1/11/14 Bic ballpoint pen, Stillman & Birn Epsilon sketchbook |
(Lightning! Thunder! Hail! High winds! Torrential rain! A
good day for still life studies at home.)
1/11/14 Cretacolor Nero soft pencil, Stillman & Birn Epsilon sketchbook |
It’s hard to do still life sketches of fruit without color.
But every book and instructor of drawing advises using monochrome to study
values to avoid being confused by hues. So today, on this incredibly stormy,
colorless (but noisy!) day, monochrome it is.
My friend Janine has been practicing value studies with a
ballpoint pen. I know some artists swear by ballpoint pen as an art medium
because of its unexpected capacity to build value gradually when applied in
layers, similar to the way graphite and colored pencils are used. I tend to
think ballpoint pens are good for
nothing but hastily jotting a phone number
onto a pad in a hotel room, so you can imagine how excited I was to give this
medium a try. Still, I know it’s done (try Googling “art made with ballpoint
pen” for some stunning examples), so I tried to remain open-minded.
1/11/14 Platinum Carbon ink, Stillman & Birn Epsilon sketchbook |
1/11/14 Private Reserve Velvet Black ink, Stillman & Birn Epsilon sketchbook |
While I was at it, I did three more studies of the same
still life: One with Cretacolor Nero soft pencil, one with waterproof Platinum
Carbon ink (in a Lamy Safari pen), and one with water-soluble Private Reserve
Velvet Black ink (in a Lamy Nexx) and a waterbrush wash.
Naturally, the pencil was the easiest to create soft tones
with because it was soft enough to rub with my finger, like charcoal (but much
less messy), and it was relatively fast because I could use the broad side of
the lead. I’ve never been a big fan of crosshatching, and doing so with a
fountain pen and Platinum Carbon was tedious and time-consuming. The Bic
ballpoint pen (taken from a hotel room, of course) – though it did build up
value slowly like pencil – smelled sour, and since I didn’t like smelling it, I
wanted it to be done faster, so I tried applying more pressure, which wasn’t as
effective as multiple layers applied with a light pressure (as is recommended
with colored pencil). Even more tedious and time-consuming. My hand cramped up
before I was done.
Of course, my favorite medium, both esthetically and for
speed and efficiency, was the washed water-soluble fountain pen ink. I admit,
though, that I wasn’t as successful at getting subtle variations in value by
washing ink as I was with pencil.
(In some of these studies, you may see a slight ghost. That’s the sketch behind it showing through the Stillman & Birn Epsilon paper, which is surprisingly less opaque than the Gamma and Alpha of the same weight that I used exclusively before I started binding my own books. Its see-throughness is one reason I stopped using the Epsilon except for things like these studies.)
Each medium has such a different look. I like the pencil shading and of course the washes best!!! Were you tired of the still life by the time you sketched it four times?
ReplyDeleteCan you believe I have not sketched a thing since Thursday??? That doesn't happen to me often but I was off visiting friends who are not artists and we spent yesterday and today in snowy/rainy weather mostly talking and eating. lol I'll have to get off the computer and go sketch now.
Nice drawings I like them
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