Tuesday, 15 May 2018

One Sketch #51) Waterloo Bridge


Where are the Samaritans?
Look around
They are beside you
In front of you
behind
Look in the mirror
And let one look back at you. 

On the way driving home from work yesterday, I had the radio on and was listening to Radio 2, as is my wont. A guest on Steve Wright's show was a very interesting chap called Jonny Benjamin. He was telling of how he was saved from carrying out his suicide attempt on Waterloo Bridge by a passing good samaritan, and of his subsequent internet search for the man who saved him, which forms the subject of a TV documentary he made, and a book he has just published. 

As a depressive myself, I found him, and his work campaigning to raise public awareness of issues regarding mental health, to be quite inspirational. 

Another biro sketch made in a snatched 10 minutes at lunchtime at work.

Monday, 14 May 2018

One Sketch #50) Ant

Alone, I am nothing
But I am not alone.
Alone, I'm worth nothing
But I am not alone
Alone, I achieve nothing.
But I am not alone.
And a million nothings
Are something.

This is actually a biro sketch I made it in work today. The inspiration was the fact that since the weather has become warmer we've developed a little bit of an ant problem here in my house. We found where they were getting in, and my wife bought some ant killer. Now, I have a bit of a problem with this. I don't want to go killing them. So I picked one up, told him what was going to happen, and that poison was being put down, and he had to warn his colony. Since my wife put down the ant killer, we haven't seen any. I can but hope that it's my warning which did the trick.

Sunday, 13 May 2018

One Sketch #49) Eurovision

Eurovision Song contest -
I do not mind the singing.
The problem is my waking up
To find my ears still ringing.

Like a lot of people, every year we have a party to watch the Eurovision Song Contest, which took place last night. My kids, grandkids and spouses were all present, and that's a lot of us. Eurovision occupies a unique place in British cultural life, I would suggest. I wouldn't want to try to define exactly what that is, but love-hate just doesn't get it.

My favourite was the Austrian entry which came third, although I like dthe Israelis entry - pictured - as well. Incidentally, this is a sketch I made with watercolour pencils, which I've only ever used once or twice in the past.

Saturday, 12 May 2018

Tips 5) How much detail is too much? How much is enough?


When people comment on my sketches, they are more likely to comment on the amount of detail in them than anything else. There’s no doubt that I’m a novice when it comes to simplifying a scene to try to describe it accurately in as few lines as possible. When it comes to detail I often lay it on with a trowel. This is often not a conscious decision, it just happens when I make sketches. Sometimes I’m lucky enough that it works. Other times, not so much. 

Here’s a couple of sketches from 2017 where I think that the amount of detail works to the detriment of the overall picture.



This one I made in Alicante Airport. It’s not a very good rendition of the scene in the departure lounge because it’s far too busy, and there’s too much detail in the background, which distracts your eye away from the figures in the foreground, which should be what the sketch is all about. If I did it again, I’d pay  far more attention to the figures, and include more detail, and then just use some vague outlines with no shading at all for the background.


This one has the opposite problem. It shows the Charles Bridge in Prague, and it’s just not busy enough. It’s little more than an outline. There’s a very vague suggestion of some of the brickwork and some silhouette figures on the bridge. But that’s it. To be fair, it was a very cold day in Prague, and after the ten minutes or so it took to get this far, I was just frozen and my fingers were numb, so I stopped, and I never found the right time to go back and complete it.  
This is another one which is just too busy. This is the Domkirche, the Cathedral in Berlin. I caused my problems for myself by sketching it so large, which didn’t leave much room for anything else. If I’d had a smaller cathedral in the centre of the page, that would have given me more room to very lightly sketch in what was around it, which I think would have worked a lot better. 

Detail isn’t the be all and end all. Here’s the very first sketch I made with a specialist sketching pen.

When I made this sketch it was something of a eureka moment. To me, this isn’t at all detailed. There’s a lot of simplification gone on, and the shading isn’t very subtle. Yet when I look at it, I see St. Katherine’s Church. I even think the simplicity of the foliage in the background works. 

This is just my observation, but I think that the eye tends to be drawn to the areas of a sketch where there is the most detail. Now, there’s no rule that says that you have to try to make your reader focus on the dead centre of your sketch. You may want to offset the main focus towards the right, left, top, bottom. But if you have a very detailed area away from where you want the viewer to focus, it is going to drag their attention away. If you have competing areas of detail, this can make it difficult for the viewer to know where to look in order to ‘decode’ your sketch. So let me show you what I think is a far more successful ‘busy’ sketch. 



If you were to cut this vertically down the middle, then you’d see that there’s far more detail on the left half than the right. In fact your eye should be drawn to the most detailed area, the two figures in the foreground, and the bridal shop they are passing. This is because this is the ‘story’. The two people are my son in law and my daughter, who had just become engaged – it was serendipitous that we passed a bridal shop, and I asked them to walk past it a few times while I sketched their figures. Then I let them go, and I sketched in everything else. Your eye is led down the street by the way that the details on buildings and figures further along the street becomes less clear as you go further along the street. I wanted to show a glimpse of Cardiff Castle on the other side of the street, but kept the road blank, the trees in silhouette, and the castle with minimal shading so that they are never a distraction.



More traditionally, this next sketch places the centre of attention clearly in the centre of the page. This is Dylan Thomas’ Boathouse at Laugharne. The danger I found when sketching it was that the most detailed part of the sketch is actually on the bottom left hand where the wooden beams and railings are by the side of the house. This was in danger of pulling the viewers’ attention downwards, so I used quite heavy shading on the opposite side, and sketched in a lot more detail of the bushes around the bottom and the right hand side than I might otherwise have done, which balances the railings, and hopefully keeps the viewer’s main attention on the house. You might compare the bushes with the dearth of detail in the wall on the top right hand corner, and the sea and shoreline on the left. 

Both of these demonstrate that while you might not have much control over what elements have to be in your sketch, you do have choice over the amount of detail that you use. You can get surprisingly good effects by combining very detailed areas, with areas which aren’t more than outlines. 

* When you’re in the early stages of making your sketch, look at the scene you’re sketching, and think carefully about the areas which need more detail, and those which would be better sketched in more lightly. Too much detail can be confusing to the viewer, too little can also be confusing, and may not engage the viewer’s interest.



The last sketch is one where I feel that I got the balance right. The most detailed area of the sketch is the Altes Museum entrance in the background. Everything else becomes lighter as you move closer to the reader, and further towards both edges of the sketch. The tree trunk on the right, for example, is hardly there at all.

One Sketch #48) Insole Court


Built on the sweat of the many
For the comfort of the few
Now, a free pleasure for all.
(Apart from the cappuccino
Which is bloody expensive)

Today was monthly sketchcrawl day with the South Wales Urban Sketchers chapter. Insole Court was also the venue for the February sketchcrawl which was the only one I've had to miss this year. Lovely place if you like this kind of sprawling, heavy Victorian Gothic revival architecture. Even if you don't, the grounds are well worth a look.

I thoroughly enjoyed this, not least because about half a dozen people all came up for a look while I was making the watercolour sketch above, and were very complimentary. My ego needs all the boosting it can get.

One Sketch #47) Pirate

A pirate was a criminal
A taker, not a giver
These rotten bums
Were soaked in rum
When bidding timbers shiver.

So, yesterday I was looking for inspiration. Not finding any, I closed my eyes, and said out loud to no one in particular, "The first thing that comes into my head is what I'll sketch." Heaven alone knows why the word 'pirate' came into my head, but that's what did. So I quickly sketched this, based on Captain Jack from the Pirates of the Caribbean franchise. Apparently, he based his character on Keith Richards, which is why Richards himself appears as Jack's father in one of the films.


Thursday, 10 May 2018

One Sketch #46) World War One Tommy


Born a son of the soil
A westcountryman,
An artisan.
Not especially well educated
In all ways, unremarkable.
Asking for little
And receiving less.
No soldier, but a baker.
Now, just a random number
And a name on a gravestone. 

Sorry about that. I'm currently working on poems by Siegfried Sassoon and Wilfred Owen  with some of the children in work, and whenever I do this, I can't help thinking about my great grandfather, a man called Edgar Bennett. He was my father's mother's father, and was killed on the first day of the Battle of Passchendaele. I always knew he had been killed in the First World War. but it was only a few years ago that I managed to find out when and where. I'm fairly sure that when I visited his grave in 2016, I was the first member of the family ever to do so. 

Catching Up . . .

Been a while, hasn't it?  Don't worry, I haven't given up sketching. No, I just haven't got round to posting anything. Now, ...