The Liz Steel Effect

How did people learn to draw/sketch/paint before the internet?  The availability of so much informatoin and access to so many great artists and their art has certainly changed things.  I think, for those willing to take advantage of these riches, it’s significantly eased the learning curve.  I’ve certainly benefited.

But the effects of internet sketcher interactions goes far beyond any discussions of art.  Through the sketching groups we get to visit other countries, wander their city streets, learn things about their cultures and perspectives.  Maybe more important, we learn that we’re all more alike than we are different.  It’s truly amazing.

I to tell you about a particular impact that sketches have had on my life that have nothing to do with sketching.  I call it the Liz Steel Effect.

Liz Steel is an Australian architect who happens to be a sketcher extraordinaire and a tea drinker.  I first came to admire Liz because of her great building sketches but her other favorite subject is the British style tea cup.

Until Liz, I never owned one of these beauties.  Until recently I had no idea what ‘bone china’ was.  Nor did I care.  But there were her sketches, a steady stream of wonderful tea cup sketches.

When I finally saw a tea cup and held it in my hands, I just had to buy it.  Then I bought another, and another.  At this point, my growing collection only numbers six, but I’m enjoying them thoroughly.  I’m convinced the tea tastes better.

Stillman & Birn Alpha (9x6), Pilot Falcon, Platinum Carbon Black

Stillman & Birn Alpha (9×6), Pilot Falcon, Platinum Carbon Black

And so, when Liz’s part of Sketchbook Skool came up, I had a tea cup to draw when she showed us how.  I could even choose from among four (I’ve since bought two more) which I would draw.  In creating this sketch I learned something else, that’s probably obvious to everyone else.  It’s a whole lot easier to draw something like this when your sketchbook is laying flat on a table than it is with the sketchbook balanced on your knees like more normal method of sketching.  I might have to do it more often (grin).

2014-08-08LizSteelEffect_cup

Sketching Quebec’s Aquarium

I was supposed to meet sketching buddy Fernande at the Nouvelle-France festival but she wrote to say that it was supposed to rain and that maybe it would be better to go to the aquarium.  I said ok, that I’d meet her there but that I bet it wouldn’t rain.

It rained.  I was wrong – again.  At least I’m consistent.  When I arrived it was raining and Fernande had not yet arrived.  I went to the main aquarium building sat in the corner of the foyer and sketched an outdoor scene through the window.  One of the really great things about our aquarium is that there is a lot to sketch outdoors when weather permits and an equal amount of stuff to sketch indoors if it rains, even if you don’t think it will.

Stillman & Birn Beta (6x8), Pilot Falcon, Platinum Carbon Black

Stillman & Birn Beta (6×8), Pilot Falcon, Platinum Carbon Black

Once Fernande arrived we started wandering indoors, looking for sketching opportunities.  Unfortunately, we chose the same day to visit as a convoy of school buses full of kids.  The place was packed, prohibiting us from being able to sketch without being trampled.  After a while we decided that eating lunch was the solution.  And so we did.

Moleskine watercolor notebook (3x5), Pilot Falcon, Platinum Carbon Black

Moleskine watercolor notebook (3×5), Pilot Falcon, Platinum Carbon Black

In this case the virtue of patience was rewarded.  The school buses packed up, the crowds thinned out, and we found something to sketch.

By this time, though, I was getting tired so I chose a small subject – a seahorse.

We’re heading back Monday for another session.

 

There’s Always Time To Sketch

Today was the date for an annual gathering of portrait people at a Trait Carré gallery.  This is a nice area on the north side of Charlebourg and north of where I live.  I hopped on a bus to head there, knowing that it was likely that it would rain.  And sure enough, no more than a minute after I got off the bus, the rain started to fall, and fall, and fall.

busstopI put on my rain gear and like the silly sketcher that I am, I was still hopeful that I’d meet a bunch of other likewise crazy people and that we’d sketch together.  Did I mention that the event was to be outside?  I’m slow on the uptake but it didn’t take long for me to figure out that we weren’t going to be sketching outdoors on this day.  I think the street turning into a river gave it away.  So, I wandered back to the bus stop, thinking that I’d just grab the next bus and head home.

I wouldn’t even be writing this except for the comment I heard yesterday…and the day before that…and the day before that…and…   So many people “want” to sketch but instead they say, “I’d love to sketch but I’m so busy I just don’t have time.” or some iteration of that sentiment.  “Geez,” says I.

The truth is, I don’t know what to say when people say this.  I’ve been passionate about a lot of things in my life and none of them have been as easy to accommodate in terms of time than is sketching.  There’s ALWAYS time to sketch.  Maybe if you’re a Systine Chapel ceiling painter you’d have to budget your time but not to sketch.

Dollarstore sketchbook, Pilot Falcon, Platinum Carbon Black

Dollarstore sketchbook, Pilot Falcon, Platinum Carbon Black

What’s that got to do with me standing at a bus stop in the rain?  Well, I knew I was going to be there for at least ten minutes so I got out my cheap 3×5 sketchbook, a pen and started looking around for something to draw.  I admit that the subject matter was somewhat limited but here are two simple sketches I did.  I quickly added a bit of color when I got home but the cheap paper is not water-friendly.  The two sketches were fun to do.  They were good practice for when I have more time.  They made my wait time pass quickly and made me regretful when the bus arrived.  No time for sketching?  That’s a good one.

Dollarstore 3x5 sketchbook, Pilot Falcon, Platinum Carbon Black

Dollarstore 3×5 sketchbook, Pilot Falcon, Platinum Carbon Black

 

Quick-Sketching In Malbaie

It was a nice day and my family decided to drive  to Baie St. Paul and Malbaie for the day.  It’s very pretty country and besides, they have good ice cream and there are lots of art galleries in Baie St. Paul.

Moleskine watercolor (3x5), Namiki Falcon, Platinum Carbon Black

Moleskine watercolor (3×5), Namiki Falcon, Platinum Carbon Black

It’s convenient, if you’re going to both towns, to drive right past Baie St. Paul and on to Malbaie as there’s a convenient ‘loop’ road that brings us back to Baie St. Paul.  It also happens to go by a nice, long, sandy, sunny, and popular beach called Plage Irené.  

Family jaunts aren’t conducive to me doing a lot of sketching as watching me sketch is about as exciting as staring down a rock.  I did manage a couple very quick sketches, one of the beach and another of what appeared to be a gatehouse into Domaine Forget.  I don’t know what this place was used for originally but these days it hosts dinner theatre.  I thought the gatehouse was cool, which is the singular criterion for a sketching subject…right after having a place to sit in the shade to sketch.

Moleskine watercolor (3x5), Namiki Falcon, Platinum Carbon Black

Moleskine watercolor (3×5), Namiki Falcon, Platinum Carbon Black

A Different Approach To Sketching – For Me

I was a fountain pen driver long before became a sketcher and moving a fountain pen over good paper is still the biggest part of why I enjoy sketching.  I know that for many, it’s watercolor that floats their boat but not me.  When I sketch I draw what I see and when the pen goes back in the pack, my drawing is “complete.”  I only add color as an afterthought.

I don’t advocate this approach.  I think my sketches would improve considerably if I’d “mix” my media mentally as well as physically.  Thinking of the watercolor while doing the drawing would allow me to leave lost edges, minimize the amount of hatching I use, and reduce the sketch’s reliance upon line, while placing more emphasis on form.

Sounds great, doesn’t it?  My problem is implementation as, err…did I mention how much I like pen work?  In addition, with a brush in my hand  I am lost.  Sketchbook Skool is helping me see through these problems, at least to the extent that six great teachers can shove me in the right direction but it may be an impossible task.

And so with this sketch I did something different.  In Sketchbook Skool, Danny Gregory had us draw something quickly using a brush, followed by a slower, more precise approach with a pen.   Brenda Swenson, a master of the brush and advocate of pen/watercolor is also someone who uses borders and lost edges very well. She centers her lessons around continuous contour drawing and using negative space when drawing.

Stillman & Birn Delta (6x8), Namiki Falcon, Platinum Carbon Black

Stillman & Birn Delta (6×8), Namiki Falcon, Platinum Carbon Black

When I started this sketch I was looking at a mass of forest understory and I wanted to capture only a tiny bit of one plant.  I felt the need to visually define what part of it I was going to draw so I drew a couple “corners” to indicate a frame around what would be the sketch, noting where those corners were in my forest floor.  Then, using a light gray watercolor wash, I started drawing the center veins of each leaf, quickly organizing which leaves would be part of the sketch.  These two things worked well together as the ‘corners’ quickly became a frame and thus provided some nice negative spaces to anchor where the outlines of the leaves would go.  The next step was some color.  I quickly painted in the leaves with a very dilute yellowish green mix (Cad Yellow & Pthalo Blue).  I was on a roll, and at the same time figured I’d be rolling right off a cliff ‘real soon’ as without my pen I was definitely working without a net.

When the wash was dry, I got out my pen and drew some lines, returning to paint to add more color to the leaves.  As a first time attempt at this way of doing things, I was pleased with the result.  Thanks to both Danny and Brenda for scaring me a little, and for providing some great ideas and challenges.   If you aren’t in Sketchbook Skool, you should be.  It’s fun.