‘How do you get to Carnegie Hall?’

Syed_0001Dilute Lexington grey in fountain pen and water-brush, water-colour, A6 – 20 minutes

Here’s Matthew Syed presenting at a conference I went to recently. He’s a journalist, former UK table-tennis champion, and the author of ‘Bounce’ where he explains the importance of ‘purposeful practice’, and how the myths of ‘innate talent’ and ‘genius’ do us all a disservice.

Although many of his examples are taken from sport, his ideas have a lot of relevance to art and perfectly parallel Danny Gregory’s enthusiasm for daily sketching. He explains a tennis player’s skill at returning a fast serve, and a Grand Master’s ability to play 20 simultaneous games of chess blindfolded as the learnt ability to “encode complex information in higher order chunks”. And I think this is what sketching is; the ‘complex information’ is the chosen subject, the ‘higher order chunks’ are the expressive lines we make on the paper, and the ‘encoding’ is the way we arrange these lines.

Every time I draw a person I’m learning new and simpler ways to represent, or encode, human figures; the particular curve of the fore-arm, the ways that cloth drapes over shoulders. You can see the process at work in the four figures above; I improved the proportions of the legs and torso (but then lost the scale of the head), and although the arms got better the last hand was a complete mess. As I continue to practise I become better at doing more of these complex ‘encodings’ at the same time, the lines become more expressive, and I become a more fluent sketcher.

Syed says that “in the construction of complex skills the evidence is overwhelming that the importance of ‘talent’ is very, very minimal and far less relevant than hard work.” This is highly encouraging for sketchers as our ‘hard work’ is the pleasure of regular sketching! Daily drawing with new challenges helps to build the necessary hours of ‘purposeful practice’, familiarity with occasional ‘failures’, and the satisfaction of a good sketch feeds the vital ‘internal motivation’. The only part of Syed’s recipe for excellence that is missing for most sketchers is the presence of a coach, and perhaps that’s why so many of us blog, to get the feedback we need to improve?

Posted in body, clothing, from life, hands, Lexington grey, line drawing, people, sequential, sketching, technique | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Buskers

Here are two of the many Bath buskers. The first is Ben Powell, an impeccable finger-style guitar player who I’ve sketched a few times before (see below). The weather’s been fine so he’s barefoot this time. I showed him the sketch and got chatting; his love of guitar started when he heard John Williams as a child.buskers1White Gelly Roll pen, Lexington grey in fountain pen and water-brush, watercolour, A6 – 20 minutes

And here’s Steve Robinson mid-song; apologies to him for the mess I’ve made of his face. I spent most of the time concentrating on the tricky hand angles; then I tried to correct the mouth and the problems escalated… Beware of over-working any part of a sketch, but especially the face!

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Lexington grey in fountain pen and water-brush, watercolour, A6 – 20 minutes

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Posted in Bath, body, clothing, Feet, from life, hands, line drawing, musical instrument, people, sketching, street scene, urban, white pen | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Sketchcrawl

Jim1Lexington grey water-brush, pencil, white pastel, A5 – 30 minutes

Here’s Jim busy drawing when six of us met up for a Bath sketchcrawl this weekend. One of the main motivations for starting this blog was to try and meet up with local fellow sketchers; it’s taken eighteen months but it worked!  This was the first time we’d sketched together and we managed about an hour before we went for tea.

Sketchcrawls are a curious thing; you meet up and and then separate fairly fast, the sketching itself being solitary. But it’s good to see the other sketchers nearby and then share subjects, approaches, materials, chat and a drink after. Here we are at the cafe; Jim, Tim, Diana, me, Tim and Robin.

sketchmeet_9364We stayed near the Abbey and were surrounded by crowds, buskers, and Saturday shoppers. Three of us drew people, and three drew buildings; I tried to sketch my five fellow sketchers to record and celebrate the occasion, but large slow moving groups of tourists made this very tricky and I only managed the one of Jim above, the outline of Tim’s hat, and a distant view of Robin reclining on his folding chair. I look forward to our next gathering, when I’ll get straight into sketching the bigger scene, the buildings and the crowds…

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Posted in Bath, coloured paper, from life, hands, Lexington grey, monochrome, pencil, people, sketching, urban, watching | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Rear windows #2

circus91White Uni Posca brush-pen, pencil, white pastel, A5 – one hour over two days

The back of the King’s Circus, Bath, drawn from a convenient bench outside the Fashion Museum. Standing in the middle of the Circus the circular terrace of symmetrical buildings is very beautiful, but as with Marlborough Buildings I prefer the slightly chaotic rear view, with drain-pipes, chimney pots, extensions and TV aerials…

Below’s the work in progress. I drew very faint lines dividing the paper into thirds to help place the key elements of the sketch; as it’s the back of a circular building the perspective is oddly exaggerated on either side. I added pencil shading and a white sky to increase the contrast, and finally some white pastel on the windows to help make the picture pop.

PS Am sketching in Bath city centre this Saturday, starting around 2pm by the Abbey’s large wooden front doors. You’re welcome to join us!

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Posted in Bath, buildings, coloured paper, from life, line drawing, monochrome, pencil, sketching, technique, urban, white pen | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Snails

snail1White Gelly Roll pen, Lexington grey fountain pen and water-brush,watercolour, A6 – 30 minutes

Heavy day-time rain drew the garden snails out, so I collected a few and sketched them as they moved across a table. For a creature that’s proverbially slow  (1 meter per hour) they move a lot, their heads and tentacles constantly twisting and feeling out the way, making them tricky to draw.

They’re unusual creatures; hermaphrodite, nocturnal, hibernating, have one lung, are edible, live about 2 years, and have been spread from Europe to most parts of the world. And I’ve never noticed before that the spiral of the shell is always on the right hand side of the snail’s body, not that they have any hands, just the one foot…

Posted in animals, botany, from life, garden, seasonal, white pen | Tagged , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Stantonbury

color_0013Lexington grey broad fountain pen and water-brush, water-colour, A6 – 20 minutes

A quick sketch of a familiar view, looking South West towards Stantonbury Hill about 4 miles away. It was a balmy early summer evening, the trees all in leaf, just after sunset with a few clouds low on the horizon. I’ve drawn it many times before, and can never quite get the hill shape right…

Posted in Bath, from life, home, landscape, seasonal, sketching, sky, trees, watercolour sketch, weather | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

All together now…

choirPencil, Lexington grey water-brush, water-colour, A6 – 20 minutes

A small part of the excellent Mendip Male Voice Choir, pencil sketched while they sang ‘Goldfinger’ and ‘Always Look on the Bright Side of Life’ at All Saints Church in Weston, Bath. I added the colour and shading when I got home.

Posted in Bath, clothing, from life, Lexington grey, line drawing, pencil, people, sketching | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Fish and chips

aberporth3White Gelly Roll pen, Lexington grey water-brush,white gouache, A6 – 20 minutes

A car park overlooking the sea in Aberporth, sketched while waiting for fish and chips, with mushy peas and curry sauce. Cars have odd curves and angles, but it’s also their familiarity that makes them challenging to draw; like hands and faces, we’re so used to seeing them that it’s very obvious when they’re not quite right…

Posted in coloured paper, from life, holiday, Lexington grey, line drawing, monochrome, sea, vehicles, Wales, white pen | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Beside the sea #2

Some more from Easter at Aberporth in West Wales. People and dogs on the beach observed over 30 minutes (spot the soggy wet-suit walkers); a tractor pulling a boat out of the sea after the morning lobster-pot check; and fishing from the beach in the evening. I sketched some beach folk last year too, but used a brush for the more distant figures; using the pen encouraged me to start doing tiny contour drawings. The brown Kraft paper is great for beach sketching, that’s the background sorted

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Top two done with Lexington grey in fountain pen and water-brush, Pigma 1mm pen for the small one, gouache on all three, A5 – 30 minutes for the people, 15 minutes for the tractor, and 10 minutes for the fisher-folk

Posted in animals, beach, coloured paper, from life, gouache, holiday, Lexington grey, monochrome, people, sea, sketching, vehicles, Wales, waves | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

One lump or two?

camels1Pencil, fountain pen and water-brush with Lexington grey, wine stain, A6 – 20 minutes

camels2Water-brush with Lexington grey, A5 – 10 minutes

A new favourite toy model animal, the familiar but strange Dromedary (the one-humped camel of Africa, Arabia etc). It has the strong curves of an elongated alien horse, all thrown into silhouette with lovely long shadows when sketched with the sun-light behind, or ‘contre jour’. The first one was cross-hatched once I’d drawn the contour lines in pencil, the second pair were sketched directly with a brush. The golden sand background is the natural colour of the Fabriano paper, slightly enhanced for effect.

Just for balance here are some sketches of a tiny and ill-proportioned toy Bactrian, the rarer two-humped camel of central Asia. And those are meant to be pools of shadow…

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Blue and brown Pigma pens, brown and blue acrylic ink in water-brushes, A6 – 20 minutes

Posted in animal, brush pen, hatching, inks, monochrome, toys | Tagged , , , , , , , | 1 Comment