Channeling Anita Davies

I bought a sheet of Arches hot-press watercolor paper and wanted to see how it responded to my pens and watercolors.  I cut a small section from the sheet (4×6) and got out a Pilot Prera.

Thinking I would let Google give me inspiration I searched for, and found, a bunch of small houses.  One of them reminded me of the many houses Anita Davies has drawn (https://www.flickr.com/photos/anitadavies/) and I love her clean, simple, approach to her architectural sketches.  I decided I’d try to do one in her style.  Apologies to Anita as I didn’t come close to her standards and probably missed her style.  But it was fun and I found working on the hot-press paper to be lots of fun.

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Crazy Artist Road Trip

Remember when we were kids and would do crazy stuff, like hop in a car and drive forever so we could spend a couple hours somewhere, only to jump back in the car for the long drive home?  I do.  I’m old now, though, and that’s just crazy… isn’t it?

Well apparently not.  I was in Ottawa a few weeks ago and got to attend the John Ruskin exhibition.  For me that was thrilling as it was the first time I’d ever seen large, formal pen and ink drawings up close and personal and Ruskin is one of my favorites.  But my sketching buddies weren’t with me and they decided that they needed to see the exhibition before it ended (this weekend the last weekend it will be in Ottawa).  I couldn’t pass up the opportunity to see it again so I tagged along.

2014-03-22ArtistAndObserverSo we, four adults of otherwise sound minds, climbed in a car at 6:30AM and headed west, for a little five hour drive.  When we got to Ottawa it was raining but we were counting on the museum roof holding up and so no spirits were dampened by the rain.  Parking was surprisingly cheap (less than half what it costs in Quebec City) and it was only a couple minute walk to the museum.

Once inside we checked our coats, bought our admission tickets and spent a glorious day staring at art done by people who are better at it than we are.  Well, the guy whose idea of art is to place a huge boulder on a broken airplane as an indication of gravity might not be.  The guy who drove a go-kart down a bumpy road while holding a piece of charcoal on paper might not be either.  But Ruskin, Monet, and Krieghoff most certainly are and they entertained us for about five hours, including a lunch break.  Then it was back in the car for another five hour drive.  Ten hours of road time and five hours of great art.  A two-to-one ratio ain’t bad.  I remember trips with a less favorable ratio.  Do you ever do this sort of thing?  Should you?  Should anyone?  Yeah…of course we should.

 

Revisiting Noodler’s Black Ink

When I started sketching I bought a bottle of Noodler’s Black ink.  It was “bulletproof”.  It was “water-resistant.”  Or so sayeth Noodlers.  It was only later that I discovered that fountain pen people have different definitions of waterproof than I have.  In fairness, the definition is based upon performance on papers with little sizing and fountain pen users are more concerned with signatures not disappearing in the rain than they are about a bit of the ink muddying a watercolor wash.

But I generally work on paper that is sized to accept watercolors and the result is that a light-color wash and Noodler’s Black don’t go together.  Quickly, I came to understand why so many sketchers use Noodler’s Lexington Gray, which is a very dark gray ink that seems more “bulletproof” than Noodler’s Black.  Lex Gray has been my ink of choice for a couple years.

2014-04-24treeBut I decided to revisit Noodler’s Black so I filled a Pilot Prera with it and took it sketching.  It was far too cold today to be out sketching, mostly because of a brisk wind that accompanied the 44F temperature.  My first attempt with the ink was made in my cheap sketchbook (best case scenario for Noodler’s Black).  Unfortunately, I’d also forgotten that Noodlers Black takes longer to dry than Lex Gray, particularly when it’s cold.  As you can see, the sketch is smudged badly.  Oh well, it was fun trying to capture this small crab apple tree.

After I did this sketch I walked a bit, trying to warm up before plunking myself down in front of a building to give the ink another try.

While no fault of Noodler’s Black, I had to do this sketch more quickly than I would normally do it as it was just too cold to sit there more than a short time but, frankly, I became pretty frustrated long before I finished.  I was experiencing more smudging of the ink which resulted in attempts to fix (cover up?) smudges, which made it worse, which caused more attempts to fix it, etc., etc.  Anyone who has sketched for a while knows that drill.  The results are never pretty.  This sketch was done on Stillman & Birn Alpha paper, which is more heavily sized than my dollar store notepad.

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The real ‘test’, however, came when I got home and attempted to put relatively light color on top of the sketch.  As you can see, everything is dull and muddy, largely because the ink washed out into the color.  When I was finished I emptied the pen and filled it with Platinum Carbon Black.  Noodler’s Black is not an ink I’ll be revisiting again… ever.

Snow Walking Along The Riviere St. Charles

I’m lucky because it’s only a 10-minute walk to the St. Charles River, a beautiful river that runs through Quebec City.  It provides me with a little bit of urban nature and the ability to walk for several kilometers without having to deal with automobiles.

Yesterday was my first attempt to walk it and while I had to crunch along on top of icy snow, there were some places where the path was clear.  The day was nice in any case and I stopped to sketch this cluster of trees on the other side of the river.  It’s sooooooo… nice to be sketching outdoors.

2014-04-20RiviereStCharles

Quebec: Spring 2014 Worldwide Sketchcrawl

April 19th was the date of the 43rd Worldwide Sketchcrawl.  Selecting an appropriate location for this spring event is tough for us in Quebec City because we typically have to wear heavy coats and learn to shiver.  This year has been particularly bad in that regard so we decided that holding the sketchcrawl at the Quebec Aquarium, where we’d have the option of indoor or outdoor sketching, was a good idea.  As it turned out, it was.

While I announced the beginning of the outdoor sketching season in my last blog post, it was too cold for me to want to sketch outdoors at the sketchcrawl, though a few of the participants braved the cold to sketch the walruses and seals that were in outdoor enclosures.  I found the nice warm buildings to be the place I wanted to be.

One thing we didn’t count on were the crowds.  It was Easter weekend and there were hundreds of people at the aquarium, having come from Montreal and elsewhere because of the long weekend.  This made it hard to get access to the exhibits and you had to like lots of kids looking over your shoulder while you sketched.  I always like that but admit that the crowds made the day a bit stressful.

Our aquarium, however, is wonderful.  Not only does it have the typical fish swimming behind glass but there is a multi-story HUGE aquarium with fish who pose for sketchers.  I think I’m going to get an annual membership so I can go back when it’s warmer (lots of outdoor sketching opportunities) and where I can go during the week to sketch a lot of the inhabitants.

I started the day by sketching a surgeon fish and leopard shark.  I wish they were better but they were fun to do.  Stillman & Birn Alpha sketchbook, Pilot Prera and Lex Gray ink.

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I spent a lot of the morning just looking as I hadn’t been to the aquarium for many years.  That was probably a mistake as the crowds started to build about the time I was ready for lunch.  After lunch it was near impossible to sketch leisurely.

But lunch time it was and while eating I had a great view of rocks, trees and a trail that went by the large window I was sitting next to.  Once my face was fed I sketched the rocks, creating this vignette.

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A couple of us found a spot on the upper floor of the large aquarium and we tried to sketch the fish as they cruised by in front of us.  I found it a bit difficult but lots of fun.  What kind of sketching isn’t fun?  It was a fun end to a great day.

2014-04-19FIsh