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Last chance to see the MTL:USK Sketchers at Stewart Hall, Pointe Claire

August 27, 2015

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Just a quick note – three more days to see some original artwork from myself, Shari Blaukopf and Jane Hannah on display at Stewart Hall Art Gallery in Pointe Claire QC. We each have a variety of framed artwork, and a few sketchbooks on display. If you’re in the area, the show remains up till Sunday afternoon.

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Video Trailer for Travel Sketching in Mixed Media

August 25, 2015

This just in: The teaser/trailer for my new class Travel Sketching in Mixed Media. This short video gives you a brief look at the seven sections included in the 2.5 hour video series. Check it out, and don’t forget, if you register here on the blog, you get $20 off the retail price. (Click here!)

Travel Sketching in Mixed Media Live Today! Lesson Sneak Peek!

August 24, 2015

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The new video course is live for registrations as of this morning! Super exciting for me – I’ve been planning this for months now, and am very pleased to see people already signing up! Thanks everyone!

As a bit of a sneak peak of what’s in the course – here’s a capsule summary of the first project: Single Line Sketching. (You can read more about this exercise over here – in my notes from my 2015 USK workshop in Richmond, VA).

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My main concern when designing the Craftsy.com course was unlocking your ability to sketch quickly.

I don’t mean to pressure people about drawing faster. It’s not a race – you shouldn’t feel anxiety about drawing at a lightning pace. But on the other hand….the faster you can doodle, the more often you’ll grab a spontaneous drawing when you see one.

There’s nothing more fun than seeing a glimpse of a lovely view and saying – ‘hold on a minute, let me grab a sketch’. I hope that we’ll all gain the confidence to just dash off a drawing when we feel like it.

This is the big secret to productivity in the field. Having fun with it, being relaxed, and a little bit ‘uncaring’ about results. Just draw, and enjoy the feeling of capturing the memory of a place. You’ll love showing those sketches to friends and family later, or even just looking back at the books yourself.

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Single Line Sketching is something that is easier to show than to explain :) Which is what’s great about video :) But here is the sketch I’ve made from this view, in only a minute or two.

The idea is to follow the horizon line with one continuous line – without picking up the pen. Just make a scribble that loops back across itself and wanders around the important silhouette edges – like dropping a thread that drapes over the horizon.

The technique might seem overly simplistic – but it’s a sure fire way to teach yourself to simplify and find the important shapes. And it’s also just the first step in the process.

If you have a few minutes more – or if you can steal some time later on as you’re travelling (waiting in train stations or airports, taking a break in the cafe, all those bits of downtime that you have on the road), the next steps are accenting your drawing with darks, and then – where the real fun begins – tinting into the sketches with color.

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You’ll be able to see me go through a few of these examples in the video, showing how easy it is to bring your sketches to life with glowing shapes full of color.

There are still quite a few concepts after this first sketchbook drawing style approach. I’ll go on from there to talk about working from shapes instead of a linear drawing, some discussion about simplifying perspective, and then moving on to demonstrate the steps I use to rapidly sketch in watercolor using a stack of layered shapes. More about all that in future posts!

I hope I’ve intrigued you about the class. If you head over to register now, I’m offering $20 off the retail price – just for being a supporter of the blog. These courses and my books are what allow me to keep on sending you drawings. So I hope you’ll enjoy the program, and get inspired to go sketching! And please – share these links with your friends. I’d like to reach as many sketchbook artists and journal keepers as possible.

Thanks
~marc

Singapore Workshop Results: Street Portraits and Crowd Shots

August 23, 2015

We’re recently back from the USK symposium in Singapore.

After a few years of going to the annual international event, I’m starting to take it as a normal experience. But really – it’s far from normal. It’s actually super duper amazing :)

Gathering together with artists from all over the world for a massive festival of drawing. To be able to draw from sunup to sundown with other obsessive sketchers. When I look back on it, it’s astonishing that this outrageously fun event is made possible every year by everyone’s combined efforts.  The behind-the-scenes planning of the symposium committee, the support of the sketchers who come, the hard working local volunteers, and the goodwill of instructors coming from all corners of the earth.

This year my small contribution to the program was a workshop on Street Portraits. In my personal work recently, I’m doing a lot of plein air painting – but back a year ago, when planning for Singapore, I was launching my Craftsy.com course on sketching people, so this was foremost on my mind.

I was surprised to see, when designing the class that in even the short time since launching my online course, I’ve already improved tweaked my process for drawing people.

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I have been trying to keep up with self-training. My hundred person challenge for instance, or the occasional afternoon out sketching at a pub. But I have not really been going to life drawing in a serious way. The last time was back in January. There just hasn’t been time with all the travel we’ve been up to :) (First world problems hey?). So, imagine my surprise, when I go back to street portraits – suddenly I have a lot of new ideas that come from my travel sketching.

Sketching landscapes, has made my people drawing better! Who knew? Ha.

The shortest explanation of the new approach would be: Go directly to ink without a pencil gesture > Greater emphasis on Silhouette Shape > Less concern with inking black shadows – as I know that the watercolor will handle the values.

I admit – there is always going to be a high failure rate with direct-to-ink sketches from life. But it’s just paper at stake. I’m totally OK with flipping the page and sketching another one. (This is why I like loose paper vs. bound books).

I drew the shoemaker on the far left (above) six or seven times over the course of the three day workshop. (His portable workbench was right next to my teaching spot). Gradually you can get a subject’s routine down – seeing the ‘working pose’ between reaching for tools, tamping his pipe, and selecting another shoe to work on.

In the end, despite many false starts, I have this fresh, lively drawing, that I couldn’t have gotten any other way. (Here’s an old post that illustrates this perfectly).

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The faces on the left here are good examples of my current theory “head-shape/hair shape”. (See class notes).

I’ve chosen to teach this direct-to-ink approach even to beginners, because A: it’s much faster this way and B: it makes a more spontaneous drawing. I now think that any added difficulty students might have at first (when going straight to ink (or watercolor)) – will be overcome by a few weeks practice – and will pay back 100 fold in more responsive, honest, direct observational drawings.

This doesn’t mean I never-ever use a pencil-gestures-and-inking-over approach. Just that I always say – you can only teach what you do. So I have to show what’s on my mind right now. Even if it changes year to year.

Anyway – this is a complex question – and I’m sure I’ll be mulling over the value of pencil guides vs. direct ink drawings more than a few more times this year.

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I hope you’ll check out my class notes from the workshop. There are a few good tips for portraits, and a good trick for drawing crowd scenes to back up your stars. You can get the free PDF below (click the image) or from my download page over here.

As well – in celebration of the launch of my new Craftsy.com class on Travel Sketching in Mixed Media – I’m also putting my original Sketching People in Motion class on sale – $15 off –  for any readers of this blog. (Click over here to register).

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~m

Sketching Lac Boyd: A Taste of the Good Life

August 22, 2015

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I’m just back from sketching with the Dunany Studio Artists out near Lachute Quebec. They’re a wonderful group of dedicated painters who meet weekly. You can tell they’re serious about painting, willing to try out new ideas, and to work hard at it. You can also tell they’ve been painting together for awhile. The group has a friendly, relaxed feel that makes them a lot of fun to paint with.

This lakeshore view was my demo from the afternoon session on day two. Our host had put us up the night before at a cabin on the lake, allowing us to experience getting up early to the mist on the water and the sound of loons calling. I can see the attraction of this kind of life. I had a great time just painting and philosophizing about art with the group, while imagining this was my own back yard view.

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Over the two-day paint out, we tried a variety of exercises aimed at making better compositions in watercolor. I had students do a 15 min sketch, making bold silhouette shapes directly with the brush – something that might have been frustrating – but they were all willing to give it an honest try.

Later on we moved to tinting miniature compositions we’d sketched with as little as three-to-five lines. All this was working towards the kind of bold, direct painting you might do when sketching on location. If you’re aiming to work quickly that is. Getting a sketch in an hour or so – in a watercolor sketchbook, or on a small format sheet.

Lately, I’ve been emphasizing strong simple compositions that I call The Three Big Shapes.  In this approach I try to eliminate any unnecessary clutter to make the final image as graphic as possible. In this painting, I’ve left out the underbrush in the foreground, omitted some overhanging trees and ignored a dock. All with the goal of making as few shapes as possible. It’s just Sky, Land, and Water – and a few cabins made out of the negative shapes left behind.

Of course, you can’t always do it in just three shapes. Sometimes it requires more. But the goal is as few as possible. What can you leave out, or merge together, in order to make stronger compositions?

This emphasis on simplification helps you see big shapes that you can fill with bold color. Working with very wet paint put down on dry paper, I’m letting each brushstroke fuse into the next – allowing juicy pigment to merge right on the paper without any blending or glazing. Other than making pale washes for the sky, there’s almost no mixing on the palette required.

So, a big thanks to the artists out in Lachute for trying these ideas out with me.

And of course, if you’re interested in seeing some of this in action yourself, I hope you’ll try out my new video class on Craftsy.com: Travel Sketching in Mixed Media. These videos, along with my books, are the livelihood that allows me to keep up this blog. I appreciate all your support!

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Announcing a new video lesson: Travel Sketching in Mixed Media!

August 20, 2015

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Hey everyone! I’m excited to announce my second video series with Craftys.com!

Travel Sketching in Mixed Media is a followup to my 5 start reviewed course Sketching People in Motion.

This time, the focus is on making sketchbook drawings and rapid watercolor sketches as you travel the world. My number one goal with the course, is to help you come come with sketchbook full of memories from your trip. Be it a family vacation, a day trip, or just taking a long lunch hour every Friday – my greatest reward is seeing people’s sketchbooks fill up with images.

Or, click on over to the Instructional Videos page of the blog to find out more about Travel Sketching in MIxed Medial! You will find a special registration discount offered to anyone who joins via my blog.

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Volterra’s Roman Amphitheater: Ancient History with a Bizzare Restoration

August 17, 2015

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This is my personal favorite sketch from our time in Volterra. It is perhaps not the most pictorially beautiful painting. It could even be called confusing.

You are looking down at the partially reconstructed ruins of a Roman theater, with scabby grass growing between the rocks. It was hot and dry, baking the moisture out of the painting almost immediately. This was actually helpful getting this completed in the short time I had these interesting shadows.

This might not be the sketch you would choose to hang on the wall – but in my mind it holds an interesting story. Which in all honesty, we would never have heard about, if not for our friend Simo showing us around.

These ruins had been lost for many years. But apparently it was obvious to those who understand these things, that there was a Roman theater hidden here. The shape of the terrain is distinctive – and there were probably records – old maps and manuscripts with drawings of the place, or people’s diary writing. So, while most people had forgotten, someone always knew there had been a grand structure here .

In the years between the Romans and the 1970’s this piece of history might have fallen naturally – or been scavenged for stone used to build the town. But there was also a kind of willful ignorance humans will always employ. Because of the high 13th century era wall, and the location at the edge of the city center, it was somehow considered a great spot for tossing garbage. Eventually the ruins were completely buried below the city dump. I guess if you have a surplus of stone ruins in your area, you don’t care about burying a few rocks under your midden heap.

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The town of Volterra, which goes back to the Etruscan times, had two modern industries before today’s reliance on tourism. At first it was the heart of an Alabaster carving empire. We heard about at least two great families who made their fortunes exporting treasures in Alabaster. During our week painting, we stayed in a beautiful villa that had been the country home of one of these art-barons. Today it is an artist retreat/bed and breakfast run by artists Klaudia Ruschkowski and Wolfgang Storch.

But the most recent economic engine of the city was an entirely different thing.  A huge mental asylum.

Sometime before its decommission in the 1970’s, the ever expanding complex had a population of 6000 patients. I can only imagine it must have been a Dantean warehouse for the mentally ill – along with any number of unfortunates who were simply tossed in there, never to return. A few internet searches about the asylum raise up grim stories such as 200 patients sharing a bathroom. Modern day Urbex photographers have infiltrated and brought back photos like these.

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(Photo: Fabrizio Costa)

We are told that at one point everyone in the town worked for this hospital in some capacity. If not actually guarding the inmates, they were probably washing the sheets, cooking the food, or whatever support was necessary. Perhaps this came naturally, as the town has, since the middle ages, also had a stone fortress with a dungeon, which is still used today as a prison. Presumably the medieval cells have been modernized. (I hope). Coming into town by bus from Florence, we met an artist/actress who was on the way to a theater project in which they perform inside the prison. Somehow in collaboration with the prisoners? I didn’t get the details.

In any case – at some point in the 50’s, a local man named Enrico Fiumi who had been educated as an economist was working at the Guarnacci Museum and Library in some capacity. He became an expert in local history and became aware of the buried Roman theater.

In an incredibly Italian story, he achieved two things. He convinced the asylum to *lend him mental patients*, to carry out the excavation. Presumably as volunteers who would do anything to get out of that place for a short time, and presumably working entirely with hand tools, and without any real training or supervision in Archaeology.

As well – as the excavation took shape – he conducted a many year long campaign to relocate a modern day soccer field that had sprung up next to the old dump – finally allowing them to fully uncover the theater. It was probably harder to evict the soccer players that it was to borrow the mental patients.

Today, you can look down while passing from one gelato shop to the next espresso stand, and snap a picture of the ruins without ever becoming aware of this strange history. This is the kind of thing that I find fascinating, and what leads me to spend an hour in the blazing sun, making this painting.

For the artists still reading to the end: the sketch itself was drawn quickly in pencil to capture the complexity of the floor plan. Then, working very quickly, I painted the dry grass with a marbled mix of Sap Green and Goethite, working left to right systematically in little patches of wet on dry. The pigment Goethite (brown ocher) from Daniel Smith is quite similar to the commonplace Yellow Ocher – but I enjoy it for its opacity and extreme granulation. Effects like this patchy grass can be easily implied by the natural sedimentation of the earth tone. The shadows are mostly mixes with DS Moonglow. A cheater’s color for shadow if there ever was one.

 

Steam and Stone with Simonetta

August 9, 2015

Our week painting with Simonetta Capecchi in Volterra was a different sort of Tuscan experience. Not the usual tour of Italian food and culture the area is known for. She’d chosen the painting locations based around the theme of states of matter. Steam and stone.

We spent time in the town of course, the various historic squares and churches – but the real focus of Simo’s locations was the earth itself.

We visited many strange landscapes, starting with a drive through an area used for geothermal power generation. The ridge above us featured conical towers with the disturbing look of nuclear power plants. The steep valleys bisected by fat chrome pipelines arching over the road and cutting down hillsides transformed the entire valley into a postmodern sculpture.

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We started the exploration with a short walk through white clay hills that had the feel of a miniature Sahara desert. I did a quick sketch of the pale dunes, then turned around and sketched the reverse view directly behind – a stand of hard-scrabble olive trees and tinder-ready underbrush.

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It was odd to see the two different landscapes sit right next to each other. We had a hot and dry lunch of bread and cheese and moved on.

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Over a short but steep climb, we started to see the steam vents. Initially just small holes in the earth emitting a puff of smoke that might have been a dust-devil – but soon enough we came to the fumaroles themselves. An area that looked like a land slide or a small open pit mine where there was no top soil – just sand and red rock and big cracks in the earth emitting tendrils of smoke. This is the natural engine beneath the geothermal plants.

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It might have been a moody landscape  – there could have been a hellish feeling even – except for the surrounding green hills, and the blue sea in the distance. I was told we could see Corsica on the horizon.

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The next day we visited The Balsa – a great wall of red rock that is part of the foundations of the town of Volterra. The flat-sided ridge tapers off to narrow pinnacles, reminding me again of miniature versions of other places. Something like what we saw in Utah. I suppose this is the reason for the phenomena of the Spaghetti Western.

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On the way back from this view point, I pulled off a nice 10 minute sketch while standing in the blazing sun. I strapped my umbrella to my body using my shoulder bag, had to hunch a little to stay underneath it. I’m sure this looked ridiculous, but was the only thing that made the direct sun bearable.

I’m continuing to love these direct watercolor sketches. I used to talk endlessly how the drawing was so important, and how everyone should make a careful line drawing before considering color.  It seems I’m moving away from that technique – but I suppose I am still making a drawing  – it’s just that now I believe you can make that drawing using only the edges of interlocking shapes. The line can happen in the very moment the washes are forming.

In the time since these Italian sketches, we continued onward to Asia for the Urban Sketchers workshop in Singapore, and a followup painting holiday in Cambodia. So I’ll be showing some more of these ‘shape paintings’ in the next few posts. Stay tuned!

~m

Last Minute Workshop Opportunity: Sketching the Wild Atlantic Way, Kinvara Ireland, Sept 2-6 2015

August 7, 2015

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I’ve just heard that there are still spaces available for USK Correspondent Róisín Curé’s 4 day sketching workshop in Kinvara Ireland. The workshop is available either with accommodation or without, and there are discount rates for non-sketching companions. Prices have been reduced for anyone who can take advantage of this short notice opportunity!

This is a fantastic setting for drawing and painting – and I’ve been a long time fan of Róisín’s work. I wish I could go myself.  If anyone is already living in Europe, or is planning to be in the area in early Sept – I encourage you to have a look at the workshop details: Rosincure.com

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Venice : A Sinking Feeling

July 26, 2015

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[Santa Maria Della Salute, sketched from a secret garbage handler’s dock]

Venice. Is there any more romantic city? The maze of narrow streets, the glittering mystery of the carnival, the doomed (?) feeling of rising sea level. I have always wanted to travel here.

Sadly – there’s something wrong with my brain. This trip, for whatever reason, I wasn’t charmed by the place. I have to think that’s on me, not Venice itself. I came unprepared to find the real city.

We did meet our friends Stephanie Bower and Sean Andrew Murray – both in Italy by coincidence at the same time as ourselves. So that was the highlight. To be able to sketch next to other talented artists is something I don’t want to take for granted. I’m spoiled that way :) We go out of our way to have those experiences.

Seeing Stephanie’s masterpieces of perspective appear so easily for her – that’s always a pleasure – and a stern lesson. Her skills are frankly intimidating. Though she’s a patient teacher, I’m a lazy student when it comes to the discipline of architectural views. Mine are the painter’s cheats. Style over structure.

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[The Grand Canal from the Academia bridge, early AM before the relentless heat and crowds]

We may not have given it enough time. Only a week. We might have not budgeted enough cash. A struggling artists resources don’t go very far. A great deal of what there is to see in Venice is barricaded behind a living wall of tourists. Being willing to buy some special access passes to things, stay in some historic hotels, and hire a few water taxis probably would have helped.

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[Bridge of Sighs – from directly below the usual vantage point – lucky low tide opportunity]

Even though I enjoy the sketches we got – this faux Sargent Bridge of Sighs being a favorite – I hope to return with a better frame of mind some day. I’m kicking myself for not making friends with locals, and not doing better research in advance. I could see there is an extensive artistic community here. This is going to take a more serious attempt another time.

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[St. Marks – only the good parts – minus a few thousand people in the square]