I had a great time with the Seattle Urban Sketchers last
Sunday at the Burke Museum. It had been a long time since I had visited
the museum. Amazingly, few things had
changed since I was a kid, but there are plans to build a new museum in the
next couple of years.
Hopefully, this museum will be able to display more of the
museum's collection. The Burke serves as the repository for all unclaimed
archeological and natural history discoveries in Washington state. This has
created an extensive collection of geological and human based artifacts that
are mostly stored away in the museum's many warehouses and unavailable to the
public.
I was particularly taken with a Maori Meeting Ground Gate.
The elaborate carving work was other worldly and created a sense of a portal to
another world. I was also struck by the similarity between the gate's carvings
and the work of the cartoonist Jim Woodring.
Of course, I could not pass up an opportunity to draw a
dinosaur. In this case it was a sea based dinosaur called a Plesiosaur. The skeleton was
a cast of an 80 million year old fossil.
If you have a chance to draw at the Burke Museum before it
moves it is a great space. The extensive collections presents a wealth of
sketching opportunities and a great lesson in Pacific Northwest history.
No comments:
Post a Comment