![]() OK – I’m going long here – so I’ll wrap up with some progress steps, showing what I call ‘Drawing from the Outside In’. Concentrate on what a place feels like, the impression, the atmosphere, and it will come through in the sketch. I hope you’ll be encouraged to take some artistic license with your own sketching. (Nothing against architects! Some of my best friends and all that). ![]() ![]() ![]() I’m going for the feeling of the building, not the architect’s rendering. But I’m not willing to slow down the energy of the drawing in order to be perfect. In fact, I’m *trying* to be as accurate as possible. These errors (or improvements, depending on your taste) just happen naturally. It’s built into my eye-brain-hand circuit. This is all stuff that just happens without planning. The principle I call ‘ Gradient of Interest‘ at work. And of course – I am using color to selectively guide your attention. Plus I frequently do this unconscious thing – ‘slimming’ the building, sketching it a little taller, a little more elegant than it really is. And of course I’ve left out the neighboring buildings. I’ve also completely ignored the correct number of windows and dormers. This is all in order to sketch an unobstructed view of the front elevation. I’ve cut down a big tree, pushed another one behind the tower, lowered the fence posts, and removed a complicated lamp post as well as a bunch of ugly signs. In this case I have made some significant changes from reality. (Ok, in fact I do have an easel, but I use a light-weight camera tripod I can pick up and walk with). And, unlike a plein air painter, you don’t have a big easel pinning you in place. You’re not a camera – locked into a point of view. You only need to shift a foot to the left to change your view angle enough to understand what’s blocked by a tree. One of the big advantages of drawing on location is that you can move around the subject. We are free to edit out unimportant or distracting details.Ī great storyteller never lets facts get in the way of the truth. I feel we should be making a conscious effort to compose what we see. Your special ability as an artist to alter reality to suit your needs. ![]() I’d like to use this sketch to talk about ‘artistic license’. (I can report, the chateau’s office is not 100% historically accurate). These drawings might turn up on their team shirt later this summer. The pipers asked me inside to get photocopies of the sketches. In the summer tours are given by docents in 18th century costumes.īonus sketches! I went by the chateau on the weekend, as part Montreal’s World Wide Sketchcrawl #44 and drew the guards, and these pipers. They seemed to get a kick out of being sketched – despite being photographed about 100 times while I was there. I don’t suppose an artist comes by every day. The Chateau was the first building proclaimed as a historical monument in Quebec and is the province’s oldest private history museum. I drew this one leaning against our city hall, looking across the street to Jacques Cartier Square. This sketch, (done back in April) is the Chateau Ramsay. I try to make the most of this time – running around looking for views that will be obscured by foliage later. Every spring in Montreal we have a brief opportunity when it’s warm enough to be out drawing, but before the leaves come back on the trees. ![]()
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