Ever since I was a little girl, the only thing I wanted to draw was portraits. I have sketchbooks and sketchbooks chock full of pencil drawings of celebrities that I found in magazines and drew. This obsession stayed with me in middle school and into high school where I dealt strictly in realistic portraiture (most images taken from magazines.)
Middle/High School Sketchbook.
To this day I still choose to draw faces. I have branched out and abandoned the realistic pencil sketches, instead choosing to do more exaggerated caricatures or just inventing a strange face (generally the elderly- wrinkles are more fun!) I think I've stuck with portraits and faces for all these years because I love to examine how each face smiles. And how they cry. And I like to imagine all the life that this particular face has seen.
For this project I am going to explore the field of illustrated journalism. I will be visiting a nursing home in the area and interviewing some of the residents and proceed to create "portraits" of them. I will be recording our conversations and taking a few pictures that I will then turn into sketches, along with bringing a journal to sketch in on the spot. I plan on incorporating typography into this project and writing down direct quotes from the residents.
I love wrinkles and I love listening to stories and I hate paraphrasing. I wanted to interview these residents because their stories aren't often heard, and they deserve to be.
This project is largely inspired by Humans of New York but mostly the work of the amazing and badass Wendy Macaughton. Go to link below to see her wonderful portrait of the San Francisco Public Library:
http://wendymacnaughton.com/#portfolio#journalism01
Wendy Macnaughton's work can be found at http://wendymacnaughton.com/ PLEASE DO IT SHE'S INCREDIBLE.
Humans of New York is another inspiration of mine. Photographer Brandon Stanton asks strangers on New York City to allow him to photograph them and then on his blog he includes a direct quote or short story that they tell him. These often become intimate portraits. Brandon's work can be found on Tumblr, Twitter, Facebook, his website http://www.humansofnewyork.com/ and basically everywhere because THIS THING IS HUGE.
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