Tuesday, March 25, 2014

Dorothy Irene Heights 102nd Birthday born 1912

Dorothy Irene Height
Appeared On : March 24, 2014
Location : United States


Dorothy Irene Height was a monumental figure and unsung heroine in the movement for Civil Rights and Women's Rights.  As is often the case, the doodle team faced a familiar challenge: Knowing beyond a doubt that we should create a doodle to honor this person's incredible legacy, while lingering over the question of "what and how".
In the end, a gracefully rendered portrait seemed the most appropriate route. "Portrait" doodles are similar to illustrations you find on currency or stamps. There's definitely an air of dignity and reverence about them and while a bit atypical to the the quirkier things we celebrate, such as the recent animated doodles for For Day of Spring and Fall, there is still room to make them stand out creatively. You can see here that I haven't gotten that far yet. It's a scanned in drawing with some digital touch-ups. Though, a long time is spent in these early stages to take a simple photo reference and alter the angle, tilt, gesture, lighting, etc, juuuust enough to give her a look  that is at once aspirational, poised, and determined. 
I also looked to the trends of magazine illustrations in the 60s happening around the same time of the Civil Rights movement. One thing I really like about this era in illustration is the ability to take photo referenced images, then mash them together in graphically interesting ways, utilizing line, value, lost and found edges, pattern, etc.
My three heroes from that era – from top left, clockwise: Bernie Fuchs, Mark English, Bob Peak. I actually learned some of the drybrush look that Mark English invented from my mentor (and close friend of English), Bill Maughan. Mark even visited my class once. He nodded at a head drawing I was working on... good or bad, I dunno.I wanted to utilize this technique to call out several things regarding Dorothy Height:  
  1. To depict not just her, but her cause. In this case, represented by the marching crowd of women alongside her.
  2. The marching crowd becomes an abstract series of dots, making their way into the form of her portrait – she was the voice of many.
  3. She often wore beautiful, large, ornate, purple hats. She wore these throughout her life, but was most often photographed in them at a later age. The purple dominates the color scheme of the doodle. The hat usually seen on an older Dorothy Height being seen here on a younger Dorothy Height acknowledges her as a public figure in both, young and later years. 
top: Seen with President Kennedy as he signs the Equal Pay Act. below: President Obama signs a bill in her honor
Happy 102nd, Dr. Dorothy Irene Height!
posted by Mike Dutton, Doodler

0 comments:

Post a Comment