3/25/17 Faber-Castell Pitt Big Brush Pens |
My second Urban Sketchers 10x10 workshop was Sue Heston’s “Simple Shapes Stronger Sketches.” Many sketchers, myself
included, immediately become ensnarled by the mass of details in any view we
might start to draw. Sue’s workshop directly addresses this issue by keeping
students focused only on large shapes.
On a chilly but dry Saturday morning, 14 sketchers gathered at the downtown
ferry terminal to start seeing those shapes.
In most outdoor urban views, the largest shape is the
sky. “Unlike many things – cars, trees, people – we don’t have preconceived
ideas about the shape of the sky,” Sue says in her handout, which makes it an
easier shape to see accurately and objectively.
With that in mind, our first exercise was to choose a
composition and use a wide, light-colored marker to draw the sky as a single
shape. (Fat markers were recommended because it’s impossible to get fussy with
details when you have those in your hand!) The next step was to fill in the “not-sky”
shape with a medium gray marker, forming another large shape. We did as many of
these as possible to get away from trying to draw individual buildings, windows
and rooftops and instead focused on the abstracted shapes. Sue warned us not to
try to make nice sketches in these exercises; they were meant to be more like thumbnails
that help us see values and compositions.
3/25/17 Pitt Big Brush Pens |
The second exercise built on the first by bringing in a
dark gray or black marker for the shadow shapes. Starting new compositions or
simply adding to the sketches we made in the first exercise, we looked for the
darkest areas to fill in.
For the final exercise, Sue encouraged us to use our
medium of choice while still following the same principles we’d practiced all
morning: Make the sky shape; make the not-sky shape; finish with shadow shapes
and finally details.
Although I don’t usually favor fat markers, I was certain
that if I picked up my usual pens or colored pencils I’d fall back into my old
habits. I decided to keep going and make a few more sketches with markers to
reinforce what I’d learned. After drawing the sky shape for one skyline, my
intention was to color in the gray and black, but I liked the simple line so much
that I left it unshaded. Of course, I couldn’t resist adding a couple of
cranes.
3/25/17 Tombow markers |
My favorite sketch of the day was of my beloved Smith
Tower framed by the interesting sky shape formed by the terminal building’s
overhang.
As humans who innately look for shapes we recognize, we don’t
naturally “see” the shapes in between or around those recognizable things. We
have to train our eyes to see those abstract shapes. Remember those “magic eyes” picture books of the ‘90s?
If you crossed your eyes just right, a three-dimensional pictured popped out of
the larger picture. I remember it took me a while to see the first one, but
once I did, the rest snapped into place almost immediately. By the end of the workshop,
I started feeling that way about the sky shapes surrounding the buildings,
cranes, rooftops, stadiums and millions of other details in front of me. I
think those larger shapes will snap into place easily for me now, helping me
make better sketches with any medium.
3/25/17 Tombow markers, colored pencils |
3/25/17 brush pen, colored pencils |
Sue points out a sky shape. |
Thank you for this great review of your class! I will certainly practice see "sky shapes" around the buildings that I'm trying to capture. I also really like the cranes!
ReplyDeleteGlad you found the review useful!
DeleteSounds like a very interesting workshop and a new way to look at a scene and draw it. Nice!
ReplyDelete