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Sunday, December 15, 2024

Edmonds Art Adventure

 

12/12/24 Cascadia Art Museum, Edmonds

An article I read recently about different ways to enjoy art museums made a provocative suggestion: Instead of sketching a painting I admire, sketch one that I don’t like. Doing so might increase my appreciation for the work and what the artist was trying to achieve. I had that exercise in mind as I viewed an exhibit at Cascadia Art Museum. Structure and Form: The Art of B. L. Hyde is the Tacoma artist’s first solo exhibition of oil paintings made mostly during the first half of the 20th century. I picked my least favorite one to sketch (above left), hoping the exercise would make me appreciate it more (not really).

More enjoyable than sketching the art was simply sketching what I saw in the museum space (above right) – a chair, a sculpture, and the kids’ art room beyond.

It's always fun to see an artist's materials and tools as part of an exhibit.

Ali Serra's art at Walnut Street Cafe

I was with Roy and Mary Jean, and the visit to Cascadia was our first stop in an art-and-food-filled day in Edmonds. Next was lunch at Red Twig and then a stop at
Walnut Street Café, where my friend Ali Serra has a show of his fun and whimsical robot art (at left).

Finally we ended our Edmonds art adventure with dessert at Canarino Gelato, which is the same gelateria where I enjoyed refreshments during Sketcher Fest. I have fond memories of being Andika Murandi’s workshop assistant outside Canarino on a lovely July day. Seated inside on a rainy afternoon, the vibe was different but still relaxing, and we all enjoyed sketching there (sketches below).

12/12/24 Sketch journal page of my outing with Roy and MJ

Roy surprised Mary Jean and me by giving each of us a small Seawhite of Brighton concertina sketchbook with the idea that we'd use them in round-robin fashion. We each sketch in the book, pass it along to one of the others to sketch in, and so on, repeating the rounds until all the books are full. Eventually the book we started would return to us to keep. Here are my first two sketches.

2 comments:

  1. Fun idea with the concertina sketchbook. I remember a small group of artists that I knew who lived in different countries did a similar thing. Each one started a sketchbook and then it was mailed to the next person on the list. They continued until everyone did their artwork in each book. I can't remember how many pages each artist did, but they were beautiful to look at when they were finished.

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    1. I recall hearing about a similar project in Urban Sketchers... maybe it was the same one? It sounded like so much fun! What a treat to receive a partially filled book from another country to continue working in.

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