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| 4/30/26 Volunteer Park |
Sometimes the all-mighty algorithm finally gets it right.
With my reignited love for Caran d’Ache Neocolor II water-soluble crayons, I’ve been looking around for unique or unusual ways that urban sketchers or mixed-media plein air artists are using them.
For quite a while, I wasn’t very inspired. A lot of YouTubers are swatching all the colors for their audience, but I wasn’t seeing much art that involved unique approaches or techniques.
Eventually Colin Woodward popped up in my YouTube feed. Primarily a watercolor and acrylic painter, the Irish artist has lately been exploring both Neocolor II crayons and Derwent Inktense pencils – and he sometimes takes them out for plein air work. A-ha – finally something new and appealing! I’ve been bingeing on his videos ever since.
Although he’s done a few urban scenes, most of his landscapes are of northern Ireland’s lovely woods and streams. His spare, abstract style involves nuanced brushwork to activate water-soluble pigments; in other words, he’s applying water the way a watercolor painter would. One thing I really like about his informative demos is that he explains subtleties like why he changed the grip on his crayon or chose a particular brush at that moment.
Without trying to emulate his brushwork style (which involves a lot of nice watercolor brushes that I don’t intend to use, especially in the field), I tried a sketch at Volunteer Park (top of post). (This type of multi-layered scene of different types of trees is exactly what I was practicing from home recently.) I used my same old waterbrush – but more actively than I typically would. For years now, my primary means of activating color in trees and other foliage has been to spritz the page lightly with water. I like the organic look that results – most of the time. But other times I’ve lost control of the amount of water or direction of the spray.
Central to my sketch is the dense foliage of a magnificent sequoia. That’s very different from the lighter, airier foliage of deciduous trees that I have watched Woodward draw. Still, I tried to be more conscious of the tree’s form as I activated in a more controlled manner.
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| 5/1/26 Maple Leaf neighborhood |
Though my baby steps may not be obvious, I’ve been working toward greater abstraction for a while now. Sometimes it comes out because I’m cold and need to work extra fast. It’s a lot easier when I’m working from reference photos, I discovered. I can set myself an assignment to be looser and more abstract and then focus on that task in the comfort of my home. On location, I have so much “reality” in front of me that I tend to switch on auto-pilot urban sketching, which always comes out tighter and more “real.”
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| Detail from on-location comics |
My goal for this spring and summer, when I tend to use more color, will be to push myself a bit harder toward abstraction on location. Maybe Woodward’s inspiration will be the nudge I need.



I really like the way you captured the tree in the sketch at the top. It has a nice, textural look to it. I think you are onto something with the abstracted look...but the line drawings are still very much appreciated.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Joan!
DeleteI really loved that top tree drawing and tried to see how you did it. Well, now I am hooked on Colin too! I went to YT to see his methodology with Inktense and Neocolors, intending to FF past his travelogue, but when he showed his camping set up in his van, OMG! I have car camped my way across the country a couple of times so I am a sucker for car set up videos! Now I get both rabbit holes in one! I fantasize about taking art supplies, yarn and needles, and a mini sewing machine in my RAV4 on a road trip (with Denver) just to combine all my obsessions in one. Then, I think of Denver’s motion sickness and my low energy. Reality bites!😝 BTW, what is the significance of the quote, “so you just stand there to do this”?(paraphrase because I can’t see your post when commenting) Anne HwH
ReplyDeleteI know, his van looks very comfy, cozy and ideal for an introvert traveler like me (and probably you, too)! (Definitely nothing but a fantasy for me... I don't even like driving 4 hours to Portland in a car ;-) ) And the drone photography over all those green northern Ireland landscapes! Re: "You just stand here to do this...??" Two women came by to see what I was doing. When I showed them, they were both astounded, and one said that! I often get comments like that... I'm not sure if it's because plein air is a novelty or if it's because I'm standing. ;-)
Delete😂😂 Maybe because they expect art to take so long that you would have to sit down! Anne
ReplyDelete