Showing posts with label Childhood Drawings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Childhood Drawings. Show all posts

Friday, June 4, 2010

Old Drawings of Birds

My older sister was cleaning out some old file cabinets at our auto body shop and she found a folder filled with old drawings I did anywhere between five and eight years ago. I usually shudder when I see my old drawings, but this time I thought it would be kind of interesting to post a few samples to show where I was at only a few years ago.... that and I don't really have anything else to post right now.

I used to doodle like hell on the back of tests and work packets I had at school. One of the older pages I found in this folder was a Spanish test I took in 2002, with the back covered in drawings of ducks (which goes to show that I was obsessed with drawing ducks even back then).


When I look at some of these pages, I sometimes can recall the exact time and place I drew them. With this one, it was a real surprise. These drawings are the first I ever did of Steve-O, the duck I've practically drawn every day since high school. Back then, I imagined him as a pet to one of my older characters who I eventually got rid of. He was more or less a real duck; he didn't speak and really didn't have that much in terms of personality.


At one point, I changed the eyes to ones that were completely closed off all around. I think I only kept it that way for less than a year, then reverted back.

The scenery in this picture was supposed to be a city that the birds lived in, called "Birdbrain". It was pretty much like Springfield in the Simpsons. It had a city full of skyscrapers, a giant egg shaped factory owned by a conglomerate corporation, a Levitown-like neighborhood, a fisherman's wharf, farmlands, forests, a swamp, and probably the most improbable example of terrain in the history of existence: a giant cliff in the middle overlooking a lake with a tiny island, where Steve-O lived in a house shaped like an egg.

It really had the most unusual geography. In one corner of town, it was facing the ocean, but in another it was facing a desert, and then mountains and finally a giant waterfall near a swamp. And the boundaries between the different sections were about as seamless as walking from Tomorrowland into Frontierland at DisneyWorld.

Some vague resemblance of planning keys, I guess.


Since I didn't date drawings back then, I can only gauge that this was probably drawn in 2004. It was about that time when I started to square off their heads a little bit at a time.

My mom never would raise hell towards me or anything that I did, but the one thing that always bugged her was when I would draw on lined paper. It would drive her nuts. She would say, "Its a nice drawing Michael, but WHY THE HELL DID YOU DO IT ON PAPER WITH LINES ON IT?!" But I couldn't care less. If it was paper and was blank, I'd draw on it.

I should redraw some of the old setups, just for the hell of it. It would be weird to see the same thing side by side.

Steve-O used to have this obsession with flying makeshift airplanes. I imagined that birds in this universe had evolved so much that they lost their ability to fly, which makes absolutely no sense. But I was a kid, and what the hell do kids know anyway?

It's funny to see how ideas and concepts develop and change over the course of a few short years. While I did drop a lot of these concepts, a few of them have sort of reemerged. I'm bringing back the idea of Steve-O wanting to fly and building flying contraptions for my thesis film this year, which I never thought I would bring back again. It's weird how these things turn out.