A Drawing A Day – The Gallery

I can’t believe I’m working on daily drawing #122. I’m afraid to take a day off in case I lose momentum.

Artist Lori Fillo and I have set up a gallery page showcasing 20 of our daily drawings – 10 each of our favourites, or at least 10 that we’re reasonably comfortable with displaying. And we’re going to keep going! In fact, Lori’s just texted her latest (I sent mine earlier today for a change). I’m not going to wax on about how helpful and supportive this exchange has been, but I would recommend it to anyone, particularly for artists like me who struggle to keep a practice going while holding down a “day” job. Sometimes it’s hard but it’s amazing what you can come up with even when time is limited (and even if it’s just a quick sketch on your phone. Yes, I’ve done this.) I’ve pleasantly surprised myself upon occasion, and I have to admit my composition has improved big time.

The drawings are “as is”, not colour-corrected, not adjusted in any way – just as we texted them to one another. Authenticity, right? Here’s the link to the “A Drawing A Day” Gallery.

 

 

 

 

It’s Earth Day

This cartoon might be a little subversive – is Mother Nature responsible for the Pandemic? Is she feeling bad about it? But now she’s thinking that there are some silver linings so maybe all the suffering won’t be for nothing? Daily Drawing April 20th:

Mother Nature pondering Nature

Roar Radically: UBC’s Bill Rees, Professor Emeritus of human ecology and ecological economics at UBC, talks about Not “Roaring back” to our pathological, polluting and wasteful “normal” economy once we make our way through the global pandemic (Times Colonist, April 19, 2020). Instead, actually seeing how phenomenally the environment responds to decreased human activity – once we take our feet off the gas pedal so to speak – should make us use this terrible time to help plan a comeback that, as Dr. Rees puts it, “repairs the social and ecological harm the current system creates.” It’s Earth Day – here’s hoping.

Best of 100
A few more days and I’ll have reached 100 consecutive Daily Drawings! My fellow Daily Drawer has already reached that goal. So, what we’re going to do is each select our 10 favourites and post them on a separate gallery page on my site in the next week or so. Stay tuned!

 

Art in the time of Coronavirus*

Hunkered down like everyone else, I’ve found comfort in doing art – I’ve kept up with my Daily Drawings and am online with the Vancouver Urban Sketchers who have started to gather together virtually. We’ve pushed the rules a bit – we’re not necessarily outside drawing the urban landscape but we’re still drawing stuff!

I’ve also been drawing my anxiety. We’re all anxious, right? And we have to find ways to deal with it like keeping in touch with friends, meditating (not enough, but anyway…), beer, (did I say beer?) and silly cartoons:

Cartoon

This is today’s daily drawing, by the way. And, really, I haven’t reached the official retirement age. I also know of people older than me** who appear to have the energy and vitality of people much younger.

Yesterday, the urban sketchers did “Food & Drink” and I participated by spending time drawing my lunch:

Lunch
Pen and Ink, Pencil Crayon

This was also my Daily Drawing. I had the time, so I spent a couple of hours on it for a change. I think I mentioned that I’m accountable to another artist for the Daily Drawing so I asked if I could include one of her Dailies in my blog. The artist is Lori Fillo and this is one of my favourites:

Caulfeild Cove

Stay hunkered and take care!

*This is also a good time to read and here’s a suggestion: “Love in the time of Cholera”, by Gabriel García Márquez.

** Of course I’m a fan!

Mount Pleasant Sketching

By golly, this daily sketch thing is very – pleasant. I feel more energized about my practice even on the days when I get home from work, it’s dark and the last thing I feel like doing is drawing. I do it anyway. Because I’m accountable. To another artist who’s doing the same. While I’m still in Officeland, this kind of practice keeps me sane (or reasonably close to it, anyway).

Today, I met up with the Urban Sketchers in Mount Pleasant and did two fast sketches. For the first one I went outside. It was wet-ish, chilly and slightly rainy and water drops kept diluting the ink in my pen. Then, while trying to erase some weak pencil lines, my drawing went a little smudgy. What a mess! I’m posting it anyway. For the 2nd one I was on the third floor at the Mount Pleasant Community Centre. This one is also a wee bit messy, but – who cares! The urban sketchers who got together today have posted their work here if you want to take a look. It’s such an interesting neighbourhood but it’s under threat from development now that the subway is going in. I hope that it retains its character and its old buildings – some of them anyway.

Kingsway & Main Street, Vancouver

Street Scene Main & 8th, Vancouver

 

I don’t care

I’ve just started a daily sketch exchange with another artist. There are no rules, no judgement, and you can take 5 minutes or 5 hours. You just sketch and exchange – every day. I love it. I have done a sketch every day and just not cared about being perfect, drawing well, judging my work or worrying about how much time I should spend on it to make it “better”. I just do a sketch. I did one at the office last week because I knew I had no time later. 5 minutes – that’s it. I grabbed an old piece of cardboard and a felt pen and drew the plant on the counter while I waited for my ride. One day I drew someone on the skytrain (very quickly before they noticed and became uncomfortable!) Today, at my first Urban Sketchers gathering in a while, I did three sketches! Normally, I go to one of these sessions and fret about what to draw, worry the lines and feel anxious about the result. But now – I don’t care! I just draw. I posted two of my sketches on the urban sketchers site (here’s the link). Below is a smattering of the dailies, including one of Aunt Cyn – a “sketch” after my first Tai Chi class of 2020…

An almost monthly Art post by Cindy Thom