Artist Collaborates With 4-Year-Old To Create Surrealist Portraits
When illustrator Mica Angela Hendricks pulled out a new
sketchbook she had specially ordered, she was apprehensive. The reason
of her worry was her 4-year-old daughter who was playing nearby. Mrs.
Hendricks knew exactly what’s going to happen – her daughter would crave
for her new sketchbook and beg to use it. Sure enough, no sooner had
she drawn a lady’s head, her daughter caught a glimpse of the sketchbook
and implored her mother to let her finish the artwork. Mrs. Hendricks
relented, and thus began a strange new collaboration between a
professional artist and a kid.
“I LOVED what she drew. I had drawn a woman’s face, and she had turned her into a dinosaur-woman,” the artist said in her blog. “It was beautiful, it was carefree, and for as much as I don’t like to share, I LOVED what she had created.”
“Flipping through my sketchbook, I found another doodle of a face I had not yet finished. She drew a body on it, too, and I was enthralled. It was such a beautiful combination of my style and hers. And she LOVED being a part of it. She never hesitated in her intent. She wasn’t tentative. She was insistent and confident that she would of course improve any illustration I might have done. …And the thing is, she DID.”
Every night Mrs. Hendricks would draw some faces for her daughter to add a body in the morning. Later she would add color and highlights, texture and painting, to make a complete piece. Sometimes the kid would fill in the solid areas with colored markers, but her mother would always finish with acrylics later on her own.
A selection of mother-daughter artwork is available for purchase as prints on Society6.
If you like these, you’ll also like Monster Engine: Children’s drawing painted realistically.
Via Amusing Planet
“I LOVED what she drew. I had drawn a woman’s face, and she had turned her into a dinosaur-woman,” the artist said in her blog. “It was beautiful, it was carefree, and for as much as I don’t like to share, I LOVED what she had created.”
“Flipping through my sketchbook, I found another doodle of a face I had not yet finished. She drew a body on it, too, and I was enthralled. It was such a beautiful combination of my style and hers. And she LOVED being a part of it. She never hesitated in her intent. She wasn’t tentative. She was insistent and confident that she would of course improve any illustration I might have done. …And the thing is, she DID.”
Every night Mrs. Hendricks would draw some faces for her daughter to add a body in the morning. Later she would add color and highlights, texture and painting, to make a complete piece. Sometimes the kid would fill in the solid areas with colored markers, but her mother would always finish with acrylics later on her own.
A selection of mother-daughter artwork is available for purchase as prints on Society6.
If you like these, you’ll also like Monster Engine: Children’s drawing painted realistically.
Via Amusing Planet