Sketch Book for the Artist

(singke) #1

INTRODUCTION


ALCHEMY


At school, and sometimes beyond, we are advised or even


required to plan our pictures, declare the idea, explain the


composition, and practice each part before putting the final


image together. This suits many artists well and is perfectly


valid. However, excessive planning can get in the


way of the imagination, the unknown, and what


you discover in the process of making. It denies


the importance of accident, which can offer


keys to other things.


These two brush drawings, created


centuries and cultures apart, are both


made of ink laid onto wet paper with


speed and agile certainty. The physicality,


balance, and spirit of each subject was


held strongly but loosely between


the fingertips, and allowed to flow


through the brush. Each image


relied upon past experience to


know the probable behavior


of the brush, ink, water, and


paper. They each allowed the


FLOWING SKELETON
The gliding poise of this walking
anatomy comes as much from the
feeling of movement as it does from
the feeling of drawing. I made it
almost unconsciously with a pen and
a brush, trusting my intuition to find
a visual equivalence for the sensation
of weight within my body.

energy and focus of the moment to be expressed through


controlled accident and a degree of the unknown Both


drawings were made trusting the marks, and at speeds


beyond conscious thought.


As you draw any subject—something you see, feel, or


imagine—it is not enough to only render its shape,


size, and position in space. You must also think of its


intrinsic nature: its purpose, meaning, and how it feels


to the touch. Know the texture, temperature,


depth, and opacity of your subject. Imagine


these qualities so strongly that you feel them


in your mind and at your fingertips. Whatever


the material— wood, silk, bone, metal, fire, or


ice—you must actually feel it beneath your


fingers as you draw. As your hand meets


the paper to make a mark, it should


be responding to the sensation and


meaning of the subject it draws. If


you can do this, your marks will


become the subject on the paper.


This is the alchemy of drawing.


BRUSHED LANDSCAPE
This is a detail of a brush-and-ink
drawing by a Japanese Buddhist
monk. Our position as viewer is
unsteady. We float toward the
quiet vista as it also moves toward
us. We are caught in a shifting focus
that makes everything fluid, and we
can just make out the distant stains
of mountains, mists, and an island
brushed with trees.

581 / 2 x 14^7 / 8 in (148.6 x 32.7 cm)
TOYO SESSHU

Landscape in Haboku Style
15TH CENTURY
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