Quebec City In 1759 – Well, Almost

The short story that everyone is taught about how Quebec City went from being a French colony to one in which the British were in charge goes something like this:

Battle on the Plains of Abraham
The Brits sailed up the St. Lawrence and spent some months lobbing cannon balls at Quebec City.  The French lobbed some back.  Then the British climbed the cliffs to the Plains of Abraham, where General Wolfe and General Montcalm pointed their respective troops at one another and after a short battle, the British prevailed and both Wolfe and Montcalm were killed.

There is truth to that story but so is “The Roadrunner ran fast and Wile E. Coyote got an anvil on his head.”  There’s just more to it than that.  In point of fact, there were battles up and down the St. Lawrence and Wolfe and Montcalm’s troops had more than one encounter.

What does any of this have to do with sketching?  Well, Le Collectif  arranged a sketching adventure to Maison Vezina, a beautiful house and historic site that sits on the east side of Montmorency Falls, a huge waterfall that is fed by the Montmorency River and which dumps into the St. Lawrence.

This house is fully renovated and was home to the Vezina family for much of its existence.  But prior to that this area was one of the encampments of General Wolfe.  Back then, the buildings were a bit more spartan but neverthess, they indicate the longer-term nature of the battles for Quebec.  Wolfe had built a fort, complete with dry moat as well as several buildings on this high perch above the St. Lawrence.  From there he could see the French troops on the other side of Montmorency Falls and had a good view of Quebec City itself.  It’s likely that he could also see his ships and encampments on the south side of the St. Lawrence.  It was an ideal place if you were a British general.

There are many things to draw in this area but I settled on the more mundane, the main doorway into Maison Vezina.  I just liked the rocking chair on the porch.

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

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

Sketching Is A Windy Business

It’s very windy here at this time of year, but the temperatures and sun (heck, it was all the way up to 16C this day) has caused my emergence from hibernation and I’m dancing in the streets.

I headed towards the port area.  At this time of year the boat yard operators are like squirrels, looking for nuts.  There’s a constant scramble to set up the marina docking system (removed for winter so it’s not destroyed by ice) and to get the boats back in the water.

But this day it was very windy.  I tried to find a place to sit out of the wind that also gave me something interesting to sketch and I failed.  In the end, I was sitting at a picnic table that sits in front of the farmer’s market.  My thought was that if I was going to sit in a 30 km/h wind, it might be nice to have a platform for my sketchbook.  The platform was nice – the 30 km/h not so much.

I drew the Telus (cell phones) building, hiding a lot of it behind trees, which are much more interesting than the building.  It was done in a Stillman & Birn Beta (6×8) with my Pilot Falcon and Platinum Carbon Black.

2015-05-23Telus

Sketching St. Jean Baptiste Church

Le Collectif (CALVAQ) organized a sketchcrawl at the Eglise St. Jean-Baptiste on rue St. Jean and we all met at 11:30 after the mass was over.  It was a really nice day and I had a hard time with the thought of going inside to sketch but in I went.

I confess that I find few places less inspiring than the inside of a Catholic church.  I think it must be the gaudy gold everything that turns me off.  But they have one of their old bells on display so I drew it in my Stillman & Birn Beta (6×8) with my TWSBI Mini.

2015-05-17EgliseStJean-BaptisteBell

The other sketchers seemed more inspired than I was and everyone was deep in sketching mode when I finished.  All I could think of was the sunshine I was missing out on.  Maybe I was a plant in a previous life.  Anyways, I went outdoors.

Ahh…..”Good morning sunshine…the Earth says Hello…”  Who sang that song?  So long ago.  I wanted to stick with the church theme as that’s what the sketchcrawl was about, but as I walked around the church I couldn’t find a location that gave me a scene that inspired me.  So I walked further away and found a tiny park area that gave me a view of the really tall church steeple.  I sat down in the sun and started drawing, this time with my Pilot Falcon but in the same S&B Beta book.  We had a great day and I hope you like the sketches.

2015-05-17EgliseStJean-Baptiste

A House On Rue St. Jean

Tourists to Quebec City come for what’s contained within the walls of the “old City,” a city that has expanded into a large metropolitan area (7th largest city in Canada) with the central core becoming more of a tourist attraction than a “downtown” area.

As the city grew beyond those walls, the St. Jean and St. Louis “gates” were enlarged so that more traffic could flow in/out of that part of the city and people, living out of town, could get back and forth.

Rue St. Jean and Rue St. Louis were the main thoroughfares for that traffic and very quickly, “out of town” was no longer out of town.   In fact, just west of the old city became the ‘downtown’ area.  It’s where the provincial parliament building stands, where major hotels reside, and, at last count, one restaurant for every citizen.   But one can see that, “back in the day” the prime real estate along these routes was built up by wealthy businesses and people and while many of the stores and nightclubs along these routes are no longer banks and law offices, their architecture smacks of high times.

For a sketcher these older buildings are very inviting as subjects but it’s hard to find a place to sit or stand while drawing them because the sidewalks are narrow and there’s lots of traffic on them.  Still, I venture there sometimes and I managed to draw the upper portion of this stately house last week.

I did it in a 6×8 Stillman & Birn Beta sketchbook with a TWSBI Mini and De Atramentis Document Black ink.  I added some darks with a Kuretake #13 brush pen and Platinum Carbon Black ink.  All of my watercolors these days are Daniel Smith.  Hope you like it.

2015-05-17RueSt.Jean

A Morning At Maguire Bagels

There was a great bagel place in Sillery, a part of Quebec City.  They have an open-hearth wood-burning oven in which they stuff hundreds of circles of bagel dough and pull out hundreds of very tasty bagels.  The process is fascinating to watch (I’m easily amused) and it used to be a really nice, rustic restaurant.

I went there the other day to find that the place had been remodeled.  Same great oven.  Same bagel-making activity.  But the eating area is now plastic and aluminum, with almost nothing hanging on bare walls that go up at least 20-feet to the ceiling.  The result of this huge, warehouse-like space is that anyone talking in the place generates a cacophony of noise as their voices rattle around in the hollow space.

I ate a bagel, drank some coffee, and did a couple sketches but couldn’t take any more so I left.  Sometimes improvements aren’t.

3x5 sketchbook, Pilot Falcon, Platinum Carbon Black

3×5 sketchbook, Pilot Falcon, Platinum Carbon Black

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