Showing posts with label sketchbook. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sketchbook. Show all posts

Sunday, November 4, 2018

My college sketchbook discovery

Looking for something on my bookshelves yesterday, I came across several black bound sketchbooks from drawing classes and painting classes, taught by professors Alex Minewski and Alex Martin (I adored them both), during college in the early 1970s, in New Paltz NY.  The sketchbooks are filled with drawings such as the articulating cube study of a couple of boots, above.  But what especially intrigued me was discovering a number of assignments written on the inside covers of the sketchbooks. 
We were never given a finite number of drawings to do; instead, we were told to do "endless" articulating cube studies of hands, or drawings of the bases of trees, etc.  Whatever the topic, the number of required drawings was always "endless".  Many drawing assignments refer to the book The Natural Way to Draw by Kimon Nicolaides.
 *By the way, the paper in these sketchbooks is white, though maybe a little discolored by time.  But nowhere near as yellow as they appear in these photos.


Along with drawing assignments, I evidently wrote down assignments for a Freshman Studio class in the same sketchbook.  I remember finding them very obscure and confusing.  I didn't like the teacher.
I  recall doing a vividly colorful abstract painting based on the work of Hans Hoffmann, And then, suddenly, I was instructed to tear open a hole in the painting, for a reason I never totally understood.  I'm guessing it had something to do with getting us to understand that our work was not so precious, and not to be afraid to explore how it could be transformed.  But I had really liked the painting, and the transformation never sat well with me.  I got rid of the painting after the end of the semester. 

If I ever did the drawings of ears, I must have been so embarrassed by them that I made them magically disappear, because they are nowhere to be found in my bound sketchbooks.  But there's plenty of gestures and cube studies of hands...  Even then I was smitten with Flair pens, one of my drawing tools of choice.  I also favored soft pencils and charcoal.
 The sketchbooks have lots of drawings - gestures, cube studies, weight drawings, contours, etc, done of friends doing yoga in the lounge my roommates sleeping or hanging out, and so on.


I especially recalled some of the weekend painting assignments, such as drawing and painting in the old Huguenot cemetery in the town, and a weekend painting assignment based on a still life of a (very smelly) fish on a platter in the painting studio.  But I have no idea what ever happened to most of these paintings, or most of the drawings and paintings I did in college, both in class or as out-of-class assignments. 

I did a bunch of Rouault studies, as well as studies from other artists, in my sketchbooks.  Somewhere in my house I actually still have the self-portrait that I did working in the style of Rouault. 
 And then there's this bit of wisdom, straight out of Mr. Minewski's mouth to my sketchbook.
The sketchbooks of that era were vastly different than the much more journal-based sketchbooks students do today, and I suspect the drawing and painting classes were vastly different as well.  While we were asked to research various artists, we were not asked to keep written notes or reflections in our sketchbooks.  We did absolutely no copying of images from magazines or books or photographs, other than studies of the work of famous artists.  And of course we didn't have cell phones or tablets and such, and honestly, I am glad that we used observation as our primary source of inspiration.  Other than the famous artists studies, ALL of our drawing and painting was done from observation, or at least based on observation with expressive interpretation of what we saw.  We learned, in painting class, to model form using color.  We learned to manipulate the weight of our line and to explore the way forms bent and twisted.  While a lot has changed for me in the decades since my college education, I'm glad that this was the way my education as an artist began.  I'm working to rediscover the skills I learned at that time! 
I hope I haven't bored you too much!!

Sunday, January 1, 2017

Doodlemania!

It's no secret that I'm a compulsive doodler.  I've blogged about doodling on other occasions, HERE, HERE, and HERE, for example.  There are more if you choose to look for them. I'm getting ready for a little art display in a local library, and thought it would be fun to mat and display a few of the more elaborate doodles.  So I started digging though some old little sketchbooks.  I got a couple of mats cut with six windows, figuring I could pull at least a dozen doodles to put in them.  The two above didn't make it into one of the mats, at least not yet.  Here's what did:
And here's another six.  The six below remind me somehow of the circus.  Not sure why, but I think I'll call them 'circus doodles'. 
 I realized  I had so many pages of doodles that I  will need to cut some more mats!  And these are just the ones that are in three little sketchbooks.  There are more...  Anyhow, here's another batch of 6:
 Occasionally I just leave a doodle in black and white, like the two below.  Then I have friends and acquaintances insisting that I should get a job designing for adult coloring books.  But here's the thing - I doodle WHEN I WANT TO, and not to anyone's specifications.  I don't think I'd be happy doodling if it was for a job. 
 Sometimes two disparate doodles seam to belong together.  That's what happened with the two below.  I was surprised to find how much I liked them next to each other.
 A lot of my doodles have been done at meetings and such. Case in point, the one below, done at a Temple Board meeting.  A few little notes sneaked into the doodle. 
 I came across these old doodles from union meetings, from my time when I was union president and/or on the negotiation and grievance committees. I bring a little pouch to meetings loaded with a batch of colorful Flair pens, black Sharpies, and an odd assortment of other fun pens and markers and such.  And of course a little sketchbook. 
And it appears I did a LOT of doodling at those Temple board meetings.  Others on the board would make sure to sit next to me so they could watch me doodle while we argued about finances and the religious school and such. 
 I think  this doodle below was from a speaker or workshop at an art conference.  I don't recall who the speaker was, but I like a lot of the words I wrote down. 
 If you are interested I've also written blog posts about the value of doodling.  Yes, it's a good thing!  To find any of these posts, just go to the labels on the bottom of the blog and click on 'doodling'.