Thursday, 12 July 2018

One Sketch #109) The Incredible Hulk

Although, perhaps he isn't always good
He isn't evil, just misunderstood.

Ok - I don't like copying another person's artwork if I can avoid it. To be fair, this I sketched based on a CGI image from one of the films, rather than original artwork from the comments. Basically it was to answer a challenge from a class I taught today, and having made the sketch the temptation to say - that's today's sketch sketched was just too great to resist.

I'm not entirely sure why the Incredible Hulk was suggested as a subject, but ironically he was the star of the comic I used to read every week when I was a kid. Marvel comics didn't really make any kind of impression in the UK until the early-mid 1970s, when they launched a number of British comics reprinting stories from the original American comics from the 60s. I had Mighty World Of Marvel delivered every week. Headline story was always the Hulk here, whom I liked. Middle pages were Daredevil - not bad. Third feature, the Fantastic Four, whom I loved.


Wednesday, 11 July 2018

One Sketch #108) George Michael

Not good enough
This sketch, and what a cost
The world cup semi final -
England lost.

Right, I can't bear to watch England play football in a serious tournament. Last week I painted Laurel and Hardy instead. It was a pretty good picture, and England won. On Saturday I painted Marilyn Monroe, and England won. So I asked for suggestions who to paint during the semi final rather than watching it, and my daughter's mother-in-law suggested George.

Well, we lost.

I don't blame Angela for one minute. No, I blame myself. It's just not quite as good a painting as the previous two. I can only apologise to my countrymen and women.

Tuesday, 10 July 2018

One Sketch #107) Traditional Cuckoo Clock

Isn't it ironic
That a bird which builds no nest
Should find such ornate housing
Is the kind he likes the best?

Apropos of nothing my wife, out of the blue, mentioned yesterday her grandmother's cuckoo clock. As it happened I remembered this item quite well. It was very like the one in the picture - a traditional birds and leaves design, with a little blue and yellow bird which had stopped coming in and out and cuckooing before I came on the scene. They're funny things, aren't they, cuckoo clocks? I mean, they are just a tiny bit ridiculous. . . and yet, I really rather like them. As for my wife's Nan's clock, well, sadly she passed away well over 20 years ago and I have absolutely no idea where it ended up.

Monday, 9 July 2018

One Sketch #106) Dolce Gusto Coffee Machine

I'll drink another cup
Its rich and bitter virtues
Will caress my senses
Into wakefulness,
And lo, with a sublime taste
The day begins anew.

This is my beloved Dolce Gusto coffee machine. Alright, beloved is maybe a little strong. I know that there are other brands out there - I've had a Tassimo in the past - which produce coffee which tastes as good. But I do like the Dolce Gusto. This was second hand when we had it, but I tell you what, it don't half make a good cup of coffee. I've never been a tea drinker, me, always a coffee drinker, ever since my Nan got me drinking it when I was small. Back then it was instant, and I'll be honest, I was only really drinking it for the two teaspoons of sugar she used to put into it. Then, when I was about 15, I decided that all of that sugar couldn't be good, and so I gave it up, and forced myself to drink coffee without it. For 3 months I hated every cup, but by the end of that time I realised one day that I was now drinking it and enjoying the taste of the coffee, and that's when I really became a coffee lover. Since then I've graduated from Maxwell House to Nescafe to Gold Blend. Then from Gold Blend to a filter coffee machine. That was better, and I was known to use a cafetiere at times. But nothing. . . nothing I used to use ever produced a cup anything like as good as my Dolce Gusto.

Sunday, 8 July 2018

One Sketch #105) St. John's Church, Cardiff - South Wakes Urban Sketchers Monthly Sketch Crawl

No Gothic revival this
It never went away.
And as it nears its millennium
Still it looks down
and down
And sees
All is well.

Yes, today was the July sketchcrawl of the South Wales Urban Sketchers chapter - Cardiff again, but this time a Sunday rather than a Saturday. This time we each of us stayed outdoors, in and around the Hayes area. This is the only direct watercolour I made, but I did make some ink sketches - here they are: -
 This is a bear from Cardiff Castle's famous animal wall. I enjoyed sketching it, and wanted to do more, but I was standing up and the sun was beating down on my bald spot.
 I broke the habit of a lifetime, and asked this chap if he didn't mind me sketching him. He couldn't really refuse - I'd just put some money in his bag. Very good he was too - a selection of Dire Straits' hits, which always goes down well with me.
 The Hayes Island snack bar.
The Old library - our meeting place. It contains shops, and a museum, and a café, which was closed, so we had our post morten session alfresco today.

Saturday, 7 July 2018

One Sketch #104) Marilyn Monroe

The original candle in the wind
A lasting icon
But a frail and fragile person too
The person, long gone
But the icon?
Imperishable

Right, you need to stay with me on this one. A few days ago, on Tuesday, the England football team were playing in the last 16 of the FIFA world cup against Colombia. Now, being 54 years old, and a lifelong England supporter, you'll appreciate that I've been put through the wringer by England many times. In all honesty, my nerves just wouldn't stand watching the match. So I painted the Laurel and Hardy sketch which was actually my 100th One sketch a day. I finished just in time to see the England goalkeeper save a penalty to put England through.

So, today, England played their quarter final against Sweden. To put this into perspective, England have reached something like 7 quarter finals previously during my lifetime, and won precisely 2 - and the first of those, 1966 I am too young to even remember.

So I bottled out of watching it. Hoping to work the same magic as the Colombia game, instead I painted another iconic film star, the great Marilyn Monroe. She starred in one of the most joyous comedies of all time in "Some Like It Hot", and despite dying before I was born she's still as big an icon as she's ever been.

One Sketch #103) Isle of Lewis Chessmen (Friday 6th July)

Forgive me if I find I must digress
But who'd have thought of Vikings
Playing chess?

The first time that I can actually remember seeing any of the Viking chess pieces discovered in the Isle of Lewis in the Hebrides, was in the mid 1980s. I was at London University studying English, and Old Norse and Old English were two of my constituent courses. Those of us studying these courses took an afternoon to visit an exhibition in the South Bank devoted to art and culture immediately following the Norman Invasion. In the gift shop I bought a replica Knight and a replica rook, and had I had enough spare grant from my student grant ( if you're under 40, then ask your parents what they were) then I'd have bought the whole set. I thought they were amazing. I've seen the originals several times since in their home in the British Museum, and if you ever get the chance to do so, I highly recommend it.

Fast forward  good ten years and I actually did buy a full set - although the pieces were approximately half the size of the originals. That went the way of all flesh some time in the last 18 years or so since we moved house. Nonetheless I retain a huge amount of affection for these remarkably dramatic and animated figures, and it's nice to think of hairy Scandinavian beserkers settling down for a nice game of chess after a hard day's pillage.

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, ...