An Orchard Past Its Prime: Saratoga
More Camellias!
two previous camelias-related posts from this year:
Camellias in a different medium
Two more sketches from the Orchard Outing: Teaching Experiment
Last week I shared my sketch - spread over two pages of a new (to me) sketchbook (it is a Pith sketchbook - more about it soon as I continue some experiments). I made two more sketches at the same outing and it took me some time to scan them properly and think about what was working and not working for me. Mainly because I created these sketches based on the workshops that I will be running this summer. I will be teaching two sessions at the Chicago Urban Sketchers Seminar on July 11-13 and then a week later a little different version of the workshop but with the same technique - at the Sketcher Fest Edmonds. Two sketches below were a run through the process which I will be sharing. I know that Chicago is sold out but I believe some tickets are still available for Edmonds!
An Orchard is Thinking About Blooming
Cooking Disaster - Illustrated
Camellias in a different medium
Last week I posted my "work in progress" on catching camellia colors in my sketchbook. While I struggled with the color problem I had a lovely art date with a friend whom I promised to show my experiments with gelli plate monoprinting. I've been accumulating all sorts of knowledge about this tantalizing texture-making yet amazingly hard-to-control relatively new medium and we made a nice pile of "I wonder what will happen if I try this" and a few "here is how I can make a drawing and then make a print out of it" pages - here are some that did not make it to the recycling can immediately.
Four Attempts at Catching Camellia Colors.
California: Mustard Fields and Blue Sky
Spring in the San Francisco Bay Area means lots of mustard flowers! My friend showed me one of the early fields, and as we were sitting there drawing a blanket of yellow flowers under the piercing California blue sky, we talked about Ukraine, America, the past, and the future.
I was torn between doing a full-color sketch in watercolor or gouache but then decided to dive in with the two main colors: blue and yellow and have the rest in monotone. Yellow proved to be a tricky layer as it did not go well over the gray texture that I created - so I added darker tones as a background and then used white gouache, and when it dried - yellow oil pastel (from Jennifer's kit). The sketch turned out not as I thought as my yellow is a much gentle but I like how it did not overwhelm the rest of the sketch.
Magnolia Season
One Week 100 People 2025
- Having a very simple set of tools in my shoulder bag (see below) ready to go
- Scheduling time (mostly at the end of my lunch hour) throughout the week to do this.
- Having a list of potential places to go ready (so that if there is no energy to make a choice - I have a good default - see below).
On My Table: Beginning of March 2025.
February was full of many things - I did some fun clients projects, interesting experiments and had many sketching opportunities!
Participating in Democracy
Last week was filled with many events that were hard on many levels. Here is what I am doing in response:
1. As I live in the United States I called my representatives and left a message (there were answering machine options and humans who picked up the phone. You can also write an email). My message was super short: Name, zip code of where I live, and these words: I would like to encourage (name of your senator or representative) to support Ukraine and I do not want my country - USA - to be aligned with russia who is an aggressor in this conflict. Thank you.
It took me 5 minutes from clicking on a link (see below) to find a phone numbers to hanging up after the last phone call. This is how democracy works - we tell people who represent our interests what we want and stand up for what we believe in. Nobody can change what is happening alone but every single one of us can make a choice and add to one side of the equation or another. Not making a choice is also a choice.
Find your senator: https://www.senate.gov/senators/senators-contact.htm
Find your representative: https://www.house.gov/representatives
Or use an automated reach-out tool.
2. I joined several local in-person events concentrating on supporting Ukraine and also on protesting against the corruption of truth and democracy in this country. I believe that the United States is shifting toward authoritarianism and we as a nation need to fight for democracy and the rule of law. So I painted a sign, packed my sketching kit, and went to join people who were expressing their opinion about gutting the United States and all it stands for by people whose main qualification is loyalty to one person - but not to the law, constitution, or country.
Here are some images for you:
If you are interested in more ideas for how to move forward - here is an article that I found very useful: How *you* can protect democracy.
Three Years of War
Update on my Parents - Refugees from Ukraine - February, 2024.
A complicated start of my new sketchbook
I was hesitant to start a new sketchbook. Or rather I did not want the previous one to end. It was full of great moments. I started it in mid-October - it was a different era - the world was different - more hopeful, more reliable, with a different outlook - I miss that world. This sketchbook went with me on a couple of great trips - one on the other side of America, another on the other side of the world. It went with me on many drawing outings with friends and on some cool family hikes. It saw me through some hard days when only a tiny moment was spent drawing or only a tiny drawing could come out of me. So I was holding onto it quietly - I kept cutting sketches out of larger pages, taping and gluing them at the end - at the last few pages.
And then last week I went to draw with a friend and brought a single-sheet paper with me instead of a sketchbook, ready to add it (again) to my Sketchbook 158. As we drew, I talked about having a hard time finishing my old sketchbook and while I was listing all the reasons, I let go and decided to move on the very next day. Because there is no way to go back. And because drawing keeps me more hopeful and resilient. And because this different season means different tools and approaches are needed to shift my drawing practice forward. Plus I got super moved by looking at my friend's sketchbooks - they were living breathing stories with lots of color and texture and light and lines - and I knew that the world is better because of these drawings! And every time I look at great art I want to make some too and try a whole bunch of stuff that I kept "for the next sketchbook", "for when this is over", for "when I have a plan".
And so on the very next day, I made a little video weighing a new sketchbook and signing the number, and then I enjoyed drawing my traditional "what am I using now" tools on the opening page. After which I flipped the page and started on my experiment! It involved some monoprinting, a new type of ink and... it spilled all over and soaked my pretty first page - a disaster :) But such a pretty one :)
Thank you, Suhita, for sharing your amazing sketchbooks with me!
Here is my last sketch from sketchbook #158 during and a disaster reportage from the beginning of Sketchbook 159 :)