This sketchbook spread started out as a field sketch practice, an attempt to sketch a subject that will be still, unlike the birds I enjoy painting. It gave me much more.
In addition to the memories that unfolded, it pulled me deeper into this prolific and hardy plant, its beauty, shape, shadows and color. I still wonder how it manages to withstand the cold winter. I learned that this has something to do with its ability to store water and a unique metabolic process that happens when the temperature drops. But in my brief research, I didn't learn enough to explain it to anyone.
I am often drawn to the visual detail of a subject, so much so, that it is sometimes hard for me to shift my focus out, allowing the loose sketch work its magic. I love this aspect of art, especially in watercolor. It is a challenge for me to hold on to this awareness as I paint.
When I added detail to the left group of flowers, I wasn't happy with the result. It pulled my eye away from what I found to be the most captivating part of the sketch, the top and right group of flowers that spilled over the side. The overall effect was "too busy".
So for this occasion, I pulled out my soft scrub brush and "erased" the added detail. I liked this area much better flowing loose with just a hint of shadow and shape.
Above you see the area after it's been scrubbed. And below, the same area with replacement color added. I couldn't recapture the freshness of what was there before, but I did restore some subtlety.
The final sketch gives me a lot of information for future reference. Below you see the original sketch created on the patio on the left, the final sketch on the right. See what you think.
For more information about using a scrub brush visit: Sketching a Limpkin. For more about negative space visit: Search for a Swainson's Warbler. The first post on this sketchbook spread is: My Brother's Plant
Saturday, March 5, 2011
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Ocean Trail at Rancho Palos Verdes Preserve, California--2015

Joshua Tree National Forest, California, with son Chad and daughter Thuan--2015

Photo credit: Thuan Tram
Bird banding with Mark Armstrong at Seven Islands State Birding Park - 2014

Photo courtesy of Jody Stone
Birds Close-up

Photo courtesy of Karen Wilkenson
Enjoying Gray Jays in Churchill, Manitoba

Photo courtesy of Blue Sky Expeditions
A dog sled experience with Blue Sky Expeditions, Churchill, MB--2014

Photo courtesy of Blue Sky Expeditions
Churchill, Manitoba--2014

Photo courtesy of Blue Sky
2014 Hummingbird Festival

Photo courtesy of Jody Stone
Smithsonian National Zoo with one of my Whooping Crane art banners and son, John--2014

Muir Woods on the Dipsea Trail at Stinson Beach, California--2014

Photo courtesy of Wendy Pitts Reeves
Checking out the gulls at Stinson Beach--2014

Photo courtesy of Wendy Pitts Reeves
Discovery Hike in Denali National Park and Preserve, Alaska--2012

Photo courtesy of Ruth Carter
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