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Christchurch Cathedral

February 24, 2013

13Feb24_Christchurch_MTL

Yes, it was the Metro Sketchcrawl today – but we did go above ground for a quick visit to Christchurch Cathedral. Beautiful woodwork in the beams, and plenty of stone carvings worth going back for someday.

Snow in Mount Royal Cemetery

February 22, 2013

Right now, I really want to be out there painting big huge paintings. But February in Montreal is more like moleskine and pencil weather. Last Tuesday was overcast, fairly warm, (around -3c), with a strong wind – which meant we had perfect conditions for big fat flakes of snow sticking to every surface.

On these days every tree becomes a sculpture, and every sculpture becomes a ghost. A perfect day to park the car in the cemetery and do a slow, sustained drawing.13Feb19_MountRoyalCemetery

Samurai Armor at the Pointe-à-Callière

February 16, 2013

This winter the Pointe-à-Callière (Montreal Museum of Archaeology and History) has been hosting Dr. Richard Béliveau’s collection of Samurai Armor. This is fascinating stuff to draw. Each one of these sets of armor calls on masters skill in metalwork, embroidery, fabric dyes, wood work, scrimshaw.

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There’s so much complex artistry in these artifacts. They really call for sustained drawings. I’d love to have a month to paint one of these….Perhaps. Perhaps I will. More on that later.

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This just in: audio interview!

February 1, 2013

Here’s a short (4:48 min) audio interview by freelance radio producer and reporter Sarah Deshaies, about the Innocence Lost sketching project. She managed to get some super nice comments from Trevor Barrette (playing Steven Truscott) on what it’s like being sketched.

Have a listen: S.Deshaies Innocence Lost radio interview

Final post in the Innocence Lost Production Diary

February 1, 2013

Part 6 – Feb 1 – Artistic License:

So: we come to the end of the production diary, but the beginning for the play.

Last night was the sold-out premiere at Centaur Theatre.  We can finally see it as it was meant to be – with music, lighting, and scenes flowing one into another.

During the dress rehearsal, I was given a little lamp with a dimmer, so I could sketch next to the stage manager Melanie St-Jacques. She sits surrounded by crew, computers and mixing boards, wearing headphones and mike, calling out in a steady, calming voice a constant stream of cues. Spotlights, sound effects, and video clips – fade this effect, bring up the next. All in perfect timing with the actors.  Like an orchestral conductor crossed with NASA mission control.

I’m amazed at the leap from rehearsal to stage. It’s a huge jump in the experience. Once again, I’m sure I’m the only one surprised. The actors and crew know this feeling, but for me, seeing what was already impressive reach that next higher level – it’s really quite a thing.

Frankly, I didn’t really understand live theatre before this experience. Now I get it. My form of art is mostly a solitary practice. It’s been eye opening seeing this kind of team work.

I’ll leave you with my favorite sketches from the project. These are the ones that went off the rails. The ones where I got a bit carried away. Sketching what I felt, rather than what was actually going on.

13Jan17_Centaur_BikeRide

In rehearsal, without the lights and music, I formed an instantaneous impression of this scene. They actually do this – the entire cast is there, floating around the two children on the bike.

I only saw it happen a few times.  Had no idea it was coming, and it was over in a second. As long as it takes to bicycle across a room. They said “let’s do that one more time” – I immediately grabbed a new sheet and scribbled furiously.

On stage, it’s an unsettling, ghostly scene. To me, more than a little ominous. I saw it as the overbearing presence of the community gathered in judgment. All the lies, the gossip and the fear that built up around these kids.

Beverly Cooper told me I missed the point entirely – that it’s meant to be redemptive. (That’s what I get for asking! Always go with your instinct.) Certainly the mood is completely different on stage. You’ll just have to see it for yourself.  But this remains my favorite sketch as it is, just because it’s an example of how everyone responds differently to art.

13Jan17_Centaur_PippaTestifying

Here is Pippa Leslie again, as Jocelyn Gaudet, on the witness stand. I found her small scenes the most chilling. I couldn’t help but think of the Salem witch trials. Children testifying about life and death.

13Jan24_Centaur_Onstage_03

This one is a little more light hearted. Allan Morgan as the first cop to interview Steven. There wasn’t a costume at this point – just the hat. He actually had a rolled up magazine, or winter gloves or something, stuck in the pocket of a bulky military surplus sweater. I swear he was miming a gun-belt. The real 1950 cop uniform is even weirder on stage – all brass buttons and leather belts. Like a fashionable Italian fascist.

13Jan14_Centaur_They'll send him to Collins Bay_He'll be in a penitentiary with hard criminals

[“They’ll send him to Collins Bay! He’ll be in a penitentiary with hard criminals!”]

The actual staging of this line is completely different. There was a slight change in the script for clarity, and there’s a bunch of other people in the full scene, and Julie Tamiko Manning looks completely different in her 50’s housewife costume and wig. And of course, she’s not clutching a page of the script. But still, this was one of my favorite captures of a line reading in rehearsal.

13Jan25_Roy_Surette

[Roy Surette]

So there it is! This has been a tremendous project.  Enriching artistically. Educational for me, coming from outside the world of theatre. I’m very grateful to be allowed the opportunity. And of course, I’m hopeful I’ll find a chance to do something similar another day with another production.

If you are in the area,  I hope you’ll take the opportunity to see the play here in Montreal, live at Centaur at the time of this writing, or when it opens at the National Arts Center in Ottawa on Feb 27th.

Thanks for following the production with me, and thanks to Centaur Theatre, the cast and crew, and Creative Director Roy Surette for making this happen.

~Marc

USK:MTL Sketchcrawl at the Musee

January 28, 2013

Yesterday 18 Montrealers met up for our monthly Sunday Sketching outing. This time at the Musee de Beaux Arts. Many people sketched views out the windows. Everyone is chafing to be on the street drawing. I think it’s still a few cold months away.

13Jan27_USKMTL_Musee_Sketchcrawl

I took the opportunity to do studies in the classical sculpture room. Technically visitors at the Musee are only allowed to sketch in pencil. In practice they don’t seem to mind a discreet bit of ballpoint pen, or even a little water pen and pan colors – but I think they’d draw the line at pulling out the tube colors.

In any case – I wouldn’t normally draw in pencil if it weren’t for the regulations. I don’t know why I don’t do it more often. It’s actually very relaxing. I think cast drawing would make great art therapy. It’s very calming, especially next to all this live-action-drawing I’ve been up to lately. I wonder if this is another sub-category for Urban Sketching – we could start a slow sketching movement! Perhaps that’s a topic for a future workshop.

Barcelona!

January 28, 2013

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Hey, this is good news – I just heard I’ll be going to the 4th international Urban Sketchers Symposium in Barcelona! I’ve cooked up a little workshop entitled: Drawing people in action – A character sketching crash course.

It’s a set of step by step exercises for sketching people – how to quickly capture their gestures and personality. I’m planning it to be a fun workshop, designed to be both informative and liberating. Lets get over our natural discomfort drawing people who won’t stand still for us. I’m sure I’ll be posting some worksheets and tutorials as we get closer to July. I like to give out the coursework for people who can’t make it in person.

Coincidentally , Montreal Urban Sketcher Shari Blaukopf has also been selected – so that’s kind of fun. You can meet both of the Montreal correspondents at the same time! I’m looking forward to meeting a lot of new of sketchers, and taking in as much of this incredibly sketchable city.

Part 5 – Innocence Lost Production Diary

January 25, 2013

Part 5 – Jan 25 – The Cutting Room Floor:

Just a quick report today. At the Centaur, the actors are finally up on stage, rehearsing in the theatre, in the actual set, testing lighting, music and sound (and some clever video effects). Here in our studio we’re in the midst of cutting mats and assembling frames. It’s all coming together. Starting to become a real show.

13Jan23_Centaur_Costume_and_Hair01

The other day I went backstage (or, I should say, below-stage) to see the costume and wig fittings. All that stuff takes place in a cramped basement full of old props and miles of electrical cables. The costume shop is packed to the steam pipes with hats, shoes and clothes from every period of history. The working spaces could be called ‘utilitarian’ – low ceilings, a tiny few barred basement windows, but nonetheless you can feel the theatre magic going on.

I was promised full access to the production – but strangely they didn’t let me draw the costume fittings. After watching the actors pour out emotions day after day in rehearsal, I would think seeing them in their underwear wouldn’t be a big deal :) But, at least I got to watch a wig-fitting!

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The stylists are clearly at the top of their game – it was a whirlwind of styrofoam heads and disembodied hairstyles in a tiny room, barely wide enough for a dressing table and a hilarious pink satin couch. I was drawing tucked up into a corner, perched on the smallest sink I’ve ever seen.

I got a kick out of all the mirrors with rows of lights. It doesn’t get more ‘backstage’ than that.

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I’ve saved my favorite sketches for the last in this series. See you next week when the art is up in the gallery and the show is on the stage.

Part 4 – Innocence Lost Production Diary

January 21, 2013

Part 4 – Jan 21 – Courtroom Drama:

It’s getting close to the end of rehearsal. Time is running out – I’ll be drawing right to the last minute. We’re hanging the show for opening night Tuesday January 29th. We’ll be having a small meet and greet from 5-7 pm, if anyone would like to come down to see the drawings, and I hope, also see the 8 pm show. As of this writing tickets are still available. (Purchase tickets here).

13Jan14_Centaur_Im curious how a fourteen year old boy comes to be sentenced to hang

[I’m Curious how a 14 year old boy comes to be sentenced to hang?]

Innocence Lost is about the aftermath of a murder. So of course there are trials and appeals, interrogations and interviews. Some of these scenes have all the dramatics of a police procedural. Big shot expert witnesses, testimony of the first responders. The stuff we’re so familiar with from our Laws and Orders and CSIs.

13Jan14_Centaur_you there be hanged by the neck until you are dead and may the lord have mercy on your soul

Allan Morgan is particularly cracking as the judge – spitting lines like ‘…there to be hanged by the neck until you are dead.’

Or the judgmental cop asking – Do you like girls kid? Maybe take’em into the woods?

Director, Roy Surette calls this Perry Mason Stuff. Some of the 20-something actors had to pull out phones and check that on Wikipedia.

13Jan14_Centaur_You interested in girls_Q

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What’s more interesting is the way the play handles the real situation. What it must have been like for the kids in the witness box. All of them seem out of their depth testifying – do they even know they’re building an incriminating timeline? Do they understand that it really does matter if it was 7:00 or 7:30 when they saw Steven and Lynn? Why are the authorities interrogating these school kids and not looking closer at the military personnel in town?

13Jan14_Centaur_Pippa Leslie

Pippa Leslie is particularly chilling as young Jocelyn Gaudet. Could this girl really comprehend what was going on? She seems hell bent on executing her classmate with testimony. Tying the noose with her words. Was she a thoughtless  kid lying for the attention, or just scared enough to say whatever the crown prosecutor wanted to hear? Did she make a small lie early, and end up way too deep?

It’s hard to say – who knows what any one of us would have done at that age. The crazy thing is that it ever happened. The idea that a gang of seventh grade kids could reliably testify in a death penalty case!  I understand why the story is still controversial.

I hear second hand, that there are people in Clinton who still say the jury did the right thing, despite what we know today.  Would you want to say your dad almost got a kid hung? Tough situation all around.

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Part 3 – Innocence Lost Production Diary

January 17, 2013

Part 3 – Jan 17 – Drawing Emotions:

13Jan14_Centaur_Dont build your hopes up_you don know_some funny things can happen

[ Don’t get your hopes built up. Anything can happen. ]

We’re getting into the actual scenes now. Not just reading through it, but doing the scenes over and over. Looking for the best way to imply emotions. To show the undercurrents. The drawings come out less like portraits, and more like versions of the characters. I find when the actor is playing younger, (they often switch between addressing the audience ‘now’ and what happened ‘then’ within the same scene), the drawing also comes out younger. It’s the same people – but I’m drawing them smaller, more vulnerable. I didn’t start doing it on purpose – it just happened.

13Jan14_Centaur_They found her dead_Q

[ They found her dead? In Lawson’s Bush. ]

Sketching from life usually involves exploring a city, drawing architecture. Maybe sometimes drawing people doing interesting things – usually it’s people doing something work related. It’s not often that you draw people in emotionally charged situations.  Drawing these actors, I’m seeing expressions of anger, shock, disbelief, grief. A greater range than I’ve ever drawn. Perhaps not the ultimate truth, (they are acting after all, and you can tell they’re holding back some juice for later on) but still – emotional situations a sketch artist just doesn’t usually see.

13Jan14_Centaur_I couldnt think of anything sadder in the whole world

[ I couldn’t think of anything sadder in the whole world. I still can’t. ]

13Jan14_Centaur_The father arrived in a belligerent manner asking why Steven had been picked up

[ The Father arrived in a belligerent manner asking why Steven had been picked up. ]

The great thing about the actors in rehearsal is they give me the scenes over and over, rewinding the action, trying on a slightly different attitude or emotion. (They actually make rewinding noises, walking and talking backwards speedily re-setting to the start of a scene. Really. Not kidding.)

This experience has been much more interesting than any drawing workshop. I get to draw the thing from life, but I also get three or four tries at it.

13Jan14_Centaur_Eight to One_Upheld his conviction

[ Eight to one. Upheld his conviction. ]