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Thursday, June 11, 2015

Hunt Number 408 Sketches and Photos

Sketching is very slowly becoming a habit.  Some of you may not know that I have not always been a sketcher.  I am an impatient painter and like to get right to the nitty-gritty.  It is difficult for me to sketch out a plan and follow through.  I never knew how much drawing would help my painting.

When I was a kid, my mother drew on envelopes, calendars and letters.  I never thought of her as an artist and she never offered to draw with me.  She always worked and probably didn't think of herself as an artist.  Her sister, Katherine Field, became a well known artist.  Mom probably thought that Katy was the artist in the family and let it go at that.

I was not subjected to art in school.  In early elementary we would make things out of paper for holidays or have some play time with art supplies.  That was about it.  I did not try painting until after Gene and I were married.  I sent off to an art school that was on a pack of matches as I recall.  I paid a good amount money for the course.  It was supposed to be finished in a year.  It was a good one.  I could mail in  in a lesson a month.  The art teachers would put tracing paper over it and return my artwork with a critique.  I was working full time and had two (wonderful) kids and never completed the course.  They even extended it for three years with a very small additional payment.  The salesman even told me that I wouldn't have time to do, but he still made the sale!  I got a lot of use out of the books from that course so in the end it wasn't completely wasted.

I met Sue Modrak at a workshop in Montana many years ago, probably about 1995.  She sketches like her sketchpad is just an extension of her memory and hand.  We would go in a shop and she would see some painting or piece of art she liked and wanted to try the technique.  I would reach for my camera, which at the time was not digital.  Really!  She would just take out her sketchbook, jot down some notes and sketch.  In a couple of minutes she had much more info than what I had on my camera.

Sue encouraged me by buying me a sketchbook.  Every time we get together I become the owner of a new sketchbook.  I tried sketching on my own.  I would sketch when Gene was riding his bicycle and I was waiting for him.  I sketched mostly landscapes and nooks and crannies where we were staying.  I rarely sketched at home, only when we were traveling.  We do travel a lot, but to sketch like Sue, you have to do it all the time.

Sue sketched when waiting in line, sitting in a doctors office, restaurants, etc.  She sketches so beautifully and has a likeness or image in a few strokes.  She doesn't have a website at this time to share her wonderful work here.

Another wonderful sketcher of people is Susan Carlin http://susancarlin.com in San Antonio.  She can get a likeness in thirty seconds.  She says she used her allowance money to pay her friends to be models when she was just a kid in elementary school.  She has wonderful workshops at her studio/gallery http://www.whistlestopcorner.com/  Susan is a great person and artist. Go to a workshop there, you won't be disappointed.

In 2006, I found wetcanvas.com.  At first I was interested in the pastel and plein air forums.  After a short while I discovered the Scavenger Hunts.  Jamie Williams Grossman http://www.hudsonvalleypainter.com/  was in the plein air forum and she started the Scavenger Hunts. We are on Scavenger Hunt 408 http://www.wetcanvas.com/forums/showthread.php?t=1381196 now, so the idea works for other sketchers, too.

Hunting for sketches has been a good thing for me.  At first I had to really work at it to make myself sketch so often.  Now, like I say, it is ALMOST a habit.  One of my goals is to make sketching a habit, just like Sue Modrak.  I'm getting there, but sometimes sketching is still like my homework and a bit of a chore. One of these days.........


For Scavenger Hunt 408 sketched in the large sketchbook with a Micron 03, Number 1, ellipses - there are a few in the fire remnants on the porch.
Number 2, grooved - the rail for the sliding door

Number 3, used to soothe a person - one of the rocking chairs on the porch.  Strange angle, it looks lop sided.  Sketched on my iPad with the program Brushes.

More photos from our walk the other day and my walk yesterday on the road.  I did not care to ford the waters on my own around the lake.

 This dock is a bit unusable at the moment, don't you agree?

The Mexican hats are soooo thick out in the field.

You can see the field needs cutting, our neighbor started yesterday and quit.  I guess he had a problem with the mower.

Gene had his machete and was being the trail blazer when we had to get off to go around the water.


We saw a blue heron.

 Oops he flew away!

Oh, there were two herons.

 I saw this friendly rabbit on my walk.
And a social squirrel in a neighbor's yard.



5 comments:

Bag Blog said...

You always encourage me with your sketching. As a kid, I sketched all the time. Lazy now.

Joanna said...

I'm glad you're sketching so much.

I love the photos of the heron...and the other heron and rabbit and squirrel. But, mostly the one heron. :-)

Hugs...

Jo Castillo said...

Bag Blog, are we switching times? You sketch less and I sketch more, hmmm.

Joanna, that flying heron was a good catch. Just luck. :)

Jennifer Rose said...

I would not have guessed you were a late starter to sketching, you are very good at it and very dedicated to the scavenger hunts :)

Jo Castillo said...

Thanks, Jennifer Rose. I am dedicated to the Hunts mostly out of guilt. I have been doing it so long, I feel guilty if I don't. You can tell when I am enjoying it, the sketches are much better. Ha.


About Me

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Bastrop, Texas, United States
I Grew up in a small town , Magdalena, New Mexico. I enjoy art and the pleasure other people get from my work. I always donate some of my sales and art to charities, especially for children. That started in Bolivia with Para los Niños. "I cannot pretend to feel impartial about colors. I rejoice with the brilliant ones and am genuinely sorry for the poor browns." -- Winston Churchill

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