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Abstract Art

Through Tangerine Eyes

TangerineEyes2Through Tangerine Eyes
Alex Hinders, 2014.
Colored pencils and pen.

I almost didn’t color this one, but in the end I did, mainly because I was bored and this was the first drawing I found. The color scheme consists of warm colors contained within a frame of cold colors. While I can’t exactly say why — sometimes creativity evades logic like that — I felt this drawing shouldn’t have green. I would have been okay with having red in the drawing except for the fact that would be the only color without a complimentary one, and again, I really didn’t want to bring green into this. In retrospect I probably could have gotten away with putting red in the iris of the eye but I don’t really have any regrets on how this turned out.
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You might think that you see red in the drawing, but I assure you that’s just a dark orange that’s edging dangerously close to the red zone. My scanner has a hard time picking up subtle variations in orange. Well, I suppose my eyes have a hard time picking up on those, too, which is why I rarely use orange as a dominant color.

As for the meaning of the drawing I get the sense that it’s about looking within and seeing the good parts of yourself that you might have forgotten you have, or have been neglecting lately. Tangerine Eyes are much more practical than Rose-Tinted Glasses.

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