11/2/11 My view from a studio window |
When I first started sketching, I spent a lot of time
looking at the work of other sketchers online, and one thing struck me right
away. While I was naturally dazzled by the sketches of glorious cathedrals,
monuments and other world-famous structures, what caught my attention were all
the equally marvelous sketches of ordinary residential scenes. How are these
people able to sketch an alley or parking lot and make it look fresh and
exciting? What magical power do they possess that makes this possible? As a
brand-new sketcher, I knew it would be a long time before I learned that magic,
but I was eager to begin.
The sketch above is one of my earliest
urban sketches; it’s dated Nov. 11, 2011. Still too self-conscious to sketch
from the sidewalk, I took my baby steps by sketching out the windows of our
house. It would still be several months before I had the nerve to show up at my first Urban Sketchers outing, but my spirit was willing: I was driven to show
my world, one sketch at a time.
Nearly nine years and more than 7,000 sketches later, I have
sketched on four continents. My subject matter has included a few world-famous
scenes, and it has also included many, many mundane, ordinary scenes.
During those years, I’ve learned techniques and approaches
from excellent teachers, many at Urban Sketchers symposiums, that helped me
refine and shape the style I use today. As grateful as I am to all of them,
none handed me the super power I kept thinking I would eventually find.
It turns out that there is no magic, at least in terms of
techniques or tricks. Any sketch I have ever admired – whether it’s of the
Eiffel Tower or a fire hydrant; the pyramids of Egypt or a utility pole – was
made by a sketcher who had observed so closely and fully that I couldn’t help
but see what they saw. That was the “magic.” And it turns out that all those
teachers did try to give me the super power I was looking for: Every one
of them told me that drawing was about seeing. But I didn’t always
understand.
Below is a sketch I made last week. I still have a lot
to learn, but now I realize that the most important skill I have to learn is to
see. In fact, I now understand that as a sketcher, I have only one job:
To observe so closely and fully that I can make anything look interesting, even
the mundane. And by observing closely and fully, even those things I see
every day become fresh again.
(This post was inspired by Stephanie Bower’s
#USkThenAndNowChallenge to look back at our own old drawings, share them and
reflect on what we’ve learned since then.)
4/25/20 Maple Leaf neighborhood |
Funny how that word "mundane" popped up twice today in relation to sketches. On FB Suzala posted what she called a "mundane" view of the scene looking out from her front patio/porch. I personally feel that there is something interesting to be found in anything, and like you I found out that you just have to see it to capture it. Nice lesson to learn!!!
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