On-Location

Fifth Urban Sketch Meetup

Everyone had already claimed their spots and were underway on their drawings by the time I arrived to today’s Urban Sketch outing. (I started my day downtown with my first Creative Mornings meet-up, which caused me to arrive over a half-hour late to Urban Sketch, but it was so worth it. You can view the recording of the event here. Look for ‘Tay & Val.’ It should be posted soon!)

We gathered at the lovely Woodland Park Rose Garden. The day was perfect. The early morning rain had stopped but clouds still hung dramatically in the air. The sunlight appeared only in a few brief intermittent moments, so everything was mostly lit in a soft, ambient gray light. The grass was trim, bright green, and damp. The roses were covered in glistening raindrops. It was idyllic really.

It didn’t take me long to find a spot. As soon as I arrived, I turned down one of the grassy lanes between beds of roses and was captivated by a gorgeous giant tree as soon as I saw it. I planted myself next to an elaborate spray of bright pink roses and quickly set to work.

In keeping with my need to do something totally different from my recent watercolor work, and as a continuation of my enjoyment of hatching random textured strokes yesterday evening, I decided to take a stylized approach to the lovely tree. One of the primary goals I have for myself is to learn to work more loosely, and to not be so tense and perfectionistic in my process. One of the things I really enjoy is hatching. So I decided to focus today on drawing in a loose manner while using more scribbling kinds of strokes.

I began by contouring the tree, first its trunk and then its outer canopy. Then I came back in and began the inner contours of its canopy. This I did lightly in pencil. I loved putting in these general contours. As I drew them in I thought of topographical maps. It very much felt to me as if I was mapping the tree. As I put in focused attention on the leafy branches of the tree, I watched a map of its topography unfolded on my page. It was a lovely feeling.

Next it was time to add color. Initially, I selected all the colors I thought I could possibly need for realistic color tones (some dark blues in the tree, some lavender in the roses) all those kinds of colors that are there that we usually don’t see. But as I started drawing in the canopy, I realized that kind of color-mixing wasn’t the primary focus of my piece, and I instead narrowed my selection down to just a few and began experimenting with strokes.

I enjoyed playing with the leafy textures. Different parts of the tree were revealing themselves in different ways. I used the contoured sections of canopy as an opportunity to play with a variety of texture, including some highly stylized spiraled lines there at the top. This gave me the idea to do the trunk and limbs in that same fashion.

As I drew in the maze of the trunk and larger limbs, I thought initially of ants and other insects and how they bore the most captivating patterns into wood. This led me to a contemplation of the beauty of woodgrain itself and how it moves and flows around knotholes and the like as it stretches its pattern through the wood.

As I worked, I realized that I really rather liked the unfinished portion of the tree. I liked having some white space up there as a counterpoint to the dense cluster of roses I knew I’d be drawing below. Of course, ideally, I’d especially love it if the white portion of the tree was in the left upper quadrant so that it created diagonally opposing visual interest in opposite corners of the page between it and the roses, but alas it was too late for that, so this is where I settled instead.

For the roses, I worked to carefully see the roses, each petal and how they formed into a flower, but I also worked to stay loose on the page: seeing carefully, but drawing gesturally. I wanted to get the feel of fully formed flowers and leaves but only intermittently and for it to mostly be made up of splashes of color and form. I think it turned out alright.

Lastly I came in and added all the supplemental details. The lawn, the mulch under the roses, the shrubs behind the tree, the bench sitting under its shade, and the blue-gray sky. In truth, the sky had dramatically gorgeous clouds mimicking the shape of my contoured tree canopy. They would have looked dynamite in here! But since I wanted the tree to be such a focal point I made it quite large to fill the page. So there wasn’t enough space around it to properly show the clouds. I knew that trying to include any of those cloud contours would only confuse things. So I oped for a flat wash instead. I used different strokes for the mulch, lawn, and shrubs. Then I used my blending stick to soften all of the secondary textures, which worked especially well on the shrubs. I loved how they receded after I blended them.

The final touch was to add some gray over the maze of the trunk, which both improved the coloring and also made the trunk look more textural. The maze acts as a foundation, but isn’t distracting with the gray laid over it; I really like how that turned out. I left the higher limbs lighter as an echo of the white portion directly across from it. I’m not sure if I like that result so much, but that was my reasoning behind it nonetheless. Finally, I highlighted sections of the outer canopy contours with darker lines, to great effect that I really love!

All along as I worked and made each of these creative decisions, I wondered what others would think. I wondered if people would see the big patch of white and think it was unfinished. Or if they’d think the overall drawing looked childish. But I realized rather quickly that I just didn’t care and that art can really and truly be anything you want it to be. Everything I did was with purpose and intent. I considered my strokes as I went, I varied them and tried different things. I savored the meditative process of contemplating canopy topographies, ants, woodgrains, and petals. I enjoyed the challenge of working fast and loose while still aiming to achieve some measure of realism underlying all of the high stylization.

Are there things I’d change? Sure! (I wish I’d added some varied tones into my grass instead of leaving it as a flat wash of one tone, for example). However, at my first meet-up (only 1 month ago) I was so overwhelmed by my subject and so insecure about sharing my drawing with others that I left that meet-up in tears. I felt so embarrassed and inadequate. Just one month later, I confidently chose a subject, made some stylistic choices to challenge myself and practice some varied techniques, and I was really proud of what I drew even if others might not ‘get it.’ But you know what? I got several kind compliments about the many strokes it took, the ambition of taking on the large tree in such detail, and the layout in general. That felt really good. So I guess my fear that my approach would be inconceivable to others was unfounded after all. :)

Fourth Urban Sketch Meetup

It was a sunny and cheerful Friday morning. The ground was damp from a light rain the night before and the Urban Sketch Seattle group met at the library in the Queen Anne neighborhood. After our initial round-up, I headed straight over to the pink Methodist church because I'm so enamored with it's pink-ness!

I sat myself up on a retaining wall diagonally across the street from the church and began doing my pencil plan. In my Ink & Watercolor class, we were encouraged to keep our pencil plan to 60-seconds so as to stay loose and not get bogged down in perfectionistic details. For my first two USK visits, I stuck to that plan and strove to loosely follow the model of that class (60-second-pencil-plan, inking in contours, putting tone in using ink-wash, and glazing in the color with watercolors). I'd never drawn on location before and both times (and also due to my lack of experience) I inadvertently selected challenging subjects (trying to fit in too much subject matter the first meetup and not enough in the second). I was disappointed with both of those drawings.

By the third meetup I started to hit my stride. I selected a lovely old building that I was quite smitten with upon first glance. I've long loved old buildings and I happily sat myself down to spend time with this one. For the first time I felt I'd found the right balance in my subject of 'enough but not too much.' I knew I wanted it to turn out well and liked that it was mostly a box-shape. I began by using what I'd been learning in my Observational Drawing class. I ran into some trouble with perspective, and worked and reworked it, but when I couldn't get it just right, I gave myself permission to move on because I knew I needed to get started on inking it.

I spent a full hour on my pencil plan. This didn't worry me, as I felt my plan was so solid I should be able to ink it in quickly enough to finish the drawing in the remaining 1.5 hours. I worked diligently and squinted to see all of the details in the brickwork which lended to it's charm. I had to quickly problem-solve how to give the appearance of bricks (both vertical and horizontal) when I was starting to run out of time. I felt tempted to avoid the messy garage before deciding that it lended too much visual interest and that if I left it stylized but based on some things I could see in it, that it would be easy enough to render in time.

I finished just in time and it wasn't until I came out of my delicious drawing frenzy that I realized I'd only drawn the building itself without any context whatsoever! It was floating in midair! I'd honestly been so absorbed in the beauty of the building and it's detailing that I hadn't even considered any of its surroundings at all! After the throwdown, where we all shared our drawings, I went back to my perch and kept working. I wanted the building to have something proper to sit on. I penciled out some of the contextual surroundings and then took a break for lunch. I came back and got everything inked in and left with an unfinished (nothing on the sign above the garage, none of the towering trees behind) drawing that I felt quite satisfied with.

Week 3 was my first experience with merging the skills I'd been learning in my Observational Drawing class with my Ink & Watercolor class. It was the first time I gave myself permission to take the guidelines given to me by each of my instructors (one approaching from a detailed, highly-accurate, realistic perspective, and one coming from an approachable, loose, empoweringly forgiving, stylized perspective) and combine them into an approach that works for me.

Here's the thing. I don't have a lot of drawing experience really at all. My eyes are barely trained in seeing things in a way that allows me to interpret them on a 2-D page. I am very much a beginner. So if I want to have a drawing that I'm proud of it's going to take me a while to dial in and interpret what I'm seeing in a way that can be believably rendered. I need more than a 60-second pencil plan! However, I also don't have any interest in creating highly-realistic drawings. I want my approach to be stylized and an interpretation of what I'm seeing.

So, this is all of the learning and experience that I brought with me to this fourth meetup when I sat down in front of the little pink church. I spent a decent amount of time on my pencil plan, making sure I was seeing angles and proportion and scale reasonably well. But I also didn't let myself get hung up on it. I blended the approaches of my two instructors. This resulted in a drawing that I'm really proud of, but that also has some personality to it. The cross is a great example: I found the 3-D nature of it very challenging, but I sketched it out as best I could, working hard to see it as my Obsv. Drawing teacher taught me to assess things, but not overworking it to perfection and instead committing as best as I could and getting it inked in. The result is a cross that is believably 3-D and also one that has some wonky personality to it! I didn't know how to do the front steps, so I just thought about what I knew steps to look like from my O.D. class and inked it in like a champ. They look convincingly great!

The truth is that this church actually has a winding ramp with rails leading up to the front door, and an awning coming off of the alcove on the right side. They didn't make it in because I realized my initial layout hadn't left enough room for all that railing. I also wasn't confident about putting it in anyway, so I didn't mind that there wasn't room for it. The awning kind of flew under my radar long enough that I missed it at first and just left it that way. Delightfully, I liked the way my drawing was coming together so I didn't mind the way this interpretation worked out with those missing pieces. Though I do find it very interesting the things that we just don't see sometimes! (Case in point: there should also be another smaller tree in the grass median on the right-hand side. I was stunned to discover its existence after 2 hours of staring at this scene!)

After the throw down, I did return to put in some more window detailing in the bell-tower and on the left-hand side. That was the beginning of the left-hand side getting too overworked, which I then made worse by overworking it some more. That was a valuable lesson learned.

I stopped short of adding in the brickwork on the bell-tower or any of the dark roof tiles because I decided I'd like for this to be my first hybrid piece! I'm pleased enough with how it turned out that I am thinking of giving it as a Christmas gift to a couple who I know love this church. So I wanted to preserve it as it is, scan it in, then print out a few copies to test some different roof and brick textures on before deciding how I want to add in that detail. I will also digitally erase the mess on the left-hand side and sort out what detail should be left in and what should be removed so as to better understand how to interpret multiple layers (tree, shrub, window) in pen and ink so that it looks believable to the viewer and not like a mess. (I think I'll handle it like I did on the right hand side where that tree obscures the building in full, which looks very believable).

Once these decisions are made, I will make a fresh ink drawing based from this original piece and add color. It's an ambitious project, but I'm feeling optimistic. And I'm super excited about integrating some tech into my process and seeing what I learn from that adventure.

So this is the story of my Fourth USK meetup. But it's also the story of learning to integrate teaching methodologies into a process that works for me at my current level of ability. Blending these two approaches has increased my confidence and my sense of agency. I'm starting to make work I'm really proud of and I'm enjoying the process of creating it.

Last Observational Drawing Class

We had such a great last drawing class today! After learning about composition in the classroom, we took our easels and pads outside and sketched on location! I worked in charcoal focusing on setting up contours and value in my scene by adding and subtracting values. It was great practice in both form and tone. It’s fun to see a barely begun piece like this knowing what I’d do to keep going, adding and subtracting, until it’s all finished. This beginner’s understanding of the unfolding of the drawing process is all due to this class!

My biggest challenge is remembering to take a step back and not get overly focused on one small piece of the page, but to keep working the whole piece evenly throughout: to not get too focused on only tone or only line and overwork one small section, for example.

I also got some super helpful feedback from my instructor on how to better see the address book in my homework project. I knew it was wonky, but didn’t problem solve it well. So I’m very glad to have help seeing it more accurately! Additionally, I was able to ask for some feedback on how I could have better translated some problematic pieces in my ink-pen drawing that I did at the last urban sketch meet-up. (Can I just say that it is the most miraculous thing to me that my instructor can just LOOK at my drawings and know immediately how to fix it?? It’s honestly so fun and impressive to watch. He’s never studied any of the buildings or still life scenes that we bring into class, and yet he can walk right into the drawn image and demo a fix for you on the spot. It’s so cool).

I know I already said it, but I’m so glad I took this class. And now I’m even toying with the idea of taking figure drawing later next year, which I never would have ever expected from myself. Meanwhile, I’m just going to keep practicing what I learned these last five weeks and keep growing my skill set!

Third Urban Sketch Meetup

This is the drawing I did last Friday with Urban Sketchers Seattle. I completed only the building with all of its detail during the allotted drawing time. Then I stayed afterwards for an extra 1.5 hours to work on the bakery and street and parking lot and other such surrounding details. I penciled in a few thoughts on the towering canopy behind but haven’t done any background trees yet.

After sitting with it over the weekend, I’ve decided I’ll either go back and completely finish it on location, or it will stay as is. I really don’t want to finish it at my desk, as I extra especially enjoyed being on site with this lovely old building. After spending 4 hours with it and studying it, it feels like an old friend. One that I’d kind of like to go see again.

We will see if I make it back there in the coming few weeks to add trees and color. Until then, here’s my mostly finished black-and-white, which I also really love (and which is contributing to a little of my ambivalence about finishing it. I love it so much the way it is!)

Finishing it will necessitate a second meaningful experience (rather than sitting at my desk) or it will stay as is, to mark the first enjoyable experience already savored. I’m still waiting to see which direction it will go.

Second Urban Sketch Meetup

This morning Benjamin and I went to our second Urban Sketch meetup! It wasn’t scary this time since I knew more what to expect. We met at Pier 66 and I picked the ‘water dinos’ since they’ve always captured my imagination. I liked the way they stood out along the horizon.

Some might think my composition includes too much boring water. But if you know me, you know I love water. So I liked the way it was framed between the two angles of the road in the foreground and harbor island in the background. I’d like to be able to draw and paint expressive water, but I can’t yet. It doesn’t mean it can’t still have a prominent place in my scene as I learn and practice though.

The dinos, being so far away, were very flattened to my eye. But I wanted to challenge myself to make them more 3-d to really examine them and understand how the beams and supports fit together, while also practicing the techniques I’m learning in my drawing class. So it was a worthy challenge. I spent most of my time on the dinos: drawing and hatching them.

Then I added a wash to the sky, which in the end made it too dark so I wished I hadn’t. But it was very gray and hazy today. Then I mixed colors for the tree-line, shipping crates, water and sky. I like the tree and crate colors very much and I enjoyed painting the stylized washes of color to give the illusion of the colorful stacked crates. The sky was too dark and not yellow enough and the water too light and not blue or silvery enough. But, I was running low on time and can’t adjust colors very quickly yet as it still takes a lot of thought about how to manipulate them on the color wheel.

Yesterday I spent some time on YouTube watching watercolor color-theory videos which was very helpful in mixing my colors today! My sky and water colors kept turning out too green, so I thought about those videos and worked my way closer to the shade I wanted while also introducing colors to adjust the shade and tone. Very cool stuff! But I need a lot more practice.

I used colored pencil on the dinos and yellow docking things.

Afterwards, Benjamin and I discussed our processes for our drawings and he gave me some feedback. He gave me recommendations for blending the treeline into the boxes and for grounding the dinos so they don't feel like they’re floating. He explained that if I’d left the street lamp in it would have helped tie the foreground into the background and also that I should have outlined my yellow pieces on the roadway. He also mentioned that adding in the fencing along the bottom would have been interesting.

So this gives me some concrete stuff to work on! Mixing colors, blending elements better on the page, grounding my objects, and composition. I kind of liked the lamp post, I just didn’t like that it was in the very middle of the picture. Benjamin suggested I could have moved it a little to the left to balance it while still keeping the visual interest. He’s so right! The fencing would have been nice but I ran out of time. And I didn’t outline the yellow colored pencil bits bc frankly I just forgot them as I rushed to finish. In the end my dinos were too dark because I hatched them and then added colored pencil, so I tried adding highlights, which is silly because they're so far away and my highlight pen is so [relatively] thick that it just made them look like they'd been snowed upon. 

There's quite a lot I would change about this image, but what it comes down to is that I'm glad that I went and spent the time drawing and faced my fears of sharing my beginner's work with other more seasoned artists.

First Urban Sketch Meetup

This morning Benjamin and I went for our first Seattle Urban Sketchers meetup. We met at Sakya Tibetan Monastery and fanned out through the neighborhood to sketch, on-location, for 2.5 hours. Afterwards we met up for the ‘throw-down’ where we all set out our sketchbooks for each other to peruse.

Trees being a great interest of mine, I noticed these four large beauties filled with prayer flags and stationed myself on the side of the monastery.

I started out too tight and controlling, so I attempted to loosen my strokes and then got too carried away on my first tree. By then I felt committed to keeping the style throughout the other trees. I didn’t know how to change course midstream. So they are way overdone and I’m not really pleased with them at all. But I love how the flags turned out and how they wind through the trees. I’m also really proud of some of my shrubs and included a detail shot of them. My cars are quirky, but you know, I ended up liking their stylized look!

I didn’t quite get all the color in I wanted (although the tree trunks really were white, isn’t that lovely?) but I got close. The sides of my work were a disaster so I admit this is a cropped version. I didn’t have a good plan for how to frame my image and was taking the Urban Sketch Manifesto WAY too literally (about needing to show all of the surrounding context in your drawing), but I learned a lot from this experience.

The throw-down gave this introvert all kinds of insecurity. I don’t like unstructured new social situations anyway and it was even worse because I felt so vulnerable having people look at my art next to everyone else’s who all have more experience than me. I went into full-chameleon survival mode and waited for it to pass and left as soon as it was over. Then I went and sat in the car and had a vulnerability hangover and cried big fat tears over my feelings of vulnerability, inadequacy, and discouragement. Benjamin was encouraging and supportive but I still couldn’t feel better. So I put on Mac Davis’ ‘Lord It’s Hard to Be Humble When You’re Perfect In Every Way’ and turned it up and sang it loud. And that helped. Fake it ‘till you make it, right?

Most of all I’m just proud I went and that I’ve done my first on-site sketch.