Archive for July, 2009

My Keys

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

keysEveryday Matters challenge #37 is ‘Draw some keys’.  These are mine.

Yes, that is a Garanimals key chain.  No, I don’t have kids.  Yes, I am a full-grown adult.  That’s just how I roll.

And for the record, I don’t actually wear Garanimals.  Although if I did, it would certainly have prevented a number of fashion faux pas committed by yours truly over the years.

I’ve been in an artistic funk for the past couple of weeks; waiting for inspiration to strike.  It hasn’t.  Fortunately, the Everyday Matters list has lots of things to choose from — no need to wait for inspiration.  Too bad the list can’t come to my house and kick my lazy butt off the couch sometimes.

One of the Residents of Oz Park

Wednesday, July 15th, 2009

oz_park_tree0001

I stopped on my way home from work this evening to sketch parts of this tree in Oz Park.

Oz Park was commissioned in honor of L. Frank Baum who wrote the Wizard of Oz , and also lived in the area at the end of the 19th century.  It has statues of the Dorothy, the Tin Man, the Scarecrow, and the Lion throughout the park, and is a nice place to go watch people play with their dogs.

This sketch was the result of some recent advice I offered to an aspriring sketcher who was trying to deal with a paralyzing case of fear of failure.  One of those bits of advice was “set a timer for two minutes; go!”.  It occurred to me that the same advice could also be used to overcome the ‘I don’t have time’ excuse that I like to use.  So this is my two-minutes worth (well, actually, the line drawing was two minutes; adding the color was probably only another five or ten minutes after that).

There are plenty of things wrong with it.  Certainly, the colors are completely wrong, because I didn’t have any paint with me at the time; so it was ‘get home, get out the paint, and fake it as best I could’.  And that’s all fine.  The point of this exercise was not to be realistic.  It was just to keep the creative juices flowing.

I’ll tackle something a little more serious when I have more time.  When I don’t have that kind of time, I have to make myself do more of these quickies.  Sometimes quantity is just as valuable as quality.

Your Basic Bottle Opener

Sunday, July 12th, 2009

bottle_openerI picked up some gray PITT pens this weekend while I was supposed to be grocery shopping.  Hey, it’s not my fault they put the grocery store so close to the art store…  This is my first sketch with them.

Edit: just for the record, I did continue on to the grocery store immediately after the art store.

Compositionally Challenged

Sunday, July 12th, 2009

telephone_poleNot everything goes according to plan.  If I ever forget this, all I have to do is sketch something.

My plan for this sketch (another view from the back of our condo) was to make the telephone pole the center of attention.  I thought framing it with the flowers and planters we have on our deck would help with that.  Unfortunately, I think the foreground objects have taken over instead of retreating to the background.

I think the single biggest mistake I made in this regard is that I made the plants too colorful, and added too much contrast.  I think if I had made them more sillhouetted, that would done the trick nicely.

Or, I could have cheated, and just done a strategic crop.  But what would that have proven?

I’m also not happy with the how flat the background buildings came out.  I wanted to push them to the background, so I knew I had to leave details out and avoid putting too much emphasis on their color and structure.  Unfortunately, I think I went too far the other way.

Oh well, they can’t all be winners.  Plus, I learned something as a result.  And hopefully, I won’t have to make the same mistake a hundred times before I finally learn how to deal with it.

Reading Between the Lions

Tuesday, July 7th, 2009

art_institute_lionThe Art Institute of Chicago has these giant bronze lions on either side of the steps leading to the main entrance.  People sit on the steps and read between the lions when the weather is nice.  As for me… I stand across the street and draw them.  And of course, the woman on the steps was talking on her cell phone instead of reading, thus messing up my very clever title.  Maybe I should have gone with a telephone-related title like ‘Hold the Lion’ or ‘The Lion is Busy’?

This lion is the one on the north side of the entrance.  His unofficial name (given to him by the sculptor) is ‘On the Prowl’.  When one of our home teams is in the playoffs, the lions are dressed in team jerseys.  They even have super-size helmets for the lions for football season.  Since it isn’t playoff season, the lions are naked.

I did the line drawing during lunch this afternoon and painted it when I got home this evening.  There was just barely enough time to eat, walk over there, draw, and walk back.  But the weather was really nice today, so I felt like I had to take advantage of it.  People hovered around and looked over my shoulder.  I could hear them whisper to each other, “Ooh, he’s drawing the lion!”  It was, simultaneously, nerve-wracking and exhilarating.

This was real challenge for me for a few reasons: 1. I am intimidated by drawing living things, even if (as in this case) that living thing is not really a living thing; 2. Mostly related to number 1, I actually included a human being in this sketch; and 3. I had to paint from memory so I was left to my own devices with respect to color and shadow.  The lion’s looking a little chubby, but overall, I’m happy with how this came out.

Urban Gardening

Sunday, July 5th, 2009

urban_gardening0001Today was a nice day to sit on the deck and sketch.  In fact, it was a perfect day to stretch my ‘urban sketching’ muscles.

My Favorite Cubs Hat

Saturday, July 4th, 2009

cubs_capThis is my beat-up old cubs hat.  I bought it at the first game I’d ever seen at Wrigley Field, and I’ve worn it hundreds of times since.  It’s probably time to replace it — some of the wrinkles are permanent.  But, like an old pair of slippers, a good hat feels better the more worn-out it gets.

This sketch is black and white because, quite frankly, I’m a little tired and too lazy to pull out the paints.  Besides, I wanted to see whether the new sketchbook I have would handle pencil.  I didn’t do any blending, but I think the paper in this sketchbook would have taken it fairly well.

The Bleachers at Wrigley Field

Friday, July 3rd, 2009

wrigley_bleachersI spent the day roasting myself at the Cubs game.  I can hardly think of a better way to spend an afternoon, especially when the Cubbies get a win.

The scoreboard at Wrigley is an icon of tradition… one of the last manually operated scoreboards in the Major Leagues.  You won’t find any Jumbotron in Wrigley Field, no sir!  This is baseball, as pure as it can be — at least as pure as it can be when you’re fielding a team full of multimillionaires.

That part of the field, by the way, is where Milton Bradley dropped an easy fly ball.  Whoa boy… Chicago fans can be merciless when a highly-paid, highly-touted, professional athlete does something so inept!  Just ask Rex Grossman; I’m sure he can tell you a thing or two.

By the way, anyone got any good tips for laying down a clean watercolor wash on smooth paper?

What is that? Some sort of ficus?

Thursday, July 2nd, 2009

potted_plant0001Truthfully, I have no idea what sort of plat this is.  All I know is that it sits near the front window, and its growth only seems limited by the size of its pot.

The color in the real sketch is not quite as yellow as it appears here — blame the scanner until I can figure out how to make it behave.