Prints available: https://FineArtAmerica.com/profiles/JohnEric-Goines.html


5 ft x 4ft painting in my studio – in progress…







The contract on my day gig ended 11.30, so I’ve been trying to take some time out to work on art until the new gig starts – my local model was available so we had a mini session


I went back into my drawing pad, to take a look at some unfinished work, to see if I could finish some up, and maybe bring it into Photoshop and fiddle with it a bit.
This is what I came up with in about 15 minutes worth of drawing, and another 15 minutes in Photoshop. Before and after pictures follow.




In the past couple weeks, I’ve drawn two models, male, and female.


As a design professional and freelancer, part of the struggle in today’s world is in turning away business.
A creative professional will appreciate it when you come to them prepared, with a clear idea of what you need, money to pay for the execution of it, and, of course, ample time to produce what you need. Design isn’t an afterthought. It isn’t “making something pretty.” Design in many cases is as important as function. Bad design wastes people’s time. Bad design makes things hard to read. Bad design means your product stays on the shelf, where the better designed one goes home with the customer. Participate in the process, be prepared, and then trust your designer to produce and you’ll come away with communication, ads, graphics, a logo that will clearly represent you and what you wish to communicate.
Delightful, small drawing location a block and a half from the house.








Cocktail Time: Stregga D’Or
.25 oz Stregga
1.0 oz St. Germain
2.0 oz Hendricks Gin
1.0 oz Meyer Lemon Syrup plus 2 very thin Meyer lemon wheels (seeded)
Seltzer
Ice a gimlet
Shake syrup, and booze over ice
Dump the gimlet and shake out excess water, then strain in your drink
Garnish with lemon wheels and a gentle spritz of seltzer
The first time I draw a model, I create a collage, filling the space on the page with the various poses.
Tonight’s work.:

I do enjoy the opportunities to draw where the model is there just for me, to pose as I choose. He knows he has my undivided attention and where my eyes land on his body as he holds his poses, knowing when I draw his arms, his chest, and the smirk as I concentrate on the lines and curves of his penis and balls, where occasionally, sometimes to the model’s chagrin, his penis decides to show off, and to my delight, and sometimes his embarrassment, it continues to show off, despite his best efforts.
The erotic tension sometimes finds it’s way through brain, arm and pencil, onto the page.
The moment subsides, but the images remain.



