Yesterday was the first
British SCBWI Sketch Crawl event in London.
A group of ardent children's book scribblers descended on the Natural History Museum, and later moved on to the Victoria & Albert Museum. A report will be on the
SCBWI Illustrator's blog shortly, but here are all the drawings I came up with.
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| sketching materials |
As the organiser I was prepared for people turning up without drawing equipment, so I lugged a lot more materials than I would normally have needed. Here's what I carried for my own use.
Loaded with tools of the trade I set off during the rush hour on a cold but sunny morning, warming-up with a couple of sketches of tube commuters. Standing room only! These and several other drawings were made with a Pilot Hi-Tec C 0.4 pen, a very handy fine point nib, though not completely water proof. I use it for most of my pocket sketching in black and white, but it tends to bleed a little when wetted, especially when freshly applied, so I largely avoid colour work with it.
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| Buildings on Cromwell Road, French & UN flags |
While I waited for others to arrive there was time outside the Museum to try out some new ink and a different pen on the buildings across the road - Noodlers ink from the US is waterproof and supposed to be usable in ordinary fountain pens. However I found the flow to pen-nib a little too slow, and by the end of the afternoon the fountain pen nib had clogged up completely.
The event was publicised outside of SCBWI and was open to anyone to join in, not just our members. However as it turned out only members turned up on the day. And so, having assembled the company, we "officially" began the sketch crawl and dispersed within the Natural History Museum. I was particularly interested in the relationship between the exhibits, the visitors and the architecture of the building, so first up was a pencil panorama.
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| Giant Ground Sloth |
The small child on the left was frightened of the giant sloth and had to be whisked off to less intimidating areas by his parents. But not before I'd grabbed the moment on paper. As an illustrator I'm always looking for a visual story!
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| Dodo |
The birds, the birds! Time to get out the watercolours.
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| Griffon Vulture |
... and gigantic plastic scorpions.
Battling for Survival read the caption. The scorpion? Or the people it loomed over?
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| Battling for Survival |
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| Moeritherium |
In the mammals section was this incredible creature, a full scale model of an extinct Moeritherium, one of the earliest known relatives of the elephant. How could I not draw this. Fantastic!
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| European Bison |
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| Distant Relatives |
The Natural History Museum is a very funny place. Visual humour is everywhere, incongruous juxtapositions between what lies on either side of the glass displays. This girl made me smile, she stood for a good few minutes blandly staring into the gaping jaws of the bear while jabbering away on her phone. Distant relations, connected by the moment!
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| Cafe people |
And so to lunch in South Kensington, where I grabbed these two on adjoining tables.
In the afternoon we then headed to the Victoria and Albert Museum. rather than rush into the galleries I was mightily impressed by the shadows and subtle lighting of the entrance hall.
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| Entrance, Victoria & Albert Museum |
I planted myself on a bench and switched materials to a Gillot 303, dip pen and bottle of ink, with a splash of watercolour to finish. My trusty companions!
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| Busts |
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| gilt statue |
Again seeking the visitor/exhibit contrast, I finished off our visit hanging out in the sculpture department, looking for more "stories" to record.
But at the end time ran out...
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| statue gazing |
Finally the event was over. Flushed with the euphoria of creative energy, the participants got together at the end and shared our collective productivity.
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| Some of the attendees. L to R: Sue Eves, Amber Hsu, Anne-Marie Perks, Claire Tovey, and yours truely. |
Evening rush hour and I'm on the train home, but still scribbling!
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| evening rush-hour on the Circle Line |
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| Almost home |
Phew! 18 sketches in a day, busy work. It was a very satisfying event which we certainly plan to repeat. If any readers are interested in participating let me know, anyone can join in, you don't need to be an SCBWI member, or a professional artist.
The idea for Sketch Crawls was started in the US a few years ago by Enrico Casarosa and soon spread over the world. For SCBWI I've kept the London version a separate event, however more information on the original concept is on the
Sketchcrawl website.
15 comments:
Great fun, John. What a productive way to take a line for a walk! Lovely and lively scribbles.
Great sketches! It looks like a lot of fun!
Inspiring! To me the images are vivacious and charming - I adore them. And I'm staggered how much was done in a day. Plus the details you gave on your artist materials are interesting (even though I'm a writer, not an illustrator).
What a great productive day you all had, despite the cold weather!
Sketching on location always seals a memory of the moment into the image that can be returned to when you look back over them.I think that is part of the energy of these pieces. Nice work John. I'll look forward to seeing the other member's work on the blog.
John, these are FABULOUS! You did so many too - well done. I'm so glad you had a good day.
I especially love your 'entrance to the V&A' and the bison head. Love the story about the girl on the phone too.
Ours is next weekend: do hope we're not snowed off!
fun, fun! All these sketches are keepers! Wouldn't it be nice if our picture books could be as spontaneous as our sketches?
This is such a fantastic idea, John!! I hope other scbwi regions take note and do the same thing!
Your sketches are just wonderful! Makes me want to give it a try...
These are beautiful sketches, John. The subway looks like a great place to find subjects.
wow, what an excellent day!
I really love reading about the tools and the way the time passed...felt like I was there! ;)
love love the way you used the two sheets of paper to get a landscape effect... ;)
I always love ink wash/watercolor wash in sketches... instant tone and mood!
:)
how lucky are we to draw?
This looks like so much fun and such a brilliant idea!
John, these are so fantastic! That dodo is one of my favourite ever exhibits, so I'm particularly fond of that sketch. Looks like it was a great day.
Just lovely work! I have the same Cotman Watercolor Box, though I gutted mine for the pans and now work with this: http://www.christinarodriguez.com/blog/2009/11/2/homemade-travel-watercolor-case.html
We definitely need to do a sketch crawl for the SCBWI here in MN. We do sketching field trips to the Zoo every summer, but visiting museums would be great, too.
Like your blog:-)). I am also a child of God. Please visit my norwegian blog (has a lot of pictures) its about creativity in decorating and photos. Happy Holidays:-)
Ann Kristin
http://www.kreativglede.net
It's a beautiful sketches and lot fun this sketches.thanks for sharing.
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