Archive for the ‘Urban Sketching’ Category

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?

Burwood Tap

Tuesday, May 19th, 2009

burwood_tapThis is a friendly little tavern on the corner near my home.  I stopped to sketch it on my way home from work this evening, because the weather was simply beautiful and my back was not bothering me too much.

I’ve got a few perspective problems with this that I’ll have to watch out for in the future.

I love the shape of this building for some reason.  Maybe it’s the knocked-off corner; maybe it’s the awning… whatever it is, I just love looking at it, and I hope I can one day truly capture just how inviting I think it is.

St. Clement Church

Saturday, April 18th, 2009

church

Charcoal continues to kick my butt.

There are thousands of beautiful old buildings in Chicago, and I want to be able to draw them.  The weather is finally turning nice, so I should start to see more opportunities to do just that.  I am really enjoying my charcoal adventure.  But I am really struggling to get a good handle on it.   The evidence is in the massive inconsistency between the bell tower and the main facade of the church.  Though, to be totally fair to myself, I did stop before I felt like I was finished due to time constraints; and I did focus a little more on the bell tower.

I spent an hour sitting on the sidewalk across from this church which is two blocks from my condo.  I had several false starts until I finally set my mind to finish a sketch no matter how badly it starts.

Anyway, I am starting to learn some things about myself that I thought I would share:

  1. I tend to let the looseness of a really soft charcoal dictate a very loose drawing style.  I don’t know if this is a good thing or a bad thing.
  2. I tend to focus on the negative space and the shadows much more than the object itself when I am working with charcoal.  The result is a much more impressionistic approach than when I am sketching with pencil.
  3. Once I have an implement in-hand, I tend to use it until I am forced to switch — especially when drawing away from my normal space, where I can spread out all my pencils, erasers, and such.
  4. I don’t erase.  This is true when I am using a pencil too.  When I first picked up my pencils back in October, I made a conscious decision to not use an eraser — it was an exercise in discipline, to force myself to learn to make the right line the first time.  But now that I have switched to charcoal, I think I might benefit from using an eraser at least as a shading tool.
  5. My sketchbook is not necessarily receptive to the combination of charcoal and fixative.  The charcoal separates in spots, which might be related to my habit of blending with my fingers.

Of all these things, point number 2 is the most interesting to me.  I really do think differently with a piece of charcoal in my hand.  I wonder why that is.

Drawbridge Control Tower Over the Chicago River

Friday, April 17th, 2009

drawbridge_control_tower

Chicago has more drawbridges than any other city in the country (if you believe the guy who does the PBS specials).  This is a control tower for one of those drawbridges near the Sears Tower (soon to be renamed the Willis Tower, but I’ll be surprised when people around here start referring to it as such).

I drew this during the last 15 minutes of my lunch hour; we are finally starting to get some nice temperatures here.  Given the short amount of time spent, I was obviously not going for a great amount of detail — I just wanted to capture the shadows.  My proportions are off a little — the tower is actually a little more squat than I have captured here.  But I am still glad to be able to get outside to draw.

Jefferson Memorial At Night

Sunday, March 1st, 2009

jefferson_memorial

In keeping with the theme of the day, which apparently is “Washington DC Architecture”, I have sketched the Jefferson Memorial.

This is a tough one, because a significant portion of the light comes from inside the building.  I opted for the pen and ink + watercolor approach on this one, and I sort of wish I had left the pen and ink out of it.  Oh well, live and learn.

US Capitol Dome

Sunday, March 1st, 2009

capital_dome0001

Sunday morning in the U.S. means political talk shows on every major network.  And every one of them, it seems, is set against a backdrop of the U.S. Capitol Dome.

I’m thinking that March will be a good month to really work on learning to use watercolors.  This painting was done using 2 colors (Winsor Blue and Yellow Ochre) from my Cotman travel set (my thanks to Kate Johnson and Phyllis who commented on my last post that I should use less water).  I purposely left the colors largely unmixed just see what the effect would be.

I really admire the work done by the contributors over at Urban Sketchers, and I look forward to warmer weather so I can get outside to sketch some architecture.  In the meantime, I have plenty of work to do.

Lunch with a Red-head

Tuesday, February 17th, 2009

wendys0001

For the second time in just over a week, having my sketchbook with me at lunchtime paid off.  If I had left it at home, I doubt very much that I would have seeked out paper and pencil.  But, since I had the stuff with me and a few extra minutes at my disposal, it worked out.

I’ve mentioned my aversion to lettering in the past.  And as I started to draw this, my first thoughts were, “how can I fake the sign?”  And then I almost immediately forgot all about that, and the next thing I knew, I had the whole thing sketched out; and not too badly if I do say so.

In fact, the signage and the roof are my favorite parts of this sketch.  They aren’t perfect, but for what this is–a small post-lunch sketch–I’m quite happy with them.  If I had to guess why, I would point to 3 things:

  1. Practice: I’ve been drawing more days than not for the past 10 weeks (Wow!  When was the last time I was able to say THAT?!).
  2. Confidence: With all that practice comes a certain level of trust that I can make a decent line when I need to.
  3. I don’t know if I can put this into a word or two, but: A willingness to bind and gag my inner critic until the work is done.  Sometimes you just have to convince yourself to shut up and draw.  The more I do it, the easier it is to beat my inner critic into submission.

One thing I think I’m starting to convince myself of is that no matter how difficult the subject matter, it’s all just shapes and areas of shade/color.  Some are a little more complex than others, but that just means you have to spend a little more time looking at them.

Interesting.  This was not my best work; but I feel like it pointed out a lot of really important things.  Oh American fast food… is there no problem you can’t solve?  I mean, besides obesity.

Shadows

Monday, February 2nd, 2009

shadows

Despite the cold, today was sunny. The dentist on the corner has a nice green awning that catches the shadow of the traffic light when the sun hits it just right.

There are parts of this that I am really happy with, and parts that I’d rather forget. All part of the learning experience, I suppose.

In particular, I wish I’d left the building (brick, awning, etc.) a whole lot more pale to give some additional contrast to the light pole and shadow. I was impatient, though (this is getting be a theme), and was trying to shortcut the process by guessing how dark it would come out on the first pass instead of working in layers. And the more I worked the painting, the less straight my lines got. I know better; that’s what really bugs me.

Idyllic Christmas

Sunday, December 21st, 2008

cat-and-xmas-tree_2Every once in a while, I sketch something that I’m really happy with.  This is one of them.  I think I really captured the silence of the moment.

The Corner Pub

Thursday, December 18th, 2008

burwood-tapI love street scenes.  But it’s cold, so I don’t expect to do much of this until spring.  I was on my way to do a little Christmas shopping.  A foot of snow had fallen during the day, and I just couldn’t resist snapping a pic of the scene so I could draw it when I got home.  This is a thumbnail sketch using a Pilot G2 gel pen.