Since I’m on vacation all week, my friends are helping me fill the blogging gaps. My friend and Píccolo collaborator, Lisa, is here to give you a how-to on illustrating your self portrait!
Professionally, Lisa goes by her last name, Perrin. She is an illustrator, designer, collaborator, entrepreneur, and educator currently based in Baltimore, Maryland. Perrin’s work is informed by the humorous and strange world of Eastern European Jewish folk tales. Visit her website, and follow her on Twitter and Tumblr.
Onward!
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Real talk: I draw myself a lot. I do it to catalogue how I look, how I think I look, how I invariably change, and how I draw over time.
attribution: digital painting and gif by Perrin with her rabbit; Blanche DuBun
The self is an obvious point of reference and source of inspiration. Frida Kahlo did it to explore her feelings at different key moments in her life. Your Facebook friends do it with their phones to look cool in front of their cohorts (I understand this is called a “selfie.”) Arguably, this is a key part of being a person. It serves as a kind of auto-documentation.
An illustration is a little different. The primary goal of an illustration is to communicate and tell a story. So when illustrating yourself consider what you want to communicate through the portrait. It can be as stylized and fantastical as you like. If you want to show yourself zipping out of a banana suit, or traversing the vastness of the cosmos because it expresses something about your personality or dreams, then this is the place to do it!
Below is a smattering of some of my illustrated self-portraits.
attribution: self portraits by Perrin from 2005–2012
Step 1: What do you look like? If you are going for a more conventional likeness take a moment to study that mug of yours. Prop up a mirror or take a photo for reference. If you want your illustration to be less literal try drawing yourself from memory or draw what you think you look like. You may be wrong but this is your articulation of yourself so no one can stop you!
Step 2: What do you want to communicate and articulate to the viewer about yourself? If someone that did not know you came across this portrait what would they infer about its creator? Would they get your sense of humor from the banana suit?
Step 3: HOW you will convey what you want to communicate? What colors will you use? Will you show the whole figure? Will there be a background? If so, what is it? Make choices that will enhance what you want to communicate and make sense.
Step 4: Illustrate that business. Use the medium of your choice, be it digital or analog, collage or pencil. Stay true to your goals. Enjoy the process of creation. Consider indulging in this practice every so often to see how your portraits change as you do.
Step 5: Bask in self-realization. Probably post to Tumblr.