#OneWeek100People 2026: Three Day Metro Pass!

So it begins! The tenth consecutive year of our sketching-marathon!
[ As always, check out the previous years HERE ]
It’s hard to believe I’ve done *anything* for ten years. I’ve always felt that I’m a person who doesn’t stick with things for long. But as I look back at the years (and that’s half the fun of doing this, seeing the tower of sketches grow ever taller) – it’s more like I’m a person who travels in loops – or maybe spirals – circling around the same habits and interests, always coming back to sketching, but gradually rising higher, so I come back around maybe just a little bit better each year.
(I hope so anyway! That’s something I want to talk about later – my obsession with improving my drawing? Why is that so important?)

But let’s start with: Why do I love sketching so much? To the point that I’d rather do *this* than work on ‘real projects’?
The *directness* is a big one – in the sense of – I really don’t like preparing for things! I really don’t like planning, or doing studies. If I over-prepare for something, I’ll loose interest when it comes to actually doing the thing.
I feel like, “There’s no point now, I’ve done all the fun part.”
I’ve been working on a big painting in the studio – (the biggest thing I’ve ever done by a good margin) – and I’ve gotten it to a nice under drawing, all mapped out, values blocked in – – but then it just sits there for weeks! I haven’t touched it in ages! I feel like – “Ug. Now the work begins.”
Does that sound familiar to anyone? Hah!
It’s WAY more fun to take a week off and go sketching :)










I mean: that’s why I love the marathon format. The ticking clock of the deadline, and the super-satisfying feeling of the stack of 100 drawings piling up.
It’s everything I love about hyper-focus, and zero responsibilities :)
Perhaps the real magic is finding *small goals that can compound*.
But also – find something that doesn’t stress you to do. It’s not fun to be worried about ‘success’. It’s not fun to be doing things for a competition. It’s much more satisfying to just draw for your own curiosity.
Or in my case, I’m a drawing robot :) Keep moving, find the next person that grabs the eye, look for lighting, look for poses. Just do the next drawing, and repeat. :)
I mean – it’s a great cure for winter blues. It’s a great cure for doom-scrolling the news.
I am 100% positive that sketching is the same as playing music. (Though I don’t play any instrument). But it’s got to be the same kind of immersion – where everything falls away, and you can just do the thing you enjoy for hours at a stretch.

This year I gave myself a couple of extra ‘focus tricks’;
*I bought a three day metro pass*. So I can ride the subway all day and not worry about taking random stops. As soon as I have a few people I like, I pop up above ground, sit down in a café and paint them. (Our transit system allows you to ride on one fair in one direction – mixing trains and busses if you want – but as soon as you ‘backtrack’ towards home, that fare is over! and you pay again! It can be very annoying when you have a series of chores, but they don’t line up nicely).
Second trick; *I made sure I had a late afternoon drawing appointment every day*. This year I used Meetup.com and had something booked – life drawing class, a sketching meet-up, a writers group. (I like going to writers groups to draw – nobody ever complains).
This honestly saved me from going home early more than once. It was cold! I wore the wrong boots! But neverminded – I have to keep drawing!
:)
I’m sure this isn’t possible for everyone – but this is the good life of a retired sketcher :)
~m

Really love #18!
Thanks!
Jérôme
I’m with you all the way! Pure fun with the added push of practice, an opportunity to learn, and maybe get new ideas. I just checked my blog, and my first 100 People was 2017, so it’s my 10th year, too! The only year I didn’t do them from life (well, other lives 😆) was during the pandemic, when I did selfies from a mirror! That was also the only year I didn’t hit 100! I do several annual drawing challenges, and this is still my favorite. Thank you for spurring us all on!
Mirror drawings are from life! Your own life :) :) There should be an extra prize for people who did all ten years. You need to make yourself a marathon t-shirt (I don’t know why I didn’t think of that before :) I could have been selling those all this time! Haha – see that’s why artists are not business people.
Ha-ha-ha!! I don’t need another T-shirt, but I’ll proudly tell anyone that I see this week. ;-)
I think you like to sketch – no commitment, it fast and the subject is before you, paint big …before you start it’s a financial investment in paint and support, time, commitment.. go big or take a nap
Yes absolutely – I don’t like the pressure of the huge commitment :) Art is an enjoyment for me – why would I want to put it to work on the farm :)
That’s a good system, I’ll try it, thank you.
And one more thing, I notice that in your attention to detail and the beautiful washes you use, you bring a quiet dignity to all your subjects. They aren’t just people in a line-up anymore, they’re individuals -what’s that music he’s listening to, is he warm enough in that little jacket, because beside him, the others are clearly in full winter gear, etc..
Thank you Kath! Yes art elevates the everyday doesn’t it? The fact that you spend time to see and recreate a regular person or a typical place – the time and attention is a gift or celebration or something :) But also – I feel like making the everyday more mystical or more dreamlike is a great relief from the harsh reality of the world.
You summed up here what I’ve been sensing, and now it’s clearer: “I feel like making the everyday more mystical or more dreamlike is a great relief from the harsh reality of the world.”
Thanks Marc for this email.
I have always looked at your inspiring paintings you post so I am going to try the people!
I also took an online course with you a number of years ago – brilliant thankyou. I still try the cinq a sept!
Might there be any chance of you letting us see a video of your process of one these portraits do you think please?
I am trying too!
Happy 100
Best wishes
Amanda
I didn’t have time to take video’s this year – but I do have some older ones from a previous year? Did you see these: https://citizensketcher.com/oneweek100people/oneweek100people-2022-all-posts-collected/
Ooh the excitement of paint bleeding into other colours .
Thank you so much for replying and so quickly!
Your sketches are SO good and you flow so well. Your pointed round brush is so pointed!
I will try to find your Facebook page.
Best wishes for a happy 2026
Amanda
PS I tried to reply in your box your link went to but WordPress didn’t like me because my email in there somewhere but not with them ! Far too complicated to sort that out! Grandchildren etc keeping me busy along with painting etc