4/26/19 former Key Arena under renovation |
Ostensibly
the Friday sketch outing was scheduled for the Cherry Blossom and Japanese Cultural Festival at the Seattle Center’s
Fisher Pavilion. An indoor venue, it was a safe bet for these iffy spring days.
My secret intention, however, was to sketch outdoors as long as the weather was
hospitable, and it was. In the sunshine, I would even go so far as to call it “warm”!
4/26/19 at the foot of the Space Needle |
In
all directions, the Seattle Center is full of things to sketch, but I just
followed my ears to the noisy commotion at the former Key Arena, which is undergoing a major renovation. Sitting on the
edge of the International Fountain, I caught a crane and a few smaller machines
doing their thing. The only problem was that from that distance, I didn’t
realize the crane was standing on a lower level, so I couldn’t see most of its base.
It looks like a crane without an engine. (Still, I’m pleased that I was able to
get both the crane and the arena in the same composition while maintaining the
correct proportions on both – all on a 5½-by-8½-inch page. I credit Gabi Campanario’s Pocket Urban Sketching workshop for that.)
I
seem to be a magnet for heavy equipment – no matter where I go, I find some. (I
realize that’s not a challenge in this city.) At the foot of the Space Needle,
I found a machine with nothing to do, but its tire treads made an
interesting study of light and shadow, as did the Needle itself.
Happy sketchers in the sunshine! |
It is so easy to find cranes and construction/demolition equipment in almost any city.
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