Showing posts with label Liz Steel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Liz Steel. Show all posts

Monday, April 2, 2012

Some more on windows...

120402 A few thoughts on Windows
Here are a few random thoughts on drawing windows (it is not how to draw perfect perspective since this page contains a very bad example of perspective...unless I am drawing a very curiously angled window!?! )

I have been meaning to do this for a while- but seeing Kate Johnson's wonderful post on painting windows here has prompted me. On the top left corner is a very quick Australian version (double hung federation green window in a Sydney sandstone wall) and the doodles illustrate some things that I have been thinking about lately.

These are obviously drawn from an architectural point of view... I just couldn't help drawing a plan could I? One of my earliest memories of being a junior architect in the office was being told how to draw a window properly in elevation(front view) - draw the frame and then the sashes etc etc...and that certainly has helped me understand what I am looking at when I am am sketching on location.

To draw windows convincingly, one needs to consider the relationship between the window and the face of the wall - is it set back a long way (deep reveals) or is it flush or proud of the wall. Also where is the glass in relation to the frame? When you look a a wall from an angle do you see more of the window or more of the reveal?
What is the relationship between horizontal and vertical members.

Hope my scribbles make some sense....

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Thinking about maps in travel journals and other things

Now that I have finally finished all my scanning from my recent 3 week trip to Eurooe, I was looking through a few of my travel sketchbooks last night...
Thinking about mays- NYC2 2010
last years big trip (11 weeks USA UK Italy) was so busy that I rarely drew maps, while during my 5 week trip in 2009 I drew maps every night. This year's trip I made an allowance for maps on my summary page and ended up drawing most of them when I got home.
Thinking about Maps - NYC1 2010
What STRUCK me last night is... the few maps I drew last year where incorporated into a page with a sketch or two and that these ARE a lot nicer pages. If I hadn't got around to drawing a map on these pages, I could have added some text or some collage or just enjoyed the glorious white space which I generally don't have enough of in my sketchbooks.
Thinking about Maps - Rome 2010
Anyway... this has got me thinking of a different approach... it doesn't necessarily mean that it is another trip...but I am always thinking about how to do things different whether for a new trip overseas or just recording my day to day adventures.



07_Wed20 04 Lunch and Tearoom view20 Tues02_09 St Pauls 3 Dome20 Tues02_07 St Pauls 1 details19 Mon01_09 London Purchases and Freebies!19 Mon01_04 London St Marys Woolnoth Int19 Mon01_03 London St Stephens Walbrook
06_Tu17 06 Greyfriars Graveyard and Lunch05_Mo18 04 Art Gallery with Wil and Stu02_Fr15 06 Newcastle Earl Grey and Waterstones01_Th14 04 Terminal 5 PEOPLE12_Mon25 10 From Lisbon to Cardiff via Bristol12_Mon25 09 Final FINAL Lisbon Sketch - Rossio Square
10_Fri23 07 Sketchcrawl110_Fri23 06 Contrastes Lunch08_Thurs 10 Correspondent Dinner {explored}08_Thurs 05 Cityscapes408_Thurs 04 Cityscapes507_Wed20 02 Breakfast and coffee
06_Tues19 Arriving in Lisbon- dinner08_Thurs 08 Unfinished Business10930TH_03 Pal Farnese Extras0929WE_07 San Carlo Int Columns triads0927MO_05 Palatine Hill 20917FR_11 Grand Canal Wet


Following on from last nights thoughts... I just created a new flickr set specifically for my favourite kind of journal-style pages.
A collection of some of my favourite pages that are in a journal style...ie. not just a single 'great' sketch on a page. Ones that tell a story, ones that I enjoy looking at and re-living months, years later.A combination of sketches, media, notes, a map, a bit of collage...and maybe even a tea cup sketch or two!

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

My sketchbook from Lisbon

I had grand intentions of doing a special post here of every day at the symposium...but too much going on... but here is the sketchbook in full

My main aim in my travel sketchbooks is NOT to produce perfect sketch after perfect sketch but to tell the story of my adventures and capture 'the moment' which (somewhat tragically!?! )is resulting in me trying to sketch everything I do!

A few thoughts...
- I hardly need to say that the Urban Sketchers Symposium was AMAZING! It was an overwhelming 3 days of inspiration and meeting other wonderful artists, talking non stop (for me!) and trying to sketch non stop... as such I am somewhat amazed at the amount of sketching that I was able to do
- A little ambitious was my intention to make sure that I recorded every days event with a map... non of these for my stay in Lisbon got done at the time so this has generated quite a lot of work since I have got home.
- I wanted to include more collage in my sketchbook and did manage to achieve it this trip. I did find that it was always better to stick down the item before I started sketching - hence I got into some strange habits such as ripping up the placemat before the meal arrived.
- The collage/map/as-many-notes-as-possible approach this year was somewhat experimental and I think that some pages (in particular my opening spread for each day) are too crowded...so my conclusion is that to add maps and collage I should leave MORE white space as I am sketching through the day... leaving an entire spread for the map would have been better.
Trip 2011 Volume 2 Lisbon COMBO
Here is every page in a single image too - if you prefer to look at that- click to go to flickr to view larger.

Thursday, August 18, 2011

A very special sketchbook from the Urban Sketchers symposium


One of the things that I was REALLY looking forward to at the symposium was being able to share it with my great sketching friend Alissa Duke (she is included in the book too and is an organiser of the wonderful sketching group that has been forming in Sydney) We got up at 4am on the day when registration opened so we could book the sessions we wanted together – how keen is that. Sadly Alissa was unable to make it so I thought I would try to collect some sketches from others to bring back for her. The result is this little book...

It is now filled with original works from a variety of artists of different styles and countries - Portugal, USA, Spain, Israel, Germany, Singapore, Argentina, Brazil, South Africa, Canada, Dominican Republic, UK, Denmark, Sweden etc (and of course Australia) It really gives you an idea of how exciting it was to be at the symposium. Of course it is not a substitute...but as Alissa couldn't make it, I think it is the best way I could bring something back for her. If you don't know about Urban Sketchers the blog is here.

Sadly, I was not able to fill up the book with other peoples sketches- 3 days is not long enough for that...so I filled up the book re-doing some of my sketches when I got home (some of them sketches at 5am when I was awake due to jet lag!)

Here are the pages in full if you would like to view it on flickr (click on image to view larger)

A very special sketchbook from the symposium by borromini bear


A HUGE THANKYOU to everyone that contributed!!! She LOVES it!! (and I do too - what a privilege to be able to carry something so special for a few weeks!)

Finally.... please go over to Alissa’s flickr and say hello and see all the fabulous sketches she has been doing in Sydney lately!

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Sketches from my first day in Lisbon

Many of you follow my blog/ flickr / facebook and therefore know that I have started to scan and post my sketches from my recent 3 week trip which included the Urban Sketchers Symposium in Lisbon (no need to say how wonderful it was!) However....I am going to post my pages in full here (like on my blog) but with some extra details/ thoughts about the production/ thinking about the pages themselves.

Most of the other Urban Sketchers fill their sketchbooks predominately with sketches and the occasional note. But that is not enough for me... I want my pages to tell the FULL story of my day!! This is resulting in an obsessive attempt to sketch every event in my day – quite a challenge under normal traveling conditions...but when I am surrounded by people(and wonderful artists at that!!!) and just want to spend the whole day talking to them... it is hard. Thankfully, the more I sketch while talking non stop the easier I am finding it!!! Practice helps a lot!

Anyway... Here are my pages from the day before the symposium ..... It was a fun filled day, running into sketchers left, right and centre and struggling to decide what to do and ignoring a headache(I only remember this part of the day now because I recorded it at the time)

07_Wed20 01 The Day before summary

This year I wanted to include more collage in my sketchbook so prior to my trip I was experimenting with a layout for my opening page for each day. The side of the page is a print out from a book of Portugal tile patterns(I adjusted the colour so that I could write over it) I LOVE maps but do find them a bit tedious to do – so I allocated the left side of this first spread for the map so that the book makes sense even if I never get around to drawing them. This year most of my maps have been (and will be) completed at home!

07_Wed20 02 Breakfast and coffee
I wasn’t particularly happy with any of these individual images at the time but the most important thing is the page as a whole (the whole not the parts)... Just keep going, get someone to write on your book, change colour of your pen etc. All games that you can play to make a fun page. Of course I don’t mind those sketches now....

07_Wed20 03 Arco da Rue Augusta with Omar
Ok – here is a ‘proper’ urban sketch. Sitting alongside the wonderful artist Omar - http://omar-paint.blogspot.com/
I love mixing up full page single views with the more random (food) pages. I find page after page of a single sketch in my own book a bit boring... More than 3 pages without a cup of tea and we have a sketchbook crisis on our hands!?!

07_Wed20 04 Lunch and Tearoom view
My favourite page for the day... I was definitely in a complusive sketching mood and didn’t really have time to do a proper view sketch before our lunch arrived so just chose a corner of the buidling near us..I am always thinking to myself “what can I sketch – what time do I have to do it” And of course I sketched my lunch as well to record the event. I stuck the docket done and then continued sketching over the top. I should have gone and had a nap but I went to a tearoom(on my own) instead and wanted to devote a whole page to that so filled up the right hand side of this spread with another selective view from my table. While drawing I discovered a sketcher in view so I popped over to see who it was. It was Eduardo from Brazil!
Last week just before posting this page I decided to add more new gamboge to the building (it wasn’t actually that colour...but no one will ever know!?!) the extra colour which I then added to the top of the trees and the fountain structure really pulled the page together.

07_Wed20 05 Only Tearoom Visit
Tearoom sketch was nothing that special as I was keen to have my tea and go over and talk to Eduardo....but nice to have a simpler page. I made the mistake of not getting the tearoom card at the beginning so couldn’t fit it on my page. The sugar packet is a classic!!

07_Wed20 06 Sketching with others
Off to talk to Eduardo and Joao who he was meeting. After swapping sketchbooks I realised I didn’t have much time till I was to meet 2 more sketchers, Paul and Orling – to go out for a sketch! So I did another quick sketch of a single doorway...knowing that I would have a blank single page to fill at some stage. While I was sketching the great view below I was thinking about what I would do to fill it....so I bravely attempted to sketch my sketching companions. So you can see that I am thinking about my sketchbook all day... it is a game with me – “can I fit one more sketch in????” Crazy girl – I never stop!

07_Wed20 07 Escadinhas Do Duque with Paul and Orling
A great view.... Deserved a nice double page spread!

07_Wed20 08 Night before Dinner
Sketching my dinner despite feeling rather unwell with a headache – it was a way of distracting my mind and telling myself that I was ok (if you can sketch your headache can’t be that bad!) Very rushed loose outline of the gang at dinner...not sure I would have attempted this if I was feeling normal as my inner critic would have prevented me!

What a long post... so much goes into my sketchbook that each page has many stories attached to it... One of the reasons why I am addicted to sketching and recording my life in a little book!

Thursday, June 23, 2011

My 'trip prep' journal

Been enjoying the posts here and especially Kate’s post recently on how you use your journal and public vs private... I wish I could say more about that...but instead I have my head down preparing for another trip.
Trip Prep 11_01 Palette Planning  {Explored}
I have a dedicated sketchbook for my ‘trip prep’ and this year I am trying to use it to contain everything associated with planning...there are so many ways that your journal can be useful in the planning stage and I am trying to make my pages visually interesting without too much planning...so here are a few pages – starting with COLOUR first (never too early to start thinking about this as I have used the last month testing a few combinations)
Trip Prep 02_To do Lists
Trying to make my ‘list’ pages a little more interesting (but don’t worry I do have pages of scribbly notes and no images as well)
Trip Prep 05a_Last years Big Trip CLothes Review
Trip Prep 05c_More thinking about clothes
I have lots of fun deciding on what clothes – I ALWAYS take more than I need so I use my journal I the hope that I will eliminate a few items.
Trip Prep 10 - In search of the perfect bag
The big decision on which bag to take – this rating system was a lot of fun and had some interesting results.

For more random prep check out the set on my flickr or blog.
As for using your sketchbook to lose weight... I will have to find time to share all my secrets there in the next week or so....

Monday, January 3, 2011

Interview #2--Liz Steel (and Borromini!)


I first met Liz Steel online a few years ago, and became entranced by her bold sketches on Flickr.  Such bright, fresh, dedicated and funny work.  When it came time to pick artists to be involved in the Artists' Journal Workshop book, Liz was among the first I asked! 

I was delighted with the opportunity to get to know her better when she stopped by here near the start of her long international journey this past summer, and more so when I did this interview.   (I've kept the original spelling...this IS a truly international project and it only adds to the flavor.  Or flavour!)


Q. First, were you born in Australia?   
A. I was born in Sydney Australia and have lived there all my life (and love it!)


Q. How long have you been an architect, and how did you decide to do so?
 
A. I have been practising as an architect for over 16 years. I decided that I wanted to be an architect at age 10 when I discovered that there was such a thing as a plan which described the layout of a building - up to that point I only drew the front of houses. I found a book in my local library entitled “She’s an architect” which confirmed to me that that was what I wanted to be when I grew up!
 

Q. What kinds of things do you design? 
 
A. I design all kind of buildings – residential buildings (single houses to multi-storey apartments) commercial buildings, office fitouts and interiors and for the last 14 years I have also been specialising in television related projects.
 

Q. How did the time off for this summer’s trip work?  How long was the trip? 

In Australia, working more than 10 years in the one firm entitles you to Long Service Leave – a bonus 2-3months of vacation that you can often take in one block of time. I have been with my firm for 15 years and have been chipping away at my allowance for a few years. This year, I had to use up my leave- so I was able to have a 11 week vacation.

 

Q. How did you plan your meet-ups with other sketchers, and how many did you meet in the course of the trip? 

A. There are MANY online sketching friends that I would love to meet, but I normally don’t plan my trips around meeting up with them – I determine my itinerary and then work out  what sketchers I will be near. This trip had two exceptions – the first was the Urban Sketchers Symposium in Portland which occurred in the start of my trip and the other was my visit to Kansas City to see you! (I couldn’t fly across the states without popping in!)


* Kate's not:  Big smile when I read that!

I usually contact people beforehand to organise but sometimes I have unexpected meetings while travelling thanks to Flickr comments and emails – it is really a very exciting and dynamic way to travel when you blog from your iPhone along the way, This trip, apart from the 70 odd people at the Urban Sketchers Symposium, I meet up with 16 online sketching friends.

 

Q. What’s your most vivid memory, if you can isolate one!
 
A. I have so many amazing memories from my trip – the Urban Sketchers Symposium and meeting other sketchers, special time with special friends and family in the UK, 2 weeks of dedicated sketching in Italy with a friend and then having the courage to sit on the streets in Rome sketching alone, having days when I felt so much in the groove...etc etc! 

But the most important memory, the one that I want to remember, is the feeling I had when I got on the plane to come home. It was a feeling that my trip was a journey that would continue when I got back home, it was an enormous sense of satisfaction that I had filled all my sketchbooks, that the sustained period of sketching had resulted in development of my skills and it was a feeling of sheer joy that all my wonderful experiences were recorded by my own hand in my own way in those books! This feeling was reinforced when, on my first full day home, I went out to sketch the Sydney Opera House – sketching the most famous icon in my own beloved hometown while still in ‘trip mode’ was a wonderful blurring of the edges between the end of my big trip and  the resumption of my normal life.






 
Q, Tell us a bit about Borromini, and how many other people have sketched him.

Borromini (which is the name of a famous Italian architect of the Baroque period) is a tiny little bear that I bought in 2007 to take with me on my holidays. I often have periods in my travelling when I am on my own so I wanted a travelling companion to photograph. His first trip was in September 2007-this was also the first that I kept a sketchbook - so Borromini's existence is integrally connected with my sketching. When I went online in 2008, I was very cautious of revealing my identity and so it was natural to hide behind the wee bear! It didn't last long till things changed - but the Bear has his own identity now and seems to make his own friends. I can't keep up with him!

Q. Would you give us a link to your books?  I would love for you to get some orders from this.  Are the latest trip journals going to be available as books, or have I missed that?

A. I have a page on my blog with links to my books
http://www.lizsteel.com/p/blurb-books.html

I have a Paris book(sketches from 2009)  which will be available for purchase in the next few weeks. And hope to do something with my sketches from this year (now that I am finished scanning all those sketchbooks!) but not sure exactly what I am going to do yet – so watch this space!


Q. How long have you been keeping a sketch journal, and what inspired you to start? 

A. A friend introduced me to watercolor pans in a field kit in December 2006 and I instantly feel in love with them. Inspired by her use of them and Danny Gregory’s books I started my own in Jan 2007 with the intention to sketch regularly as ’training’ for a trip to Europe in September that year. Not only did I achieve that goal but the almost-daily habit has become an end in itself!

 

Q. How does your sketch journaling relate to your job as an architect?

A.
As an architect, sketching is the way that I think and communicate. I draw all the time when I am trying to solve a design problem – it is a almost a reflex action of my brain and the simple action of drawing over and over can reveal solutions. Once I have a solution I draw to explain what is in my head. But when I started sketching from life, I had to make a big switch -  I had to stop and learn to look.

This stopping and looking has helped my design skills as an architect. The observation needed for sketching gives me insights into the mind of the original architect and the discoveries that I translate to paper seem to be permanently registered and inscribed into my memory for inspiration and re-interpretation in my own real life projects. The constant sketching of anything in my daily life has also helped me at work, as it has improved my ability to be able to describe design proposals in quick  hand drawn coloured sketches – in an age where digital images abound,  quick freehand presentations sometimes make more of an impact.

 

Q. You do a lot of travel sketching; how do you plan what to take?
 
A. It is a balance between simplifying and flexibility – and somehow packing light. Most of the time I only use my ink pen and watercolours but as I am travelling and sketching more than usual, with different scenes and different situations I have to be prepared for anything. So I pack a few things for specific occasions such as my brush pen for when I only have a few moments and a few watercolour pencils for galleries etc where I wouldn’t be allowed to paint. Drawing my kit before I go always helps me to rationalise – I also do this with my clothes!

 

Q. Do you ever go someplace with the idea in mind up front of sketching?  (I mean do you choose a destination TO sketch it?) 
A. If I am re-visiting places I do normally choose a destination because I want to sketch it. But when visiting a city/country for the first time I plan my itinerary around the places I want to visit (like any other traveller) but I make sure I allow some extra time for the all important sketch. Sometimes I choose not to go into a tourist attraction/ museum/ historic house etc preferring to use my time sketching the exterior.

 

Q. What do you enjoy most?
 
A. My two favourite things to draw are complicated architecture (particularly Baroque buildings) and a good cup of tea (with accompanying cake). So a cafĂ© table with a good view is the ultimate – comfort and inspiration in one!






Q. How long do you normally spend a day with your journal?

A. Normally 20 minutes to an hour a day – either at lunchtime, in the evening while having my post dinner cup of tea or sometimes I get a creative urge late at night when I am tired and really should go to bed!
On Saturdays I often go out for the day for a sketching adventure – then I am using my sketchbook all day.




 

Q. Other thoughts? Whatever else you feel is more important, personally, to YOU...

A. The most important thing for me is the excitement of really starting to ‘see’ the world around me. Often the visual exploration of an object or scene give me a real buzz – in a way, the resultant sketch is less important than this discovery although I think this excitement is often reflected in the sketch.

Also my sketchbook journal is the celebration of the little things in life – the everyday becomes special and worthy to record and it is a great way to realize how much we have to be thankful for – even in hard times.

The final thing is that my sketchbook is MINE – it is there for me to fill with sketches of the things I like, the things that I want to remember, the way I want to sketch  or the way I want to develop my skills.  I think that when you find the YOU in your work, you have more enjoyment, confidence and satisfaction.



--------------------------


A bit more about Borromini Bear here http://www.lizsteel.com/p/about-borromini.html

It was lots of fun for other artists to sketch him this year – I can think of about 12 artists that sketched him – but it is possible that there are more. I do plan to make a gallery of sketches and put this on my blog.


Here's one of mine!  -Kate
 
Q Did I remember to tell you that’s going to be a whole separate page on North Light’s website?  I had my sketch, Joseph’s, Laura Frankstone’s, and Vicky Williamson’s, so they wanted to do a whole page on Borro!) 


A. WOW!!!!!

----------------------------------




Check out these links for more information...you'll be inspired by Liz's work and her energy and dedication, too!
 
Liz's (and Borromini's) blog: http://www.lizsteel.com/

LIz's Blurb books...I have the wonderful little A Perfect Cuppa, it's delightful!  http://www.blurb.com/user/BorrominiB

The bear has caught the imagination of a lot of us, and he gets sketched often!  Liz has made a Flickr Gallery of the little fellow here:  http://www.flickr.com/photos/borrominibear/galleries/72157625607354553/#photo_4885532417 --you'll see sketches from several of our blog correspondents!