Archive for the ‘Objects’ Category

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More Instruments

March 29, 2012

Last month I returned to the MIM to draw some more exotic instruments. As before, I had so much fun sketching that I forgot I was in a music museum. The instruments are so carefully crafted and so cool looking that it really is more like being in an art museum.

I also enjoy wearing the headphones because then when annoying onlookers try to talk to me I can just pretend I didn’t hear them. I often get lured into a conversation by someone pretending to be interested in the sketching, only to find myself trapped 30 minutes later as the person is talking my head off. Hey I came to draw, not hear your life story. Such is the burden of the urban sketcher.

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Tannenbaum, O Tannenbaum

December 24, 2011

Meet the new tree…

Same as the old tree…

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Mix it Up

November 18, 2011

Okay so I realize that this sketch of a mixer is not very exciting. But what you can’t tell is that this mixer is seriously as tall as a person. That’s why I felt compelled to draw it. But I should have drawn a person or something next to it to give an idea of the size. 

By the way this was done at the Crystal Creek Sandwich Shop in Flagstaff, AZ where they make their own bread.

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Pink Nightmare

August 16, 2011

Here are a few more of my timid attempts at using color. I rigged a small watercolor palette that is portable and fairly easy to use with the idea being that I could do watercolor sketches on the go. Of course I did all three of these in the comfort of my own home. So I guess I am still working up the guts to do those watercolors on the go.

The problem is that I spend a lot of time on http://www.urbansketchers.org, which showcases the work of some pretty dang amazing sketchbook artists from all over the world. Seeing all these new masterpieces pop up everyday is both inspiring and intimidating.

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Washington DC

July 4, 2011

In the summer of 2009 my little brother got an internship in Washington DC, so I took the opportunity to go over there for a weekend to sketch, hang out with Brady, and try not to argue about politics.

We spent my first evening there rollerblading up and down the mall between the Lincoln Memorial and the Washington Monument.

I made two attempts at the Lincoln Memorial. I have this obsession with Lincoln. Whenever I come across a Lincoln statue I must draw it.

The next day, Brady had to work, but part of his job is to give tours of the Capitol Building to visitors, so he gave me my own personal tour, which was way more interesting than I thought it would be and which included riding the secret underground kiddie train from the senate offices to the Capitol Building.

Then I went off to explore for the rest of the day on my own while he kept working. I probably walked about 10 miles going back and fourth between the major sites.

Eventually I stopped for lunch at Old Ebbitt’s Grill, where many presidents have dined, along with one of my favorite writers, Sarah Vowell.

After that I loitered around the National Gallery where I saw Manet’s Plum Brandy (one of my favorites).

And Rembrandt’s Polish Nobleman.

I even came across another artist…

Now what we have here is a drawing of a woman doing a painting of a painting by Berthe Morrisot. Oh and the Morrisot painting also has a painting in the background.

And on the right is The Ragpicker by Manet.

The next day Brady and I went to Iwo Jima.

Then it was back to Old Ebbitt’s for a drink.

Later that night we got in the car and tried to find a place to have dinner, but every place we went you had to pay at least $20 for parking. So we ended up in Maryland at a place called Plato’s diner, where Brady updated his Facebook and learned all about Scrapple.

All in all it was a pretty great time.

Happy Fourth!

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The MIM part 2

June 27, 2011

A couple days after the symphony I went back to the MIM with my mom and grandma to check out the actual museum. I didn’t expect to last longer than an hour or so as I’ve never really been a big music person. But that’s a the great thing about sketchbooks. As long as you have one, you never really get bored. And the museum was great. There were thousands of instruments and they were all so weird and fun and crazy looking that I forgot it was a music museum and started thinking it was in an art museum. And in a way, I guess I was, because these instruments were definitely works of art.

We ended up staying there almost three hours.

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Uncle Jeff

June 23, 2011

My uncle Jeff was killed in a motorcycle accident on September 11, 2000. He was a prominent doctor in my hometown of Sioux Falls, South Dakota, and a few years ago they commissioned an artist to sculpt a life size statue of him. The statue now sits in front of the hospital where he worked.

I thought the sculptor did a pretty good job of capturing his likeness, considering that they only had photographs to go by. Sadly I did not do as good a job of capturing the likeness of the statue, even though I was sitting right in front of it.

The task of making a statue look like a statue (as opposed to a real person) has been an ongoing struggle for me.

I did this drawing in 2008, the last time I went back to Sioux Falls. It is my plan to draw this statue next time (and every time) I go back, and someday, I will do it justice.

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Drummers in Portland

June 16, 2011

I was in a square in Portland sketching this statue of Abe Lincoln when these drummer guys came up to me and looked at the drawing and told me a little background about the statue. They said that it was done towards the end of the Civil War when all the stress and pressure of the war and his personal life really started to show. In the statue you could see that he was more haggard and worn down than in most depictions of him.

Later on I did a quick gesture sketch of the drummer guy.

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They’re Called Thestrals

June 10, 2011

My brother won this stuffed dog on the Santa Monica Pier in the summer of 07. He loves playing those games where you win a stuffed animal, but he’s more into the game than the prize, so he gave the dog to me. The summer of 07 was the summer of Harry Potter, and our vacation was planned specifically around the release of the 7th book, so I named it Thestral, after the skeletal horses that are invisible to everyone except those who have witnessed death.

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Sit Down

May 9, 2011

I’ve been drawing a lot of chairs lately. It’s been a good challenge. It seems like a chair would be easy to draw since they don’t move, but I have a tough time getting the angles right.