In The Studio…Experimenting With Water Soluble Pencils And Various Papers

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Stillman and Birn Beta paper (a little smoother than a cold press watercolor paper)

Every year in the winter, I try to set aside time to review my painting process and experiment with new media and supports, both for painting and drawing. Last year in January I had to swing into action for the “Wildlife Art: Field to Studio” group exhibition at the Flinn Gallery, but after three exhibitions in four years I currently don’t have one scheduled for 2017 so have time to mess about and explore ways to improve my work.

I purchased a set of Cretacolor AquaMonolith pencils last year, took them to Mongolia without much of a pre-departure tryout and wasn’t happy with what I did. Tough to test drive a new media in field conditions. I also had some Derwent Inktense water soluble pencils  that had been sitting around for a year or so with no time to play with them. I’d been using their regular water soluble colored pencils on and off for years. So a couple of weeks ago I sat down with all three and a bunch of different papers.

Cretacolor is an Austrian company. I’d already started to use their Monolith graphite pencils and I like them a lot. I use them now for my finished drawings. They and the AquaMonoliths are woodless graphite with a lacquer coating. The difference is that the latter are color and water soluble. Derwent is an English company, based in the Lake District, which was founded in 1832. Wood pencils were invented by them and we’ve visited the factory during a past trip to England (a definite stop for artists if you’re there). I’ve used a variety of their products for years, including their wood drawing pencils.

Once I laid down the colors I went back with a waterbrush (more on those in a future post) and did some blending. It’s a “hit it and leave it” for the most part. On most of the papers continuing to wet and push the color around makes a mess. I experimented with how hard and thick to lay on the strokes and found that I liked leaving them visible.

I’m posting them in the reverse order that I did them because of how Google and other sites will choose the header image and I’d like the “good ones” to show up. Fingers crossed. :0)

None of them are more than about 2×2″, so thumbnail size.

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Stillman and Birn Alpha paper (slight texture, a little on the thin side for adding water, but it didn’t buckle at all)

I had fun getting the rain effect in the top sketch.

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Stillman and Birn Zeta paper (smooth, almost a plate finish)

The pencils worked, but I like them better on a paper with more tooth.

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Pentalic Nature Sketch sketchbook (not thrilled with this first try, but I otherwise really like the paper so will experiment further; it does have some tooth and is off-white)

I’ve been using the Pentalic Nature Sketch sketchbooks for a couple of years, carrying a small one around with me and also to Mongolia. They’re reasonably priced, come in a variety of sizes including a 6×12″ which I like a lot. The paper is acid free and 25% cotton and really is multimedia, including watercolor if you don’t go too heavy on the washes.

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Strathmore 400 vellum bristol

I’ve been using this paper, along with Rives BFK, for my finished drawings that I frame for sale at my local gallery, Strawberry Rock Gallery in Trinidad, California. While it has a bit of tooth, it was the least successful and is off the list for now, but I really like it with the Monolith pencils.

NEW! My Gallery Of Original Drawings For Sale!

baby-rhino
“Baby White Rhino” colored pencil on toned paper $150

Just in time for the New Year….affordable original art by Susan Fox, Signature Member of the Society of Animals Artists, Juried Member of the American Academy of Equine Art and Artist Member of the Salmagundi Club. I’ll be adding more every month. They are one-of-a-kind originals so once they’re sold they’re gone.

You can view them here.

If there’s a particular species you’re interested in, let me know. I have many more drawings available and can send you an image on request if I have something.

Wishing you a very Happy New Year!

 

It’s Time For “The 12 Days of Drawings Sale”!

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PREVIEW:”Relaxed” graphite on paper (African lion I saw in Kenya in 2004).

I love to draw! And I love to draw animals the most!

For the third year I will be offering one-of-a-kind original drawings of a variety of species. They are created in graphite on acid-free bristol vellum paper and are unframed. All will be under $200. Payment accepted through PayPal. Shipping is included, as is sales tax when applicable.

The drawings will be posted here on my blog and also on Facebook, Instagram, Pinterest and Twitter. All work will be subject to prior sale. On December 30, any unsold work will be listed in a new gallery on my website.

Thank you for your interest! And Happy Holidays!

 

Experimenting…

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Three out of the last four years I’ve had exhibitions to paint for. I didn’t plan it that way, it’s just how it worked out. But what that means is creating a body of work with a deadline. It’s not the time to experiment, dork around and try new media and materials. You go with what you know. I don’t have an exhibition coming up for at least another year or so, but will have juried competitions and exhibitions to do new work for starting in January. So I finally have breathing space to explore, experiment and maybe integrate some new tools and techniques into my process or just do for fun. One part of that has been “gray studies” and you can see some of them here.

For the last few days I’ve been trying out Derwent Graphitone pencils on a variety of papers. When you’ve been at this as long as I have, art materials accumulate, including paper. Digging around in my flat file paper drawers and looking over my sketchbook options, I found 15 different ones to try, including also a a hot press watercolor block. The Graphitone pencils are water-soluble graphite. I use a waterbrush to wet them, so the paper has to be able to take that without buckling.

What I was after was a forgiving surface that could be layered, would let me control the damp to wet graphite and end up with something that was visually pleasing. Most did ok, but some have made the short list, including the piece at the top, done on Strathmore 300 vellum bristol. It’s 100lb. which worked fine, but a thicker ply would be even better.

None of these are more than, at most, couple of inches in height and took no more than about twenty minutes. I need to get better at doing humans, so I used some of my Mongolia people reference and got a two-fer out of it.

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The woman above was done on, as you can see, Letraset hot press illustration board. I liked the result, but I’m not sure about carrying a small pile of boards around if I want to use this technique on location, expecially Mongolia.

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For the wrestler I used a Strathmore bristol vellum 476-2 that I found at the bottom of the flat file drawer. I only knew what it was because I’d jotted the name in the corner.  It wasn’t bad, but I have no idea if it’s still available.

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I’ve been very taken with the Pentalic Nature Sketchbooks. They seem to handle a variety of dry and “damp” media well. However, the paper is thinner in the newer sketchbooks from when I originally started to buy them (even though they still say 130lb. on the cover), but the Graphitone did act more like watercolor when wetted than on some of the other papers.

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Finally, for this portrait head I used an off-white Strathmore 400 vellum bristol, which had also lived near the bottom of the paper drawer for many years. I like the way the media worked on this paper the best. It’s probably 3-ply which means it can take a fair amount of water. But paper formulas change over the years, not usually for the better, so I’ll be buying some to see how well it works today. Fingers crossed.

The other papers I test drove included: Rives BFK (my favorite for dry graphite drawings), Sennelier Album Carte d’Art, Rising (plate finish), a Canson drawing paper, Aquabee Super Deluxe (a great example of a paper that has been ruined by cheapening and thinning over the years as the company has changed hands), Crescent cold press illustration board and, finally, Daler Cartridge Paper. The watercolor paper was Lanaquarelle hot press.

Looks like we’re going to have rainy weather for the next week or so up here Behind the Redwood Curtain,  perfect for continuing my explorations. Family coming up next week for Thanksgiving, so see you in a couple of weeks. Have a great holiday!

Sketching At The Santa Barbara Zoo

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I returned home on Monday from attending the Explorers Club Lowell Thomas Annual Dinner in Santa Barbara, California. I spent a productive afternoon the day before the Saturday event sketching at the Santa Barbara Zoo, keeping it really simple: a 7×5″ Pentalic Nature Sketchbook and a Sakura Micron .01 black pen.

Sketching live animals can be quite challenging and is great exercise for one’s visual memory. None of these took more than about five minutes. Sometimes I only did the contour and filled in the bodies a bit later, like with the condors above. I did take photos but learned long ago that drawing animals is a very different experience than shooting photos in that you have to really LOOK and SEE to get anything down. In the end it’s as much about process as result, but I’m pretty happy with these.

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Art And Memories From The Susan K. Black Foundation Workshop In Dubois, Wyoming, Sept. 2016

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Mt. Moran; pen and ink, grey felt tip brush on paper

I got back home at midnight last Saturday from two days in Grand Tetons National Park and five days at the 15th Annual Susan K. Black Foundation workshop. Both were a resounding success. You can read about my time in the park here. This post is about the workshop, which I’ve attended four times in the past and plan to go to next year.

All the previous instructors had been invited and almost all of them where there, including nationally known artists like James Gurney, John and Suzie Seerey-Lester, Greg Beecham, Mort Solberg, David Rankin, Jeanne Mackenzie, Andrew Denman, Guy Combes, Ann Trusty Hulsey and John Hulsey, all of whom I know personally or have studied with or both.

One of the main events is the Quick Draw, a traditional name but almost every artist at this workshop did paintings. Here’s some photos of the event in action. It’s followed by sketches and watercolors that I did in the Grand Tetons and EA Ranch.

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James Gurney, known best for his “Dinotopia” books, painted a portrait of this pronghorn antelope in casein, gouache and colored pencil
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David Rankin, who I worked with most during the week (more on that in a future post) painted an osprey
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Guy Combes did a lovely painting of a cheetah
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Andrew Denman created a graphite on paper drawing of a barn owl
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Although he’s better known for his sculpture, John Phelps painted a portrait the old-fashioned way…from a study drawing
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John Seerey-Lester chose to paint a moose, one of the very popular animals to see in the Grand Tetons
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John Hulsey who, with his wife Ann Trusty Hulsey, publish the online art website and newsletter The Artist’s Road, went for a late light landscape in watercolor
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Greg Beecham chose to paint a polar bear, bringing in the whites over a toned canvas

The weather was partly cloudy while I drove around Grand Tetons NP, which meant interesting light that could change very quickly. The aspens and cottonwoods were turning to their fall colors, too. All in all a perfect time to be there.

Both of the first ones were painted over the course of a couple of hours along the Moose Wilson Road.

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Aspens- watercolor on Saunders Waterford paper 8×8″
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Aspens with storm clouds- watercolor on Saunders Waterford paper 8×8″
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Clouds and light
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Scenery at EA Ranch, near Dubois- watercolor on Arches cold press paper 8″x4″
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Pen and ink sketches- Sakura Micron .01 pen in a Beta Series Stillman and Birn sketchbook
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Pen and ink sketches- same media as above
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Contour sketches at SKB- same media as above
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Contour sketches, SKB and the Denver airport- same media as above

 

Sketches and Watercolors From My Trip Back East

Alligators at Harris Neck NWR, Georgia
Alligators at Harris Neck NWR, Georgia

Here’s an album of the art I created while I was traveling last month. I had a lot of fun drawing the alligators at the Okefenokee NWR and Harris Neck NWR. They’re good models because they don’t move much. There really is no substitute for drawing from live animals, although I took a ton of photos, too. Other than the one at the top, they’re in chronological order, starting with New York. All but one pencil sketch was done with a Sakura Micron .02 black pen. I used a Pentalic Nature Sketch 7×5″ sketchbook, a very handy size. Drawings on white paper are difficult to scan or photograph. I lightened them as much as I could.

Central Park View
Central Park View
Calfornia sea lion, Central Park Zoo, New York
Calfornia sea lion, Central Park Zoo, New York
Resting grizzly bear, Central Park Zoo, New York
Resting grizzly bear, Central Park Zoo, New York
Turtles, snow leopard cub, Central Park Zoo, New York
Turtles, snow leopard cub, Central Park Zoo, New York
Pronghorn head mount and hat, Explorers Club, New York
Pronghorn head mount and hat, Explorers Club, New York
Cheetah mount, Explorers Club, New York; White ibis, Okefenokee NWR, Georgia
Cheetah mount, Explorers Club, New York; White ibis, Okefenokee NWR, Georgia
Ibis in tree
White ibis in tree, Okefenokee NWR, Georgia
Water lily, Okefenokee NWR, Georgia; River cooter (turtle), Harris Neck NWR, Georgia
Water lily, Okefenokee NWR, Georgia; River cooter (turtle), Harris Neck NWR, Georgia
Alligator 2
Alligator, Harris Neck NWR, Georgia
Alligator leg 3
Alligator front leg, Harris Neck, NWR. Georgia
Jekyll Island
Jekyll Island, Geogia
Alligator Crazy 4
“Crazy”, 12′ long, 800-900 lb. bull alligator, Okefenokee Swamp Park, Georgia
Farmstead
Farmstead, Okefenokee Swamp Park, Georgia
Alligator details 5
Alligator details, Okefenokee Swamp Park, Georgia
Bald Cypress tree
Bald cypress tree, Okefenokee NWR, Georgia
Cypress roots
Bald cypress roots, Okefenokee NWR, Georgia
Cypress and alligator
Bald cypress, American alligator, Okefenokee NWR, Georgia
Live oak and moss
Live oaks and Spanish moss, Fort Clinch State Park, Amelia Island, Florida
Savannah, egrets
Savannah NWR, South Carolina
Pencil birds
Birds, Hudson River Valley, New York State

When I got back north and was up in the Hudson River Valley, I visited Olana, the home of American artist Frederic Church. The house wasn’t open but the grounds were. It was windy and pretty cold, but I was determined to do at least a couple of watercolors since the view from the house is famous and has been painted by a number of artists over the years.

Hudson River from Olana
Hudson River from Olana, New York State; 8×8″
Catskills from Olana
Catskill Mountains from Olana, New York State; 8×8″

I also spent a couple of days with an artist friend at his home in the Hudson River Valley. We spent one morning on location at this lovely pond.

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Pond, Hudson River Valley, New York State; 8×8″

Selections From My England & Romania Sketchbook

With my sketchbook at Stonehenge
With my sketchbook at Stonehenge

I’m back from our three week trip to England and Romania, a success on all counts! It was lovely to be in England in May, my first trip there in eleven years. Not much had changed…the countryside was still beautiful, the beer was excellent and I was able to get a nice selection of flower garden seeds at a big Garden Centre. I loved seeing Stonehenge again and we finally got to really explore Avebury, which we’d only had time to drive through on a previous trip.

Here’s a album of sketches, plus a couple of watercolors I did (Sakura Micron .01 pen on paper): 1

 

At Heathrow waiting for the rental car
In San Francisco waiting to board and then at Heathrow waiting to get the rental car. It’s fun sometimes to just find something to sketch right where one is.
New Forest Ponies
New Forest Ponies
Stockbridge, Hampshire
Stockbridge, Hampshire
Stonehenge
Stonehenge
Stonehenge
Stonehenge
Stonehnge
Stonehenge
Sheep grazing near Stonehenge
Sheep grazing near Stonehenge
Stonehenge
Stonehenge
Stonehenge
Stonehenge
Avebury
Avebury
Avebury
Avebury
Bourton-on-the-Water
Bourton-on-the-Water

And on to Romania, a country that I had never been to before. I did a little research and ended up booking a tour to the Carpathian Mountains of Transylvania in hopes of experiencing the largest surviving areas of the ancient forests that used to cover Europe and seeing European brown bear, of which there are close to 5000 in Romania, the largest population of any country in Europe. I succeeded on both counts and and all that and more will be the subject of a couple of upcoming blog posts.

View from the restaurant patio where I and my driver/guide had lunch en route
View from the restaurant patio where I and my driver/guide had lunch en route
Scenery near a monastery that we hiked up to. In the foreground is a haystack
Scenery near a monastery that we hiked up to. In the foreground is a haystack
The third day we went on an eight hour hike high up into the mountains to what is called The Alpine Hut, which is where I did this sketch
The second day we went on an eight hour hike high up into the mountains to what is called The Alpine Hut, which is where I did this sketch. And had a well-earned beer.
Another view from The Alpine Hut
Another view from The Alpine Hut, which was between two ridgelines in the sub-alpine zone

After a week in Romania, we went back to London for three days, catching the “Sargent and Friends” exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery on the last day. We also spent time just hanging out at Trafalgar Square, where I did these sketches.

The spire of St. Martins-in-the-Fields
The spire of St. Martins-in-the-Fields
Sir Edward Landseer's lions at the base of the Nelson Column, Trafalgar Square
Sir Edward Landseer’s lions at the base of the Nelson Column, Trafalgar Square
Quick copy of a dog in a painting by Murillo; people at Trafalgar Square
Quick copy of a dog in a painting by Murillo; people at Trafalgar Square
The Egg and the Dome of St. Peter's from the window of our Airbnb apartment in Soho
Way in the distance we could see the Egg and the dome of St. Paulr’s from the window of our Airbnb apartment in Soho, which had the most amazing view of the city

On our last day, we spent the afternoon at St. James Park, which had great birdwatching and many very old trees. I got out my watercolors, finally, and did a couple of small paintings.

Ancient oak tree, St. James Park
Ancient oak tree, St. James Park
Pencil sketches of birds
Pencil sketches of birds
Pencil sketches of birds
Pencil sketches of birds
Pencil sketches of birds
Pencil sketches of birds
A view of the London Eye from St. James Park
A view of the London Eye from St. James Park
London skyline from the apartment
London skyline from the apartment

 

Tolai Hare Study

Tolai Hare 12x10" Wolff's Carbon Pencil and Prismacolor pencil on Canson paper
Tolai Hare 12×10″ Wolff’s Carbon Pencil and Prismacolor pencil on Canson paper

 

Over the past week I’ve finished, photographed and sent in my entries for the two most important animal art juried exhibitions. Whew. It was pretty intense there for a couple of weeks. Now the waiting begins…tick tock tick tock….In the meantime….

I’ve been wanting to do a painting of a tolai hare, the only member of the rabbit family native to Mongolia, for a number of years, but until last year had never gotten good enough reference. They wait either in cover or pressed to the ground, then explode into view, sometimes almost at your feet, and take off. Definitely gets the adrenaline going. I was at Ikh Nartiin Chuluu last year, staying at the research camp, which is at the head of a valley with a spring and stream. A variety of wildlife, both mammals and birds, come to drink there. One evening I was sitting up on the rocks, hoping to catch argali in good light. But what showed up first was this tolai hare! Since I was already in place and not moving, he/she went about their business none the wiser to my presence. And I finally got what I needed. This is a new species for me, so I did this drawing to “learn what they look like”. I enjoy working on toned paper and adding the touches of white.