Tag: observational drawing

Alumni travels

This month three of last year’s Illustration graduates, Drew Starling, Felix Miall and Hari Connor, took part in the Stojkow Arts Residency Programme in rural Poland where they were able to do lots of drawing and gather inspiration for upcoming projects. In this week’s blog post Hari shares her experience and some of her lovely work created during her week-long residency.

The residency is on this beautiful farm in the rural south of Poland, surrounded by meadows, rivers and forests. I love going out of the city to work on drawings at a slower pace, and I’m always inspired by nature and by making work together with other creatives. I’m really interested in observational drawing as an exercise, how the process of drawing changes how you interact with a place, making you slow down and appreciate tiny details, and how the final artwork can reflect one’s experience of the space. It’s also really interesting travelling and working with other illustrators, and seeing how different artists’ interpretations of the same landscape or object can completely vary.
I’m currently putting together a new book called ‘The Way I See It’ that collects my observational drawings from the last few years chronologically, finishing up with the work from this trip. The book will be small, and include notes and prose that I wrote at the time – I wanted to recreate the feeling of handling something personal and intimate that you get when looking through someone’s sketchbook.

The book has gone to print, and should be arriving next week in time for launch at Glasgow Comic Con – I’ll be selling it online and bringing it to Thought Bubble after that. I’m doing a new, experimental comic that includes a huge amount of natural scenery and plants, but I’ve only sold short zines of my observational drawings before, so I’m really interested to see what people think of it in comics circles!

Comics meadow scenesIMG_6010IMG_6014IMG_6022IMG_6034IMG_6066tree pencil sketch

Stojkow Arts Residency Programme was set up by Jessica Kettle who graduated from ECA Illustration in 2014. For more information email jessicakettle10@gmail.com.

 

Drawing in the Meadows

Last week the first year illustration students set out on a location drawing trip in the Meadows with artist Catharine Davison. Most of the students are familiar with this area of the city and were encouraged to look at this setting in a new way, concentrating on working directly from source.

Catharine encouraged the students to use a variety of materials, including charcoal:

“Drawings with charcoal and a rubber are a perfect introduction to working quickly, enabling the students to adjust to the changing light conditions and on a relatively large scale. The willlow charcoal creates a soft grey mark that is easy to rub away even with a finger and a darker compressed charcoal brings another dimension to the process, also could explore scratching with a rubber and a knife, layering darker lines and marks to reveal shapes of light and dark.”

The group moved to a different location within the Meadows in the afternoon to look at a row of historic and contemporary buildings with a busy pedestrian path way in front. Each student was given a pack of 3 coloured felt tips and a black marker. The colours were arbitrary as the drawing was not about ‘colouring in’ but more about creating a tapestry of marks in response to the location. A black line was then used to pull the composition together and to reveal the focus.

One of the challenges of a location like this is dealing with the public and the group was quite conspicuous, attracting lots of interest from passers by. They were photographed and witnessed some lively conversations, but rather than cause problems for the students it began to add a narrative to their work. The students had a productive day, returning to their studio with a collection of expressive and atmospheric observational drawings.

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