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28 September 2021

Drawing Tuesday - black and white / freize sculptures

Some of us went to Regents Park to draw from the sculptures in place for the Frieze Art Fair - most of which were anything but black and white! For those at home, monochrome was suggested...

Why work in monochrome? The answer seems to be (a) for tone or (b) for stark contrast. Plus, the ease of not having to carry a lot of colours around!

It's not just about ink - other "black" media are available, starting with the humble pencil, charcoal, pastel, and of course paint. 

Or, if you decide to work on black paper, there are white gel pens, china markers, paint, tippex...

Collage is another option, a way to cover the paper quickly;  paper, glue, scissors.




(Some small pieces by French textile artist Rieko Koga (http://www.riekokoga.fr)


On the practical level, here's a video about using watersoluble graphite for tone -

This one shows the method of building up the tone with watersoluble graphite and brush-pen, washing lines in rather than drawing with the graphite -


And here we are in Regents Park....


From Carol - Palanquin, Anthony Caro



From Sue K - Meditation tree by lbrahim El-Sahili. A sunny day delivered strong shadows when almost through the study - quick adjustments made!



From Richard -  I went for the repurposed steel drainpipe assembly with caran d’ache, and was fascinated by the light moving on it.



From Jo - This doodle was done with a brush-pen, and then I flipped the contrast on the computer.




A distant view of a José Pedro Croft, Untitled, 2021.



From Judith -




From Janet K - Meditation Tree - Ibrahim El-Salahi



From  Ann - A black and white sketch of an interpretation of Velasquez' Las Meninas.... a few months ago. 



From Joyce - Notan (a Japanese word meaning dark-light) focuses on the interaction between positive and negative space. Here is my example and also a woodcut I did many years ago from sketches of fish in our pond.




From Najlaa - a doodle -



From Gillian - Two plant drawings that I think complement each other, using Chinese ink .



From me - A collection, including two colourful pieces not drawn by the others - Annie Morris's Stack 9 - with colour notes - and Vanessa da Silva's Muamba Grove #1, #3, #4



21 September 2021

Drawing Tuesday - holiday at home

 In Britain, we go on holiday - across the pond, they go on vacation. 


An American holiday is "a day set aside by custom or by law on 
which normal activities, especially business or work including school, 
are suspended or reduced. Generally, holidays are intended to allow 
individuals to celebrate or commemorate an event or tradition of cultural 
or religious significance." We have some of those too, as well as the rather 
arbitrary Bank Holidays.

"Home" - what's that? 
  1. 1.
    the place where one lives permanently, especially as a member of a family or household.
    "the floods forced many people to flee their homes"
    address
    location
    place
    pad
    digs
    residence
    domicile
    abode
    dwelling
    dwelling place
    habitation
  2. 2.
    an institution for people needing professional care or supervision.
    "an old people's home"
Also -
"A home is a place of refuge. A person's most personal belongings are kept in a home and it's where a person feels safe and accepted. A home tells a story and expresses a person or family's interests. To create a home requires an emotional connection and sense of belonging, not physical things."

Perhaps you can't do without "going on holiday" - to seek excitement, 
or peace; diversion or relaxation. Being somewhere else, away from 
home, can be so magical. 

Perhaps it feels like a holiday when the pace of "ordinary life" slows 
down, and nothing is required of you; time to relax. On the other hand, having 
kids home for  the holidays is (or can be) a particular sort of nightmare. 

Perhaps the prospect of travelling, and all the disruption and uncertainty 
that entails, is daunting ... how can being at home feel like a holiday?

Plenty of angles on this. Perhaps there's an object that sums it up 
for you...or a photo that carries the memory.




From Carol - We have spent the week in Norfolk, so much like home 
to us now but also a holiday.  of course if you had a home like this 
(Blickling Hall) then you probably would never want to holiday away from it.



















From Sue K - Spending much time in the garden - a bit of a holiday as 
l get so absorbed & at a remove from ‘duty’ tasks. Here’s a sketch of 
multiple watering cans for those clusters of dry days we’ve been having. 
Scattered with Pelargonium petals.



















From Joyce - like many of us I can’t resist picking up pebbles and 
shells with interesting patterns, when walking long the beach. 
Here are a few.



















From Jo - One version of Holiday at Home would probably look a bit like this - 
croissant and coffee by the kitchen window:
 
Or, I could think about holidays past, from the comfort of home.........
Having given up attempts to stand up on a sailing surfboard, I was 
very happy paddling around the bay on just the base. Spent ages on 
Sunday evening trying to draw arms, legs, elbows and paddle in a way
that would work. I had been in the Aegean, so wore T-shirt and hat 
against sunburn. Then, being at home, a programme on Botticelli's 
Birth of Venus came up on the TV and all I could focus on was how 
she managed to stand up on that thing!  Result:
 
Conclusion: all the life-drawing classes I've been to have made no impression!


From Ann - A pen and ink study of the view through the arch to the shed 
at the end of garden. Colour is coming....


















From Gill - This is how I’m spending my holiday at home today.
Adding collage to some of my aquatints.
















From Janet K - Home is where you hang your hat. Our summer hats 
have not gone beyond London for almost 2 years. We have been walking 
our neighbourhood. Circular walks of between 1 and 1 1/2 hours. 
Explored new areas, learned new local  history facts.The embroidery was 
done in Spring 2020 - some of our walks with our street a the centre.


















From Najlaa - On the computer.













From me - "Holiday slides" of various everyday objects. Every day 
is a holiday!





14 September 2021

Drawing Tuesday - cosmos

The main meaning of "cosmos" is, well, the universe and everything that's in it. Which is hard to draw, or even summarise, in a couple of hours.

There's also the flower cosmos - sort of the quintessential flower - some petals, usually pink or red shades, also white; and then the yellow bit in the middle (pistils, stamens) -   with rather fine, feathery leaves.

Back to the universe - here's a proper definition of cosmos:
  1. the universe seen as a well-ordered whole.
    "he sat staring deep into the void, reminding himself of man's place in the cosmos" 
    • a system of thought.
      plural nouncosmoses
      "the new gender-free intellectual cosmos"

I like the astronomical aspects...happened on a Gresham Lecture by Carolin Crawford and got hooked. Out there, in the vastness of space ... it's not empty, there's an atom in roughly  every cubic metre. Stars are dying and being born. Metals are being made by atoms combining. Whew. 

Back on Earth, photographers are busy pointing their cameras up into the night sky and coming up with fantastic photos, such as this super-long exposure, which shows the star trails -


Here are some cosmic objects, described and pictured - 

The cosmic system has been shown in many and various diagrams, like this one  of the Big Bang -


Of course we could be imagining the whole thing! 



If so, we've been doing that for hundreds of years -



From Jo This is a strictly-from-memory one of me and my father in the 60's standing behind the man pressing buttons and moving the big dish outside the window at Jodrell Bank where they picked up radio signals from the cosmos. Crayon and felt-tips.



From Janet K - Not the cosmos but  a summery September morning in Clissold Park with Margaret, Jo and Sue.



From Sue K - Here’s my sketch done in Clissold park - not on a ‘Cosmos‘ theme - more looking long & hard at an old tree. It was a very hot day so, armed with sunhat & found a shady place to settle at.



From Carol - I started to think about cosmos in terms of how things exist in it, in space and time. My garden swing was full of dynamic movement and squeals of fun at the weekend, now in a state of stillness and quiet in the cosmos.



From Gill - A monoprint of how I imagine Cosmos to be.



From me - "Cosmos" relevance of this tree drawn in Clissold Park, such as it is, comes via that quote from Blake -
To see a World in a Grain of Sand.
And a Heaven in a Wild Flower.
Hold Infinity in the palm of your hand.
And Eternity in an hour.

The black marks are from an earlier use of this square sketchbook - on some pages they become part of the drawing - I ignore them and when revisiting the page  I might add marks to help incorporate them, or else use white acrylic to mute the black marks a bit.