Saturday, April 4, 2009

Paisley Princess Warm-up Sketches


The below sketches are not a final drawings ...these are warm -up sketches...the warm-up sketch helps me get the curves of the face in my mind...I also wanted to see a few traditional paisley and henna designs next to the portrait for staging purposes.

Here are a few renditions -






Friday, March 27, 2009

Bajidoo Bangle Design with Natural Henna

Using Natural Henna on Wood enabled this Bangle design.

Friday, January 23, 2009

Art & Folktales "TUSK"

If to tie a string around your finger is to secure a list of "to do's" to the fate of being done...then to wear an elephant on your wrist is to declare a memory never be unspun. Tusk, is a Bangle design inspired by folktales and wishful thinking, and heart warming memories.

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

The Bird of Paradise, a Henna Tattoo by Bajidoo

I decided to create a bird of Paradise tattoo on my right palm, using my left hand...It was a bit of a physical challenge but here are the results. What do you think? Click the poll to the right, to let me know.




Regards,
B. Abdoyan

Thursday, January 1, 2009

"How-To" Make Perfect Henna Paste & Design Lesson #1 Impressive Floral Made Easy

If you have seen my artwork, particularly under the "Bajidoo" title, then you are already familiar with my love of henna and all things henna based.

Much of my artwork is influenced by or incorporates some element the art of Henna tattoos.

I decided to upload a few video's on how to make a great henna paste. When I first started to work with henna I scoured the net looking to precise examples. You know step by step. No one site or one video had all the details that I have learned over time in a single spot. So here is my attempt to put the Henna Paste part in one spot. We shall see where this goes from here.... Happy 2009 and enjoy the first installment of "how-to" make henna paste.

Step 1




Step 2



Last Step



Finally, the tattoo work done using the paste created in this video set. At the end of the video, you will see the completed tattoo with the paste on and only 5 to 6 hours after the paste is off. The tattoo will continue to darken for the next several days.



Henna Design Lesson #1 - Impressive Floral Made Easy



Regards,
Brenda

Saturday, June 21, 2008

Falling leaves not unlike the myriad of ideas that flood my mind.

Going back quite a few years to my stint in Tech school, I recall cramming for a BIG exam. It was the final in my COBOL II course. A few of my classmates and I decided to pool our new found tech knowledge and study together, quizzing each other and the like. Pool being the operative word, what better way than to study while floating around in a big blue pool with a margarita in our hand? So being the creative bunch that we were that is exactly what we did. First we decided to tackle the logic gates, “if this, then do that,” you can get the picture.

I was dead in the middle of responding to a classmate regarding a “Nested If” statement when suddenly everything went quiet, including me. Well actually being truthful about the silence, and unknown to me at the moment, the silence was actually initiated by me. I was mesmerized by a leaf caught just above me on a breeze. It was twisting and spinning downward and suddenly it fell onto a new cross directional air flow and immediately off to the left it went.

My concentration on the leaf and the path it was following was abruptly assaulted . . .by a couple words blurted out by my girlfriend; she was sitting poolside with just her feet dangling in the water. “Just like you artist types, the simplest otherwise insignificant detail and off you go – the rest of us just become invisible.”

I did not realize how easily or how often that happened to me. Nor had I realized that it didn’t happen a million times a second to everyone else.

But it was true, it is true now. About a million times a second my mind is floating from one thought to another cross wind. I could be drawing and suddenly I am thinking about false eyelashes! You know how great false eyelashes look on some women? I can’t figure out how they manage to apply those things with finesse.

My biggest, challenge is staying on point, mastering or being 100% the master of my own creativity. It seems to master me instead. Everyday I am muscled from one creative thought to another --even when I don’t want to be.

Thinking of being mastered by my own creativity, I read a BLOG post someplace the other day, it was about being a “self-taught” artist. I never really think of myself as “taught” at all. I most certainly did not go to school and study art history, nor did I attend any lectures on method. I have traveled to historically important works of art, where I was inspired and moved by what I saw.

I saw the “Mona Lisa,” I was moved by the sheer size of it….. in our romantic mind it is bigger than life. In reality it looked like a postage stamp to me.

I have wondered about the cave paintings discovered at Lascaux, in southern France. By my estimation they are “art”, but who taught the artist…or did the art simply occur spontaneously by the hand of the artist like a yelp when you step accidentally on a rather sharp stone?

I am more of the later, in my own view of me as an artist. I stepped on a lot of sharp stones and out came some art where others might have yelped instead.

Nonetheless, I subscribe to the ideal that whatever you see that moves you is art. The art born of nature, or found in a beautiful smile -- maybe a gorgeous cup of cafĂ© noire resting on a tiny red table outside of a Parisian bistro (that’s a beautiful thing!). It is all art to me regardless of how it came into being.

I am not self taught, but I am an artist who one day in the 60’s just came into being.