Finally – Outdoor Sketching

Quebec City + April 18, 2014 =

Larry FINALLY gets to sketch outdoors!!

It warmed up all the way to 44F on Friday and there was little wind.  I found myself sitting in front of the Quebec Parliament building and while the sketching was quickly done, it felt GREAT to be outdoors while sketching.

2014-04-18Parliament

I started by drawing the right spire of the parliament building itself.  I followed this with a lamp post and then did the sketch of a large fountain featured in front of the building.  Done on cheap brown paper, the Lexington Gray feathered a bit, even when using my fine nib Pilot Prera but I was having so much fun that it hardly mattered.

2014-04-18StLouisGate

I was cooling down but I did a very quick sketch of the St. Louis Gate, through which rue St. Louis passes into the old city.  By the time I finshed, the 44F temp had taken its toll and I needed to move.  Nevertheless, I officially decree that the Quebec City outdoor season has begun.  The fact that it’s too cold to sketch outdoors today is irrelevant.

Sketching Brownian Movement

Anyone who has taken a basic chemistry class has been taught about Brownian movement.  Blame Robert Brown for that as he’s the guy who first saw small particles, suspended in a liquid, dancing around randomly, a result of many collisions with unseen and inumerable numbers of atoms that vibrate constantly.  It took Al Einstein to explain what was going on but Bob saw it first.  Timing is everything and Bob is forever famous for it.

So, what’s that got to do with sketching?  Well, I went sketching today.  I went to the mall because every Easter they have a bunch of cages with farm animals that thrill the kids to no end.  I figured that sketching kids and animals would be a good idea.  Little did I know.

This year they did things a little different.  Instead of several cages and fenced areas, they had one fenced area.  I’d guestimate it to be 15′ x 25′.  They added to this area a dozen or so goats and sheep.  They threw in a couple small pigs and a gorgeous Alpaca for variety.  What a great opportunity for a sketcher.

But throw into this area a dozen or so little kids chasing the animals around, and the animals chasing the kids around.  Add to this mix a bunch of parents, explaining to their kids that they wouldn’t be eaten and that instead, maybe they should try to feed the animals.  And what do you get – Brownian movement.  Everything within that fenced area was in constant motion.  Maybe not random motion as the goats figured out pretty quickly which kids had food and were in chase of them.  Everything was moving, except for the big parent-like entities that stood around, blocking the view.  Not such a great opportunity for a sketcher.

Toned paper.  Pilot Prera & Lex Gray ink.

Toned paper. Pilot Prera & Lex Gray ink.

2014-04-16trashcanAnd so it went today as I went to sketch animals.  Instead, I drew these two animals, that were happy to move more slowly, content not to be chased or do any chasing.  And when I finished I realized I’d never sketched this kind of trashcan before so I’ve added it to my collection of trashcan sketches.  Not such a bad day afterall.

 

Mo Music, S’il Vous Plait!

We’re back in the deep freeze here in Quebec.  Will it never end?  But we’re also in the middle of recital season, a time when the students at Conservatoire de Musique give recitals and what a joy they are to attend.  Today it was pianists…amazing pianists.  Marie Robitaille, Sophie Doyon, Brigitte Legendre, Bruce Gaulin-Boilard, Manuella Gagnon, Corolane Tremblay, and Ariane Filion-Thériault each graced us with their musical prowess.

Stillman & Birn Alpha (4x6); Pilot Prera, Noodler's Lexington Gray ink

Stillman & Birn Alpha (4×6); Pilot Prera, Noodler’s Lexington Gray ink

And while they did, Yvan and I sketched, though I have to admit that at times I just stopped, listened and watched magical hands on keys.  But here are a couple sketches I did during the nearly two hours of music.  Thanks to the Conservatoire, the students, and Suzanne Beaubien-Lowe (their teacher) for making a very cold day seem just a little bit warmer.

Stillman & Birn Alpha (4x6); Pilot Prera, Noodler's Lexington Gray ink

Stillman & Birn Alpha (4×6); Pilot Prera, Noodler’s Lexington Gray ink

 

If Only I Had Time To Sketch…

If you sketch in the presence of others you’ll hear it.  It comes in many forms but, if you get down to the bone of what’s being said it’s “If only I had time to sketch like you do” and it’s said as though my daily 24-hour time allotment is longer than their 24-hour allotment.  Or maybe they’re really talking to themselves, excusing themselves in some twisted way.

I’m not sure what it is but I never know what to say.  The truth is, we all have the same amount of time per day.  Yes, some have to work more hours than others.  Some have kids.  Some are in school.  In spite of this, the average American, it is said, manages to watch four to five hours of television every day.  Facebook and Twitter traffic suggest that the hours spent in front of computer aren’t insignificant either.  Sooo…..whether you believe it or not, discretionary time is something we ALL have available to us.  It’s how you spend it that determines whether you do or do not have time for sketching.

The truth is, it doesn’t take much time to be a sketcher.  It’s true that I do spend time with sketching friends and that I often wandering the streets, enjoying extended sketching sessions on occasion.  But I’ve been “very busy” for the last few days and so haven’t done any “serious” sketching.  In spite of that, I have sketched and I’ve had fun sketching.  I thought I’d show you a few of the smallish sketches I’ve done, providing a bit of context in an attempt to demonstrate just how easy it is to include sketching in your day.

Done in Stillman & Birn Alpha (4x6), Hero 9018 and Diamine Chocolate Brown ink

Done in Stillman & Birn Alpha (4×6), Hero 9018 and Diamine Chocolate Brown ink

The single thing that is required to be a sketcher is to be READY to sketch, which means you have paper and pointy device with you at all times.  If my sketching were limited to finding special blocks of time to set up my art materials, I wouldn’t do 2/3 of the sketches I do.  As the Boy Scout motto says, “Be Prepared.”  It’s also important to think about enjoying the process of drawing, not creating great art.  Sketching is about the fun – about the doing – or it should be.  If you’ve got to find that ‘perfect’ scene, you’ll never sketch.

Here’s a sketch I did while I was at the library.  It took only a few minutes.  Libraries are target-rich environments and one of the few places where humans sit still for a while.

 

 

 

 

3x5 cheap notebook, Pitt brush pen

3×5 cheap notebook, Pitt brush pen

I stopped by the art store and picked up some Pitt brush pens, followed by a stop for coffee.  It seemed as good a time as any to try out one of the new pens.  This rooftop sketch was done in my el cheapo ($1.25 at the dollar store) notebook between sips of coffee and increased the enjoyment of that pause in the day.

Canson Ingres paper (3x5); Pilot 78G, Platinum Carbon Sepia & a bit of Lex Gray added with a Pilot Prera

Canson Ingres paper (3×5); Pilot 78G, Platinum Carbon Sepia & a bit of Lex Gray added with a Pilot Prera

I’d been at the art museum and if you look out their front window you see a monument to General Wolfe, the guy who died winning the battle for Quebec City back in 1759.  Behind it is a street lined with buildings.

That night, I was watching American Idol with Chantal and I was bored, so I picked up a pen and a 3×5 piece of Canson Ingres paper (I have these materials available at my TV watching perch) and drew the scene from memory.  It only took a few minutes but it was a pleasant experience and I emphasized the use of loose, light pen strokes.

3x5 cheap notebook; Platinum Carbon pen w/Platinum Carbon Black ink

3×5 cheap notebook; Platinum Carbon pen w/Platinum Carbon Black ink

At another time I was watching a Toronto Blue Jays pre-season game and drew this group of flowers.  That are part of a larger, dried flower arrangement in our living room.  Used a Platinum Carbon pen for this one.

Are these great drawings?  Nope…but they were fun.  Did they take a long time?  Nope.  In fact no ‘extra’ time was required at all.  I just counted and from Sunday to Friday, when I’ve been ‘too busy to draw,’ I’ve done more than a dozen sketches, all in ‘spare’ time.  The only exception was my attendance at a music recital that I would have gone to with or without sketching.  It doesn’t take much time to be a sketcher.  You DO have time… don’t you?

First Outdoor Sketch of “Spring???”

I was heading downtown the other day, marching along ice-covered sidewalks and hopping over occasional mounds of snow when it occurred to me – it was pretty “warm.”

Now you’ve got to understand what the word means in early March in Quebec City.  It means I was walking briskly, wearing a sweater over a long-sleeve shirt and with a heavy coat on top of that.  It was “warm.”  The temperature had risen all the way to -5C (22F).

And possibly a result of my being a street sketcher harboring a desperation brought on by a long winter, I made a decision.  Rather than go to the coffee shop, or to the library, as I was planning, I would head to Place D’Youville (a central location inside our old, walled city) and sketch something OUTDOORS!!!

And it all started great.  When I arrived there were a bunch of ice skaters waiting for the Zamboni to clean off the ice rink.  I took a position among them on one of the benchs, got out my Stillman & Birn Alpha (4×6) and my Hero 578.  I wasn’t completely delusional about the definition of “warm” so I decided this would be a sketch done quickly.

By the time I got to thinking about adding some details, the notion of “warm” had long since disappeared, as had my ability to feel the pen in my hands.  My brain had shifted from “get it right” to “get it done” and I was quickly bringing the sketch to a close.  I packed up and headed for the McDonalds on St. Jean Street.

2014-03-07StJeanGate_72After huddling over a cup of coffee for warmth, I decided to add some color and got the bright idea to “boldly go where Larry had not gone before” and play with mixing color on the paper and I capped this off with a bit of splatter.  While I had no idea what I was doing, there was a serendipity about the process that was fun.

2014-03-07Steeple_72Because McDonalds was very busy, they’d opened up their third-floor eating area so I headed there, hoping to get a different look at the rooftops.  Unfortunately, there were big posters covering most of the windows so the view was limited.  But, by ducking down and shifting forward a bit, I could see under an ad for something called a McWrap and I could see the steeple of a small church next to the downtown hospital (founded in 1639).  It stuck up behind a pile of metal thingies on top of the building in front of it.   Same sketchbook here but I used my Pilot Prera on this one.

While it wasn’t as “warm” as I thought, it was a great day and, as they say, I broke the ice on 2014 outdoor sketching… almost literally.