The Big Draw

The Big Draw, my postcard for the postcard swap.

The Big Draw, my postcard for the postcard swap.

The Big Draw was held at the National Gallery of Australia last Sunday. In the very short period of 3 hours participants had the opportunity to explore 10 different areas to work in. I made it to 6.

I started off fairly conventionally with my preferred ‘blind drawing’ of models from the Canberra Institute of Technology, wearing garments designed by current students.

Two sketches 'Voguing' with the CIT students.

Two sketches ‘Voguing’ with the CIT students.

I then headed around to ‘Altered  Books’, outside the William Kentridge exhibition where participants were encouraged to use pages from books as the basis for drawing and collage.

Two drawings, one with collage elements, at 'Altered Books'.

Two drawings, one with collage elements, at ‘Altered Books’.

What I really liked here were the lovely charcoal pencils we were given to draw with. I also discovered that the waxy Lyra pencils we had also provided a great resist to the charcoal. My next drawing took advantage of these properties.

Cat drawn in charcoal over a Lyra pencil background.

Cat drawn in charcoal over a Lyra pencil background.

I then went into the most exciting station ‘Drawn to Move’, inside the Kentridge show, where I-pads had been set up with a stop animation app that allowed you to capture your image as you drew. You could then send the animation to yourself. Alas my animation never made it home (I’m not sure why), but I’ve since found a similar app for my android phablet that I’ll demonstrate in a future post.

By the time I made it to ‘What do you see?’ a large group participation work on the floor in front of Jackson Pollock’s Blue Poles, I was starting to flag. I moved fairly quickly onto ‘Exquisite Corpses’, that favourite Surrealist parlour game where I ran into my life drawing teacher from university. It was good to see you again Tess!

Time was running out so I made a dash past ‘Balcony Blueprints’ and headed into ‘Stick with it’  and ‘Paperscapes’ in the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander galleries. These stations were lots of fun and very inventive and thankfully didn’t require any major effort to participate in. Playing a very clever riff on ‘dot’ painting ‘Stick with it’ used an office-workers trove of coloured adhesive dots to make patterns on a large circle of cardboard taped to the floor. There was plenty of space for everyone to join in.

Part of the 'Stick to it' work.

Part of the ‘Stick to it’ work.

I moved on to ‘Paperscapes’ for my last piece of work. I was all ‘drawn out’ by this stage so I stuck to using large pieces of coloured paper to make a collage inspired by the striping of the Bungle Bungle ranges, very apt in this room of inspired landscapes.

'Paperscapes' in the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander galleries.

‘Paperscapes’ in the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander galleries.

After three hours it was all I could do to stagger to the information desk and hand in my postcard, to be swapped sometime in the future, with one from another participant.

I really enjoyed myself last Sunday, but I came away pondering who the target audience was for this event. The obvious answer was that everyone was the audience and people of all ages were participating. My corollary to that was that I saw few ‘solo’ adults participating in the activities. Most adults appeared to be there as adjuncts to children and weren’t actively engaged on their own behalf, which I thought was a shame. I think this reflects the feeling that art is for ‘artists’ or something only permissable for children to enjoy.  I’m reminded of one of my favourite quotes from Art & Fear (David Bayles & Ted Orlando, Capra Press, 1993):

“When my daughter was about seven years old she asked me one day what I did at work. I told her I worked all day at college – that my job was to teach people how to draw.

She stared back at me, incredulous, and said, “You mean they forget?” – Howard Ikemoto”

Cafe Wednesday – cars

To be honest I wasn’t expecting to be posting a cafe drawing today. I had thought that I would be posting images of ‘amazing’ prints, inspired by my recent Michael Brennand-Wood workshop. But when I got to the studio I discovered that I’d been doubled booked with a full class of university students.

'Blind' drawing of a row of cars, 2 October 2013.

‘Blind’ drawing of a row of cars, 2 October 2013.

So back to the consolation of a good cup of coffee and a custard tart.

Cafe Wednesday Catch Up

I haven’t been to our local cafe much recently, but managed to make it both this week and last week.

When I checked back through my sketchbook I found my drawings from early August. So here they are earliest first.

Cafe Wednesday 7 August 2013

Cafe Wednesday 7 August 2013

Cafe Wednesday 14 August 2013

Cafe Wednesday 14 August 2013

The dinosaur’s back.

Cafe Wednesday 18 September 2013

Cafe Wednesday 18 September 2013

This week I did a pencil sketch of the signs outside the convenience store.

Cafe Wednesday 25 September 2013

Cafe Wednesday 25 September 2013

I wanted to put some colour in but was reluctant to work on the original drawing. Thankfully we now have scanning and printing so here is a coloured version of the sign drawing.

Watercolour over a scanned copy of my pencil drawing for 25 September 2013

Watercolour over a scanned copy of my pencil drawing for 25 September 2013

The Great Catch Up!

Oh well time just got away from me when I went on holidays in October/ November last year so now I’m catching up.

I did achieve my goal of drawing every day I was in Tasmania. Here are some of the drawings and watercolours I did.

25oct2011

The Japanese Bridge at the Emu Valley Rhododendron Garden

26oct2011

Cradle Mountain, Cradle Mountain National Park

26oct2011a

Little Horn, Cradle Mountain National Park

Cradle

Plant specimens, Cradle Mountain National Park

27oct2011

Lichens, Cradle Mountain National Park

6nov2011

The Hobart Farmers Market

7nov2011

The Bridge at Ross

 

Inspiration and response

A woodblock printing workshop with Mr Tatsuya Ito at Megalo print studio + gallery in March encouraged me to re-look at one of the most famous woodblock series printed in Japan, the One Hundred Famous Views of Edo. The Brooklyn Museum has a full set of the prints accessible on their website. What is even better is that you can zoom in and look at the details of each print. I became intrigued with the fireworks depicted in the top right hand corner of this print.

Ryogoku_hanabi

Utagawa Hiroshige (Ando) (Japanese, 1797-1858). Fireworks at Ryogoku (Ryogoku Hanabi), No. 98 from One Hundred Famous Views of Edo, 8th month of 1858. Woodblock print, Sheet: 14 1/4 x 9 1/4 in. (36.2 x 23.5 cm). Brooklyn Museum, Gift of Anna Ferris, 30.1478.98

My first response was a pencil version

20mar2011

and today I made a stitched version

26april2011a26april2011b