Inspiration
Posted: December 23, 2015 Filed under: Uncategorized 13 CommentsReceiving a book in the mail is always a thrill, but today it was even more so because the book was Miguel Herranz’s “here and there (again)”, drawings from 2012-2015. I met Miguel a few years ago at the Urban Sketchers symposium in Santo Domingo and had a chance to leaf through his sketchbook during a lecture we both attended. If you were sitting next to me you might have seen my jaw hit the floor. His sketchbook is like an illustrated manuscript, each page more astonishing than the one before. I’ve probably talked about his work in previous posts, but if you haven’t seen it, here is his Flickr stream. You’ll see what I mean. I bought the book through his crowd funding project so I don’t know if it’s readily available, but it’s a treat to have the book in hand so I can really study the detail in the sketches.
I guess I had his pen drawings in mind when I was sketching in Pointe Claire Village today. There’s still no snow in Montreal, but the winter colours are quite beautiful on an overcast day. And with all this rain we’ve been having, it seems to me that the grass is getting greener every day. Sketched in a Handbook Watercolour Journal, 8″ x 8.

Sugar shack blues
Posted: December 21, 2015 Filed under: Uncategorized 68 CommentsMy intention this week was to paint a snow scene for my holiday blog post, but alas, the ground is bare, the sky is grey and heavy rain is falling. It’s not even a day for painting from my car. The sugar shack, painted from my studio, will have to suffice.
Despite the weather, my message is the same. I wish you a wonderful holiday season and a happy new year. Thanks to everyone who brought me so much joy this year — by emailing and commenting on the blog, by sending me suggestions and links to look at, and by coming out to sketch at workshops and with our Sunday group in Montreal. I hope that 2016 is filled with many sketching hours for everyone.
A winter palette
Posted: December 19, 2015 Filed under: Uncategorized 20 CommentsI’ve been experimenting with different colour palettes for this snowless winter we’ve been experiencing. Today I went out with three tubes of paint: Burnt Sienna, Indanthrene Blue and Raw Sienna. I love the combo of the first two and they make a luscious grey, but tomorrow I’ll swap out the Raw Sienna and replace it with Quinacridone Gold, in the hopes of achieving richer and deeper yellows in my washes.
Lemon lime
Posted: December 17, 2015 Filed under: Uncategorized 41 CommentsThe day started out full of promise. No classes, no grading, no meetings. A day at home that could begin with a sketch. Nothing too ambitious, just something to get me back into painting again. But it didn’t go as well as anticipated. I started and restarted and then started again. Changing subjects, changing tools, changing palettes. It just wasn’t working out for me, and I couldn’t figure out why. And then it came to me. It was all about pace. Working life has one pace for me — fast. But the pace for painting and drawing and looking is different. It’s much slower. And it’s sometimes hard to transition between the two. To slow down enough to draw carefully, to think about what you are doing, and to really look at things. But I was persistent. I slogged through the duds, and in the end it was my lemon lime still life that saved my day.
Bare
Posted: December 13, 2015 Filed under: Uncategorized 34 CommentsIsn’t the weather strange in Montreal? Around this date last year, I was painting the snowy view from my window. But this week it has been eerily balmy (global warming? El Niño??) and there were some December temperature records broken (warm ones of course). The driver/dog walker in me likes the dry roads, but the painter part of me is longing for the snow to fall. With this muted landscape, I find myself drawn to the complexities of an individual object like a tree, this one painted on a quarter sheet of beautiful Two Rivers paper — a gift from a sketcher visiting from Yorkshire who painted with our Urban Sketchers Montreal group in September. Thanks again Terry.

Wind down
Posted: December 10, 2015 Filed under: Uncategorized 16 CommentsMy teaching semester is winding down. There’s light at the end of the tunnel. Some free time in sight. Two more classes to teach, a few meetings, a pile of projects to grade and then…hopefully some days to paint and draw in the next few weeks before classes start up again in January. Alice, on the other hand, has a much lighter workload, and she agreed to pose for me today.

“Sketching the City” is live!
Posted: December 7, 2015 Filed under: Uncategorized 60 CommentsI’m really thrilled to announce that my second online class “Sketching the City” went live today on Craftsy.com. I had a lot of input for the content of this one and I tried to include a lessons about each of the things I love to work on when I sketch in urban settings — drawing facades, adding details to windows and doors, sketching poles and wires, and painting shadows. Like my first class “Sketching Landscapes”, there are seven lessons in the 2.5 hour class and you’ll see me draw in pen and ink, and then add watercolour to my drawings.
If you’ve never taken a Craftsy class before, you should check them out. As an instructor, I have to admit that I enjoy the interactive process of seeing people’s sketches and getting to answer questions. As a student, you have lifetime access to the classes you buy, and you can watch the courses on your computer, iPad or phone, at your own pace. You can also ask questions to the instructors and post your projects.
As I did with my first video, I’m offering a 50% off link to readers of this blog. I hope you enjoy the class!
Nord Sud Est Ouest
Posted: December 6, 2015 Filed under: Uncategorized 18 CommentsIf you live in Montreal you probably recognize this view. You see it as you drive south on Clark Street, just before the underpass to get into Mile End. The rusty water tower stands out starkly against the sky, and I’ve always wanted to sketch it. New York City has tons of these rooftops reservoirs, but there aren’t many in Montreal, and on a Sunday morning you can sometimes find a spot to park where you can see the tower. As I was sketching I realized that I didn’t know much about the building it sits on. I could just make out the faded word “Warehouse” on the brick but not much more, and because the structure in sandwiched between a one-way street and some railway tracks, I’ve probably never gotten very close to it. Back home, a little Google sleuthing turned up little more. The building is called St. Lawrence Warehouse but most of what I found were links to a musical collective of the same name. So what was this warehouse used for? What’s in there now? Still hoping to find out more.

Beauty or the beasts?
Posted: December 4, 2015 Filed under: Uncategorized 12 CommentsAt the grocery store this afternoon everyone was fighting to fill their bags with persimmons because the price was so cheap. I’ve never tried them so I bought a few to eat, but the real motivation was to sketch them first. I got home, unpacked them, set them up on my table and there they were, all orange and shiny and perfect… and totally uninspiring. On the other side of my kitchen was an uneaten pear that had been bumped and bruised in my lunch bag, and a bunch of browning bananas that will inevitably end up in smoothies or some sort of cake. And because decay is more interesting than perfection, I chose to draw the rotting fruit and go directly to eating the persimmons.
Street fog
Posted: December 2, 2015 Filed under: Uncategorized 28 CommentsIt’s that in between season when we alternate between rainy days and snow. I missed painting the first snowfall last week but there may be more coming tomorrow and I hope to be out there painting it. Today I used my Fluid paper to sketch the foggy street in my neighbourhood. I find this paper very forgiving. Every time I get to a place where I think a disaster is about to happen (usually that means adding too much water onto a damp area of the paper) somehow things work themselves out. I’m making my way through an 8″ square block and haven’t had too many disasters yet, so I may just buy another one. There’s also a great panoramic format which you can see here.























