4/28/17 ink, water-soluble colored pencils |
What a lucky break at Freeway Park! It could have just as
easily rained (and did earlier in the day), but when a small group of Urban Sketchers Seattle gathered mid-morning,
it was already warm enough in the sun to enjoy the whole time outdoors.
Built in 1976, Freeway Park was considered innovative enough to include in the 2016 PBS
documentary, “10 Parks that Changed America”
(which includes Seattle’s Gas Works Park,
too). The five-acre public area isn’t wide open as most parks are. Instead, it
has many concrete stair-stepped nooks filled with trees and other plants, art
works and even a waterfall (though it was turned off today) that make you
(almost) forget that I-5 is just a short distance below.
Occasionally skirting clouds, the sun warmed my back most
of the time as I sketched the park’s most open part near the entrance to Convention
Center. In the background is the top of the US Bank Centre Building (where we sketched inside a couple of months ago).
4/28/17 ink, water-soluble colored pencils |
A little later I walked around a corner and found “Seattle George Monument,” a sculpture
by Buster Simpson. While sketching it, I perceived only Washington’s
distinctive profile (facing left). But when I read the artist’s statement about
the piece later, I learned that it “simultaneously portrays Chief Seattle
(originally Chief Sealth) and George Washington.” The nose cone of a Boeing 707
forms the bottom of the planter beneath the profiles.
I had only seven minutes until the sketchbook throwdown,
but I was loathe to squander even a second of outdoor-sketching time, so I used
those minutes to sketch a trash can with its top askew.
I’m almost afraid to say it aloud, lest I jinx it: Is
outdoor sketching season finally here?
4/28/17 brush pen, gel pen, white colored pencil |
So glad the weather cooperated for a day of sketching. Nice sketches from your day!
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