There's an App for that!

Craig Elliott

 

Well, soon there will be! I have been putting together a special collection of images for the iPhone and iPad this past week and just submitted the final set of pages and icons for approval:  

Bring inspiration and guidance on how to draw the female form with you wherever you are!  "Craig Elliott: Pinup"  is a collection of large studies, well suited as wallpaper images.  The studies have been rendered in many colorful mediums of expression such as watercolor, pencil and pastel. (31 pages, full color)

 

 

My hope is to continue to release these book Apps under different themes, as long as they do fairly well.  Keep an eye on this spot for final release dates etc.  I am shooting for a Comicon 2010 release! 

 

I went to Scotland... Or did I?

Craig Elliott

Last night and this morning I did a little world travelling.  On the internet that is.  There are a fascinating number of public webcams pointed at pretty places all around the world.  Paris, Alaska, New York Africa, Etc.  I thought that these cameras would make a fun way to watch light and color change in these distant lands.  Below are my first experimants of a town square in Scotland.  This is "The Cross" in Kilmarnok Scotland around 6 am (the cooler painting) and later around 5pm (the strongly light one). These took about 20-30 minutes each and are sketched in one brush with no pressure sensitivity in Photoshop. 
          

Portraits anyone?

Craig Elliott

I don't do many portraits, but I have done a few.  I think I have only done a limited number of them because I like to know something of the person before I feel comfortable doing one.  I think you need to know what the person is really like to know what to draw- otherwise what are you really doing?  you don't know!  You might accidentally get it right, but you might not.  

Here are a couple drawings, one of my friends Melissa and Peter De Seve.  Melissa is a very kind energetic and very smart girl with a bright outlook on life (this drawing is meant to be more realistic).  Peter has a big heart, has a fun and nutty side (just like his characters) and a very keen eye (Peter's drawing is meant to have a bit of caricature).  I hope all of these qualities come through in my portraits!  
 

Icon6: A Labor of Line

Craig Elliott

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I will be having a couple paintings in the ICON 6 show at Gallery Nucleus this month. The opening reception is July 16th at 7pm.  Go to their website for a map and directions to the gallery.  if you have never been, it is a great gallery and bookstore/ art print store.  There really is nothing quite like it, and I think we need many more like it.  Maybe they should open more of them?  Hint, hint....

Bristle Brushes

Craig Elliott

I have been asked what kinds of brushes I use for oil painting from time to time, so I thought I'd help people understand a bit more about them.  Bristle brushes are what I use for most of the painting and for all the beginning stages of my oil paintings. 

Here is a scan 3 of my bristle (hog hair) brushes as a demonstration of their longevity and quality.  The left is a brand-new, top of the line Windsor and Newton bristle brush. In the middle is a 15 year old and VERY high quality bristle brush I have been using, and at the right is an unused low quality bristle brush.  

The Windsor and Newton and the older brush both should have a nearly endless life unless you are painting on sandpaper!   The cheaper brush MIGHT work for a single painting ok, but will never have the kind of control, flex and shape that a good bristle brush does.  

The key differences between these 2 qualities of brush are interlocking, and hair arrangement.  Interlocking is a term used to refer to the way the bristles are carefully arranged by the maker to have their natural bend curve toward the center of the brush.  This is most easily seen on the middle brush because the stains from the old paint, but it is there on the first brush too.  Manufacturers will try and trick buyers who do know that this is a mark of quality by one simple trick.  They put soap or some other washable stiffener in the hairs and shape them TEMPORARILY to point towards the center.  The best way to find out if this is the case is to carefully knead the stiffener out in the store and see if the hairs still do this. The other factor in quality is the way the hairs are arranged to form the shape of the brush.  Filbert and round brushes are the easiest brushes to look for this type of quality.  Good quality and good performing brushes have whole hairs carefully arranged to make the pointed shape, of say, a  round brush.  Individual hog bristle hairs all naturally come to a sharp taper and each have a very fine point.  When a brush is arranged well all the pointed ends of the hairs will be at the tip of the brush, none will stick out in a stray manner and none will have fuzzy or blunt ends.  Cheap hair arrangement (if you can call it that) will have a combination of fuzzy, blunt and sharp hairs.  These brushes are often just stuffed with hair, and then SANDED on a power sander to shape them. this creates a terrible brush with hairs that stick out everywhere, fall out on to your painting and have very little control.   

 

Drawing of the day for Stuart Ng...

Craig Elliott

Here is a nice little sketch I did for the supercool Stuart Ng a few months back. Stuart sells the most amazing collection of imported comics, art and illustration instruction books, and fine art books by all the best artists. 

They usually set up a little book store at both Comic-con and Wondercon here in California.  I'm not sure if he goes to other states but you can always browse his website for goodies. 

 


Stuart on the Left

Centrolinead update

Craig Elliott

Jim Gurney has posted my photos of the antique drawing tool I foud at an estate sale a few months ago.  Some folks on his blog requested a measured drawing, so I have scanned the parts and put measurements on them for those of you who want to make their own! 

 

Little Wing

Craig Elliott

I just finished a new painting titled: Little Wing Says Goodbye. In this peice, A Native American girl who resues birds and restores them to full health is finally releasing one of her patients back to the wild.

Excuse the quality of this photo, the pros are taking a much better shot of it right now!

This is an oil painting on wood about 4 feet wide by 2.5 feet tall. 

Learning about color

Craig Elliott

I recently commented to a friend of mine that I had painted a particular building in Pasadena many times to practice color.  I was designing the Disney film Enchanted at the time and could see the top of this beautiful Old Town Pasadena building all day from my desk (the one that houses Louise's Trattoria for those of you  who live there) I thought I would post these sketches for you to see how simple this kind of sketch should be when you are only concerned with understanding and learning how color behaves. I am not concerened with accurate edges or details of any kind.  I just want to record the basic color and vlaue relationships that I am observing.  As I collect these kinds of sketches I file them by lighting situation and reopen them and sample the colors when I am painting a film design from my imagination!


In this sketch, the building clearly faces west on the light side as the sun is setting.  The warmth of the light is caused by the sunlight having to go through more atmsphere when it is setting and losing some of the cool end of the spectrum.  The cool side of the building and clouds is influenced by the sky mainly.  In the case of the building, other buildings (and the ground) are also adding reflected light that is hitting the subject building.

 

 

Here, the situation is clearly a night scene with light cloud cover in the sky.  The warm lights of the restaurants and shops lights the building from the bottom.  This light falls off quite quickly, as the man-made lights are not that powerful.  Towards the top of the building cooler moonlight mixes with the warm lights to make a sort of geenish grey light.  The moonlight also colors the shadow side of the of white building's walls.  One of my favorite features of the sky here is the lack of differention in the clouds in terms of value- the clouds are really just a different (greyer and greener) color than the sky.

 

The light side of the clouds and building in this sketch is a much more balanced and full spectrum light. You can see that the clouds are "actually" white and the building is "actaully" painted a slightly warm white.  The shadow sides are lit from the dome of the sky and thusly that light is the color I have painted the sky here.

 

 

 

Here is another end- of -day (or "golden hour") color sketch.  In this case, another building is casting a shadow on the lower half of main building, creating a nice mood.  The shadows are all much greyer in this case than they might normally becaue the sky had pretty heavy patches of grey clouds, greying out the blue light of the sky dome. 

 

 

 

 

 

New Character Designs in the portfolio area...

Craig Elliott

Here are a few new samples; not attached to any projects in particular.  Both started as doodles on paper and moved to the computer for final color.  Both were painted in Photoshop over a line drawing.  I want to do more work in fantasy art so I thought I'd get a little paractice in- Enjoy!