I seem to have lost the entire first part of what I had just written, all from clicking on one wrong thing, or pushing a wrong button -- I don't know.
Summarizing: I didn't finish the 29 Faces Challenge, as a severe and lingering winter has really sapped my creative energies. I do have some faces I did in the computer's Paint program, to show. Those are intended to be relatively fast (about 10-15 minutes) and sometimes I don't like them, so I don't keep them. There have been a few more sketches from The Hobbit movies, and now that the last movie has been released to dvd/br, I can select scenes from that too.
I was not satisfied with two sketches of the dwarf, Kili, and will have to do a third. I drew him smiling, and though the actor has a gorgeous smile, the character doesn't smile much. A non-smiling drawing of him might carry more of a likeness. His brother Fili, however, was acceptable the first go.
I started one of Bolg, the Orc, but he was so disgusting to look at closely, that I have to do that one in short stages. I haven't had this much trouble since drawing the Mouth of Sauron! Both are utterly gross to view with the analytical intensity needed to draw them.
Ready for the pictures?
ORI, the Dwarf, portrayed by Adam Brown
GLOIN, the Dwarf, portrayed by Peter Hambleton, who also did the voice-over for one of the trolls in the first movie. Yes, this is the Gloin that is the father of LOTR's Gimli!
TAURIEL, the Elf, played by Evangeline Lilly
Her character was entirely fabricated for the movies; she was not in any of the books by Tolkein, much less The Hobbit.
Still, Lilly did an acceptable job with the part, I think. There was a huge, romantic story line in the movies that included her, but was never touched by Tolkein.
DORI, the Dwarf, portrayed by Mark Hadlow. He is offering Gandalf the Wizard a cup of chamomile tea at the "Unexpected Party."
William Kircher as BIFUR, the Dwarf. Yes, that's an axe embedded in his noggin. He goes through the whole series like that! Kircher also did one of the troll voice-overs. I think he likely had more lines in that scene than he did in the whole rest of the series of three movies, where he was restricted to fairly unintelligible grunts --due to the presence of the axe in his head, no doubt!
Both FILI and KILI -- Dwarves, and heirs to the throne of Erebor, after their uncle Thorin.
I'd have shown only the Fili sketch, but they're on the same page, and I needed to count Kili as a face of the 29. The smile here is smaller than the first sketch I did, but still not a good likeness. He needs to look more intense! Dean O'Gorman plays Fili (on the left) and Aidan Turner plays Kili (right).
And, on an unrelated note, one of the race of Men (though some claim there is Vulcan in his heritage!).
When Leonard Nimoy passed away recently, many of us in the 29 Faces Challenge group expressed our sorrow by drawing or painting him. Many portrayed him as Spock, his iconic role from Star Trek. I preferred to show him as his still vital, though aging self. As a photographer of considerable talent, he portrayed women whose physical beauty was contrary to the standards of beauty of our time and culture, yet were sensitively shown as having a great intrinsic beauty of their own. I'd like to think he would have approved of my showing him at this stage of his life.
A quote he left us all with is included on the page:
" A life is like a garden. Perfect moments can be had, but not preserved, except in memory. LLAP." (Live Long And Prosper)
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