6/18/14 Diamine Grey, Diamine Chocolate Brown, Platinum Carbon and Pilot Iroshizuku Tsuyu-Kusa inks, Zig marker, watercolor, Pitt Artist Pen, Canson XL 140 lb. paper |
We had a non-stop stay-cation day taking our visitor to various
popular Seattle spots, including the Olympic Sculpture Park. I’ll share more
sketches when I have more time to blog, but for now, I wanted to post this one of Echo, the sculpture park’s newest acquisition. The 46-foot piece by Jaume Plensa
was installed last month only a week or two after the Friday sketchers visited the park, hoping to see it. Modeled on
a nine-year-old girl and inspired by Ovid’s Metamorphoses, the elongated head faces west, “over Puget Sound in
the direction of Mount Olympus,” according to the SAM website. I had seen installation photos in the Seattle Times (and an installation sketch by the Seattle Sketcher)
as well as photos of the completed sculpture, but I was still stunned by its
elegant, sublime beauty.
The features on the all-white face are so subtle that I was
uncertain about what medium to use – I didn’t want the shading to be too harsh.
I sketched a faint outline with a light gray Zig marker, and then I made a weak
dilution of Diamine Grey ink squeezed out of a waterbrush to shade the
features.
What a huge sculpture. I think you made a great choice of how to show the shading on the statue without making the features too dominant. Thanks for including figures to give it a sense of scale. Good job!
ReplyDeleteGreat sketch of a very interesting sculpture. It's immense!
ReplyDeleteCheers --- Larry