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A brush with the Black Death in Sienna

July 21, 2015

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The note on this sketch says “…sound of out-of-tune bells – how does this happen?”. It seemed to me that someone would have fixed such a thing over the hundreds years these bells have been ringing. Damn tourists! Like spoiled kids, right?! Always wanting a perfect experience :)

So yes – one of the days during the Cortona event we did a side jaunt to nearby Sienna. We’d already spent some time sketching on location with plenty of 1:1 feedback, so it seemed we might as well toss everyone into the pool and go on a sketching tour.

We got dropped off at the Plaza del Duomo and started by choosing a series of meeting points – circulating around a small area, and meeting at a visible landmark in an hour. So you could stick together if you wanted, or choose to have some alone-time with your sketchbook if you preferred. Either way, we’d be back together for the next leg of the tour.

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It seemed like a good model for this group of sketchers – people could find their level of artistic freedom vs. instructor attention. Each time we regrouped, people could see what we’d all found in the way of subjects. One person spent each session sampling dessert at a different café. That’s a sketcher who knows how to have fun :)

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When I’m touring a new place, I like to alternate between the big picture, (street views or architectural portraits), smaller details of structures (carved ornaments and such), and the “human element” – which is sketching people whenever possible – or in the case when it’s all tourists and no interesting characters – then I’ll draw statues :)

There’s great story I heard about this gate:

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Apparently this free standing gate leading from the basilica square to the larger oval track in the city center (where Sienna’s famous horse races take place) was originally intended to be the side entrance to a huge cathedral that would have massively enlarged the basilica, making it the biggest church in all Italy.

Except. The Black Plague occurred, and killed off both the work force and general enthusiasm for that project.

The gate, and some walls are still there today, implying just how impossibly big this structure might have been. It’s astonishing to stand in the street and imagine it roofed over with giant arches.

It’s always kind of magic to me, the way you sketch things, and later come to find they have some fascinating story. If you wander an area and just draw the interesting stuff – you’re always finding great things. You don’t need a guide book. Just looking at stuff, you can tell – that thing is something important!

This kind of fortuitous exploration is really inspirational to me. I feel the finding by accident, and the sketching by instinct and interest, connects me to history in a way that I’ll never get from books or documentaries.

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The Cortona Panorama

July 16, 2015
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So, of course I’ve already mentioned, we’ve recently been sketching in Cortona Italy. We were there in June teaching a workshop – which I was actually a little nervous about initially.

This was to be my big first sketching event outside the umbrella of UrbanSketchers.org and I was unsure what it would be like. I was working with a company I’d never partnered with before, and we’d chosen a town I’ve never seen. So there were a lot of questions how the event might go. Of course I need not have been concerned.

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The best thing about these workshops is the people. Anyone willing to drag themselves halfway around the world to go sketching is someone worth knowing! From the first day, our little group was exploring Cortona, drawing together like old friends.

By the end of the week, we’d been doing a lot of pen and ink sketching, and I was raring to get in a for-real painting. People were interested in seeing a big demo, so we set up at the lookout point in Piazza Garibaldi and I did this 9×24″ panorama.

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I was – again – a little nervous going in. I’d been drawing all week, and felt a bit rusty with the brushwork. Plus, I was a bit concerned about tackling this incredibly complex view. Not that I was going to back down once I’d set up the easel. You just stick to your game plan – do the things you are always telling people – “simplify, see the big shapes, draw with dry edges, let water play inside, come back when dry to re-enforce darks”. And miraculously – one of my favorite paintings of the trip just appeared before our eyes – like watching someone else paint it.

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Flying out to Singapore!

July 13, 2015

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Heading out to Singapore for the big USK symposium first thing tomorrow. In case you can’t make it – here’s the notes for my workshop. Maybe you can try and sketch a few characters back home. More news when we hit the ground sketching! ~m

 

Urban Sketching show opens Sunday in Pointe Claire

July 3, 2015

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My friend Shari Blaukopf has been working with the Stewart Hall Art Gallery in Pointe Claire on the exhibition “A Sketch in Time”, which opens tomorrow, at a Picnic Vernissage Sunday July 5th from 10am to 4pm. They will have a small selection of sketchbooks and urban sketching watercolors on display in the project room of the gallery for the rest of the month of July. There will be a few of my favorite older works hanging alongside paintings by Shari and our fellow urban sketcher Jane Hannah.

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There is an open invitation to come sketch with Shari and other Urban Sketchers, as well as other activities (info here). I would have liked to be there myself, except I’ve been called away to work on a sketching project down south, which I hope to be able to announce very soon. But if you’re in the Pointe Claire area, I hope you will stop by. 14Oct04_Fall_George Etienne Cartier Monument ~m

Just finishing up a week with Simo and Carolyne

June 29, 2015


We had a fun little reception in the garden at Villa Guadalupe here in Volterra. Everyone put out their works to recap the week and we had a nice gallery tour. We’d done the same at the class in Cortona, but I wasn’t smart enough to take iPhoto’s :) Here’s our teachers Carolyne Peyron and Simo Capecchi. They took us to all the best places in Volterra, and had new ideas to try at each spot. I was stubborn and stuck to my watercolors – but everyone else learned a lot from Chinese ink, found newspaper collage, blind contour drawing, even painting with wood stain borrowed from some workmen, and alabaster dust from the floor of a sculpting studio. By the way, here’s the view from the villa, and a look inside. You can stay with our wonderful hosts if you like – here’s their air BnB [link]. 

Shari Blaukopf’s Sketching Landscapes in Pen, Ink and Watercolor

June 17, 2015

I just wanted to get the word out to any of my readers that my friend and painting buddy Shari Blaukopf has just launched a Craftsy.com class.

Click HERE to Register for: Shari Blaukopf’s Sketching Landscapes in Pen, Ink and Watercolor

Quick sketch from Cortona

June 12, 2015

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Updated with a proper scan now that we’re home. This is a typical street view in the old village of Cortona. You can’t help but make sun-drenched sketches in this town – it is after all the inspiration for Under The Tuscan Sun. (The novel, and the film).

Workshop in Cortona starts tomorrow!

June 7, 2015

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We’ve been here a couple days, just looking around and enjoying the town. Lovely medieval achitecture, and spectacular views. Tomorrow we meet the drawing group.

This is going to be a great workshop – it’s a small group, which means lots of 1:1 feedback. The town is small enough we can get around on foot, and there are terrific drawing subjects everywhere you look.

I might not be posting for the next few days. We’ll see how busy it is.
Thanks ~ m

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Video Review: James Gurney’s Tyrannosaurs: Behind the Art

June 5, 2015

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The other day, James and Jeannette Gurney were in town, for the Benjamin Constant show at the Beaux Arts and he happened to mention his new making-of video: Tyrannosaurs: Behind the Art.

I’ve just received a free download from him – and am glad to give it a very positive review!

In this 40 min video, James takes you inside his studio – giving you an over-the-shoulder look at his painting process. He shows tools and materials, his painting methods – from the ideation and initial drawings, through the under painting in casein and eventually the finished effect in oils.

Here’s a great bit (below) where he selectively textures the surface with acrylic modelling paste, so the passages of color to follow can be worked in glazes and scumbles over top. A very efficient method of painting.

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Much of the film is on ‘how to be an illustrator’ – more so than how to paint. He gives valuable tips on research and scientific extrapolation from living animals, shows his rough designs and color mockups, as well as the client’s feedback and his final choices. We get to see a plein air study done for authenticity – and even go with him to the client as he delivers the finished paintings. Something that is becoming a rare event in this world of digital art and email.

This kind of first hand career advice is great stuff for someone trying to figure out the profession of illustration.

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But you’ll also find plenty of close up demonstrations of his painting method.

In the video he creates two paintings – showing bits of the work from start to finish. Jumping through time to give us the best parts – rather than long stretches of potentially repetitive ‘watch me paint’.

This is not a class for the raw beginner – he is making a real illustration, not taking time to simplify steps for students. So, besides some talk about materials and color choices, you are going right into the real deal.

While he will not explain every brush stroke for you – there is a lot to be learned from careful observation of his painting. It’s well worth watching multiple times. You’re seeing him work up close and personal. If you wanted to paint exactly like James Gurney – the method is here for you to learn from.

I’m always impressed with how efficient his paintings are. You can really see the weight of his experience. No stroke is wasted – every part builds on what went before to a rapid conclusion.

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It’s impressive how well he directs himself – painting and shooting the film at the same time, he knows when to set up the cameras and get a great shot. My favorite part being a daring correction where he blithely paints out a finished dinosaur face to make a change he felt improved the storytelling.

His reasons are sound  – but it’s a bold change many artists would have shrugged and hand-waved over. A perfect example of what makes a great illustrator. Commitment to getting the story right – even if that means giving up a great bit of painting.

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You can purchase the video – entirely shot and produced by James and his wife Jeanette – from his online distributors at Gumroad (credit card) or Selfy (paypal). It is well worth the moderate $15.00 fee. If you are a fan of his work, and would like to see more of the great content on his excellent blog – order your copy today!

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Breaking news: Landmark victory for victims of the tobacco industry in Quebec!

June 2, 2015

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I made these sketches last winter, while observing the Blais-Létourneau tobacco trials here in Montreal. You may check back here and read about my experience as a first time court room reporter, and my initial impressions on the sides of the argument.

Yesterday afternoon Justice Brian Riordan (sketched above) published his 236 page ruling – coming down clearly against the tobacco companies. He says:

“Knowingly exposing people to the type of dangers that the Companies knew cigarettes represented without any precaution signals being sent is beyond irresponsible at any time of the Class Period. It is also intentionally negligent.”

So there it is. A straightforward conclusion that the tobacco companies knew they were poisoning people, that they intentionally hid the truth, and profited from those lies of omission.

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Guy Pratte speaking for Imperial Tobacco Ltd

What this actually means for the industry, and those who are seriously ill remains to be seen – but here’s the meat of the ruling:

Justice Riordan awarded $6.86 billion in moral damages to the almost 100,000 Quebec smokers whose serious illness makes them eligible to be members of this class. Once interest and other charges are added, the total could be $15.5 billion.

Those who have lung or throat cancer will receive $100,000 if they started smoking before 1976 and $80,000 if they started smoking after 1976. Those with emphysema will receive $30,000 if they started smoking before 1976 and $24,000 if after. Once interest is considered, these amounts could be doubled or more.

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Suzanne Côté, recently appointed to the Supreme Court of Canada, (standing) 

I believe this means that it is the justice’s opinion, that the warning labels on the packages are insufficient defense – probably they came too late after knowing about the credible threat. (I have not read the report in detail, but this would be my guess as to why complying with labeling was rejected as a defense).

I must also assume that the ‘everyone knows smoking kills’ argument did not absolve the industry. Considering their knowledge that people could not overcome their addictions, despite the warnings and jokes about ‘cancer sticks’ and ‘coffin nails’, it’s not sufficient to say ‘don’t do this thing that I know you can’t resist doing and that I am so seductively advertising to you’.

And then there is the ‘well, motorcycles kill, and we still sell motorcycles’ defense – which apparently also did not hold water. I would imagine the logic is that motorcycles have the potential to be used safely, given proper precautions – whereas there is no safe use for cigarettes.

So damn! We kind of all knew this, but it’s rather incredible to see it happen in court.

I’m excited to see what comes next. Does this mean then that the sale of cigarettes will be banned in Quebec?  What will happen at the appeal? I will be watching with curiosity. I’m not sure I will have the opportunity to make any more drawings on the subject – but it was tremendous to be able to be there sketching on that historic occasion.

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Simon Potter representing Rothmans Benson and Hedges