Paul Fierlinger wrote:But why? What is the reason behind painting this way if it's so obvious that the result stems from a photograph sitting right next to your drawing?
It's an exercise. It's not art. But then again, it's a huge challenge to be able to paint exactly what you see, especially in the case of a photograph, to be able to analyse the situation that the photograph presents and to recreate it takes a lot of raw, technical skill. I had to train myself to see the photograph as a series of brush strokes, to see the photograph as a finished painting, and to determine the steps that I would have to take to reproduce it within an hour.
Painting photorealistically takes two things - it takes imagination and planning to determine what the final image should look like, and it requires the technical facility with both brush and palette and the discipline to paint in an ordered fashion. First, I have to train the technical facility, which is made easier by not having to determine the final image's appearance. I have a definite goal to work towards. Then I am free to worry about how to get various colour transitions to work properly, to be able to select colours by eye, to figure out how to place everything in the right place, to train myself to paint the largest shapes, and then to cut into them.
Paul Fierlinger wrote:And how is it such a compliment to be told "aw, you just traced that", when you didn't just trace it, you just copied it?
Well, it'd be worse if I got insulted, wouldn't it? And this isn't just some sort of mindless copying, because copies by amateurs suffer a lot of distortion of form, the colours aren't quite right, and it's doubtful that they can get it done in an hour. In addition, you have a definite yard-stick to measure against. The more powerful your skills of observation and the more control you have over your skills, the closer you can make the image look like the photograph. It's not something that was readily apparent to me until I actually tried it, and it's taken many, many attempts to get this far. So to be told that it looks just like the original photo under a Photoshop filter is telling me that I got pretty darn close. Now I just have to work on my understanding of facial structures, and develop a better way to break down the shapes of the face. I feel like I'm 98% there, but now we're in the realm of diminishing returns, so I think my next exercise from photo reference will be caricature. To get that likeness and exaggerate it.