The Savannah House
by PeterAndCompany
Traditional Artist
18 years ago
Well hey, it's my first finished assignment as a new graduate student at SCAD!
This was done for my Backgrounds, Props and Structures class. To those who remember, I actually attempted to take this class a few years ago as an undergrad, but had to drop it around midterms when I ended up in the hospital. Now that I'm coming back as a graduate student, SCAD is requiring that I complete it before I can start on my graduate studio classes. It makes me wonder if they even bothered to look at my portfolio if they think I need a class in backgrounds, but I digress.
This is one of the many gorgeous houses around Savannah. I went for a tilted angle for a more dynamic composition, and also so I could have an excuse to do three-point perspective (which is a guilty pleasure of mine).
Done entirely with a blue Col-Erase pencil. Total work time: roughly 7 hours.
Cross-posted on my sketch blog: JonPonikvar.com
This was done for my Backgrounds, Props and Structures class. To those who remember, I actually attempted to take this class a few years ago as an undergrad, but had to drop it around midterms when I ended up in the hospital. Now that I'm coming back as a graduate student, SCAD is requiring that I complete it before I can start on my graduate studio classes. It makes me wonder if they even bothered to look at my portfolio if they think I need a class in backgrounds, but I digress.
This is one of the many gorgeous houses around Savannah. I went for a tilted angle for a more dynamic composition, and also so I could have an excuse to do three-point perspective (which is a guilty pleasure of mine).
Done entirely with a blue Col-Erase pencil. Total work time: roughly 7 hours.
Cross-posted on my sketch blog: JonPonikvar.com
358
Views
11
Comments
14
Favorites
General
Rating
Category
Sub-Category
Species
Resolution
File Size
Artwork (Traditional)
Scenery
Unspecified / Any
950 x 648
228 kB
FA+

My mom would adore this drawing as she lives in Savannah now.
lol, With the perspective as it is, the blade is actually going through the wall!