Watercolor 23x31cm, Arches paper, rough
Apr 9, 2025
Apr 7, 2025
Kesslersvile Road
Every once in a while, I get requests for house portraits, and this is the latest one. The trees are always the most challenging part.
Watercolor, 12x18in (30x45cm), Fabriano paper cp
Mar 31, 2025
Mar 28, 2025
Mar 22, 2025
Mar 18, 2025
Mar 17, 2025
Mar 15, 2025
Mar 10, 2025
Mar 3, 2025
Feb 26, 2025
Feb 24, 2025
Feb 18, 2025
Feb 15, 2025
Feb 14, 2025
North Star
Image: Engraving, Yellowstone Lake, signed J G Smithwick
I love to draw in Pen & Ink. I think that is because I have always been mesmerized by the beauty of old engravings that were widely used to illustrate books and magazines before photography became commonplace. My reflexive (and futile) goal is to make my drawings look like engravings, although I will never get there. This image is from an antique book I recently purchased (America Illustrated, 1883). It is full of beautiful images, but this one is special, with the brightly lit rocks against the expansive dark landscape. It is most likely a wood engraving which means the image is cut into the wood as a negative, by removing the parts that will print white. A dark line is printed by removing the wood on both sides of it. It is hugely labor intensive. Nevertheless, one of my favorite engravers, the French artist Gustave Doré produced an incredible 10,000 illustrations in his short life span of 51 years. True, he also employed several talented artists to produce engravings from his original drawings, but that’s still beyond impressive. He was commissioned to illustrate seminal books like Dom Quixote, Paradise Lost, The Divine Comedy and even The Bible.
Back to the image above, I could say it represents a beacon, or a North Star for my drawing efforts. I will never come near it, but I enjoy the ride.
Feb 9, 2025
Castle of Beja
I started my new Beechmore sketchbook that Fátima gave me for Christmas (thank you!). The old one took me five years to finish, and this one has even more pages (thanks a lot). The new strategy calls for quicker and looser sketches, so that I have a chance to finish before the next Ice Age hits.
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Comecei a primeira página do meu novo caderno de desenhos que a Fátima me deu no Natal. O último caderno levou-me cinco anos a completar e este tem ainda mais páginas (muito obrigado mesmo). A nova estratégia é fazer desenhos mais rápidos e soltos, de maneira a que eu tenha uma chance de acabar antes de a próxima Idade do Gelo chegar.