Saturday, August 24, 2013

Sketching is a unique way to see the world. I just returned from 2 weeks in and around Dublin, Ireland with my sketchbook in tow. When I travel, my sketchbook is my constant companion, compelling me to respond to my surroundings and make a visual record of my experience.

I am a visual artist from Calgary, Alberta Canada. My sketchbooks are records of distant journeys and places close to home. The drawings I make are often field notes or research which I use both directly and indirectly for paintings. I teach drawing classes for Alberta College of Art and Design, Extended Studies Program and meet my students in various locations around the city to help them capture a sense the immediate surroundings. Often when I begin a class I ask, "Why do we sketch?" The common thread seems to be an insatiable desire to capture a sense of place which is filtered through one's own perception.

Often the challenge for me is to work quickly, avoiding too many details. As a result I find myself asking, "What can I leave out?" Sometimes drawings are more interesting when the artist avoids rendering every detail and instead leaves only clues to what was seen. Sketching on location challenges one to be a "quick read" of life. It forces you to be in the present moment. By sketching I record my perceptions and process my observations about place.
Museum of Natural History, Dublin

In the Museum of Natural History, Dublin

View of Powerscourt Estate, Co. Wicklow

Working in the Negative Space at Powerscourt, Co. Wicklow


Mixed Media Garden Study, Powerscourt, Co. Wicklow