Next Sketch Outing

Sunday, May 4: Fishermen's Terminal

Tuesday, August 29, 2017

Catching up on the Summer

Here are my sketches from Fremont sketch outing in June. Sorry it took so long to post! 

The first one was done just above the trail along the Fremont Cut.  I wanted to get the extent of the Fremont Bridge as it stretches over the cut.


The second sketch was of the building sculpture by Mark Stevens called Monsuang.  It grows on you the more I see it and study the forms that attach to a generic "industrial" residential building.  It has become one of those landmarks in Fremont.


Sunday, August 27, 2017

Abstract Butterfly at Jimi Hendrix Park

The last summer sketch outing with the Seattle Ad Hoc group! This is one of Seattle's newest parks, the Jimi Hendrix Park in the Central District. The red sculpture is supposed to be a sort of abstraction of a butterfly. There are many references to flight and wings in Hendrix' songs, and Little Wing especially has butterfly imagery in the lyrics. Some of the other sketchers drew the whole form and their sketches show this better. I imagine the park will also become a good performance space.

2017_08_25 Jimi Hendrix Park

Saturday, August 26, 2017

Beacon Hill and Northgate Light Rail

The recent outing to Beacon Hill was focused on the area around the Light Rail Station.  I have been riding the Light Rail more and more as stations are added to the system.  This was my first time getting off at the Beacon Hill Station.  It is accessed only by a fairly deep elevator, which is different from many of them that have escalators and stairs also getting to the surface station.  The location that I choose to sketch is the newly renovated Beacon Hill School that is part of a mixed use complex that grew out of the station development.  El Centro De La Raza looks to be a great asset to the community and a place for the arts and many other programs.



With the light rail as a theme I also spent some time sketching the rail /station construction at Northgate the day before our outing.  I met a one of the construction workers at the Beacon Hill outing that is working on the light rail and loved that I had bothered to sketch some of the things he is working on.  You never know who you will meet when you are out sketching!



Jimi Hendrix Park

8/25/17 Jimi Hendrix Park

Seattle’s newest park, opened earlier this summer, honors one of the city’s most well-known musicians – Jimi Hendrix. The Seattle native’s memorial at Greenwood Memorial Park in Renton is visited by many fans each year, and his bronze likeness in front of the Blick Store on Capitol Hill is also popular. Now there’s finally a public park in his name.

Several urban sketchers at yesterday’s outing featured the bright orange sculpture that forms the park’s visual centerpiece. Apparently when it rains, water collects at the top and then pours out from one end, creating a natural waterfall. Thankfully yesterday, however, not a drop of rain was nearby, and we all enjoyed a beautiful morning in the sunshine. Quotations from Hendrixs songs are engraved on pavers on the parks walkway shaped like a guitar. I chose one I thought was fitting to write on the sketch.

8/25/17 The same sculpture from a different angle.

I felt like my first sketch (above) came out a little fussy. After taking a brief break to walk through the Northwest African American Museum inside the historic Colman School on the park grounds, I tried a more abstract approach (at right) from a different angle. 

Purple Path

The Jimi Hendrix Park officially opened just this past June. Urban Sketchers Seattle paid a visit on Friday. Also next to the park is the Northwest African American Museum housed in the former Colman School.

My first sketch was of the staircase that bears Jimi's signature.



My next subject was the one that stood out the most in the park: this large orange structure. None of us could decide what it was meant to be. I looked it up after I got home. Gloria's guess was correct! "The newly installed central shelter, a soaring sculpture reminiscent of butterfly wings, now anchors Jimi Hendrix Park."

That's Tina on the far left and Peggy JG on the right, sitting on the high bench.

There were purple sections of walk way with Jimi's lyrics carved on them.



We might consider going again next year as there is more planned for the park: "Within the next year, a purple “shadow wave wall” — designed with Hendrix’s face in the middle — will be built atop a small slope in the park."

Info about the park is here 

Seattle Times article about the recent opening.




A few people are missing from the photo.

Friday, August 25, 2017

Jimi Hendrix Park - 8/25/2017


Today Seattle urban sketchers went to Jimi Hendrix Park which was only opened in June this year after decade-long effort, as to remember Jimi's legendary who grow up in the nearby neighborhood. Sketch below is Northwest African American Museum entrance (former Colman School), and I thought must have included this Art work which learned later it was modeled after the neck of a guitar. It does make sense!


It truly is a gorgeous day! I walked around the Museum... nice parks framed with trees, green grass and Mt. Rainier in the background.
Beautiful!

Thursday, August 24, 2017

An Exercise in Perspective

The recent outing at the Beacon Hill Light Rail Station gave me a good opportunity to practice basic one point perspective. On a Sunday morning the platform was mostly deserted - far different from a busy weekday. It was a little hard to spend a sunny August morning underground, but I am hoping for a few more weeks of outdoor sketching this year!

2017_08_20 USk Beacon Hill Light Rail

Tuesday, August 22, 2017

Recent USk Outings


Here are a couple of drawings done during two recent USk outings. The first is of the Eagle Harbor Marina from a Saturday meet up in Winslow on Bainbridge Island and the second is the entrance to El Centro de la Raza from this past Sunday's gathering at the Beacon Hill Light Rail station.

Sunday, August 20, 2017

Beacon Hill Light Rail Station

Urban Sketchers Seattle met at Beacon Hill Light Rail Station this morning for the monthly outing.  A good size group showed up to sketch station highlights and the surrounding area.  We had many newcomers and a couple of sketchers from Tacoma Urban Sketchers. Welcome to all including returning sketchers! I passed out an Urban Sketcher handout about posting on-line, so I look forward to seeing abundant on-line posts from this morning.
 
Beacon Hill Light Rail Station

A security guard on duty at the Light Rail Station was alert and friendly.  Checking in with him to make sure it was ok to sketch on the lower level where trains departed, he gave thumbs-up as long as we didn’t get in the way of passengers. Glowing in the dark tunnel, colorful public art hangs from the ceilings.  Remaining on street level, I drew the north wall vent screen. The Aztec themed design is quite striking, it's not something you see every day on a vent screen.  I missed a few twists and turns getting lost in the pattern, but that's ok. 
Aztec themed north vent Beacon Hill Light Rail Station

I pivoted northeast and sketched a scene of old and new buildings with old and new growth trees.  A vintage house enthusiast, I love to draw their intricate features. This drawing included a “Seattle Box” roofline and a new high-rise complex to the west. The Beacon Hill neighborhood next to the station is full of charming cottage style homes. I noted at least one razed lot with a bulldozer waiting to finish its job. Out with the old, in with the new, a continuing mantra in Seattle. Behind the line of houses I could see the blue silhouette of the Cascade Mountain Range.  At least the landscape stays the same.  

Dwellings on Beacon Hill
  
At 12:30 we met for the end of meeting throw-down.  It's always great to see choices sketchers make.  


Throw-down in front of Beacon Hill Station

Group photo in front of the Beacon Hill Light Rail Station.  I'm the photographer so count me in!  
Group photo, Seattle Urban Sketchers at Beacon Hill Light Rail Station

Chicago Bean


I missed the 2017 International Urban Sketch Symposium in Chicago a few weeks ago, but while packing my bags to head off to help move my daughter to Chicago for college tomorrow, I discovered this sketch I did last April when we were there doing her college tour that I forgot about. So on this eve of her heading out into the world to do amazing things, I'm posting this in her honor to commemorate the occasion. Looking forward to visiting her in this awesome city for Cubs games, deep dish pizza, and the Chicago marathon over the next four years!  

Saturday, August 19, 2017

Best View of... a Water Tower?

The Ad Hoc group met on Friday at Maple Leaf Reservoir Park where, allegedly, the best view of Mr. Rainier in Seattle can be had. I wouldn't know. We waited patiently. Our local guide - Tina - told us exactly where to sit. But, as so often happens, the clouds and haze refused to lift and this is all I got...

2017_08_18 View of Mt Rainier

On the other hand, I nabbed another water tower for my small collection. This is my third this summer and they are fun to draw!

2017_08_18 Maple Leaf Water Tower

August sketch outing.

Sunday, August 20
2702 Beacon Avenue South, Seattle 
10:00 Am - 12:30 pm
Meet at 10 am at the street level right in front of the station.   Kathleen Keckler will host.



We'll sketch in or around the Beacon Hill Light Rail station. The track level in the station has an art installation.  Otherwise, above ground there are some interesting areas around the station.  Some cafes and a library are close by, also.

There is limited street parking so it might be a good idea to take the light rail there.

Friday, August 18, 2017

Maple Leaf Park: Oversold But Not Underwhelming

8/18/17 Confluent Boulders sculpture at Maple Leaf Reservoir Park

“The biggest and best highlight is a completely unobstructed view of Mt. Rainier – possibly the best within the city limits!”

That’s what I wrote on the Urban Sketchers Seattle blog to promote today’s outing to Maple Leaf Reservoir Park. Perhaps I oversold it just a tad, as the cloud cover never did reveal The Mountain. Still, a good turnout of sketchers found plenty to sketch in “my” neighborhood park on a beautiful morning.

I sketch at this park regularly, so I was bound for a redux, no matter what view I chose. But it had been more than three years since I sketched this view of the public art, Confluent Boulders, and the iconic water tower behind it, so it didn’t feel old. (The sculpture by Patrick Marold is made from two sliced-up boulders taken from the Cedar and Tolt river watersheds, which both feed the Maple Leaf reservoir, now hidden beneath the park.) It was especially enjoyable this time with the warm sun at my back and Natalie and Anne for company. Familiar views feel fresh when I try to imagine them being seen through the eyes of a newcomer. Maple Leaf Park was new to everyone who joined the outing yesterday, so it was fun to imagine seeing and sketching it for the first time.



Welcome to two new faces, Marty and Cindy!




Monday, August 14, 2017

Mega Pity Party Weekend!

8/11/17 Part of Calder's Eagle at the Sculpture Park
When we heard that the 5th Annual West Coast Sketch Crawl in Vancouver, B.C., had been cancelled, many of us in Seattle were very disappointed. I had a great time in Tacoma last year and in San Diego the year before, and I had been looking forward to another terrific long weekend of sketching in that lovely Canadian city to the north.

The USk Seattle admin team decided that we weren’t going to cry over lost sketching. For the same weekend that would have been the Sketch Crawl, we scheduled an extravaganza of outings on Friday, Saturday and Sunday. Not intended to be a formal replacement for the cancelled event, it was just a way to give everyone as many sketch outing options as possible as we move toward the waning days of summer.

8/11/17 Space Needle




On Friday we met at the Olympic Sculpture Park, which has become something of a summertime staple. Although I sketch Calder’s Eagle just about every time I visit (last yeartwice in 2014 and in 2013)I was magnetically drawn to it yet again. This time, however, I chose a partial view, and as I sketched, I remembered fondly Calder’s similar but much larger Flamingo in Chicago.

I wandered around the park a long time, simply enjoying the not-too-hot sunshine and not feeling particularly compelled – until I saw the Space Needle peeking over some buildings. Then with only a few minutes before the throwdown, I made a quick sketch above the amphitheater with Richard Serra’s Wake in the background. The empty space on the page was a good spot to hold the badge that Kate had playfully given to participants.

8/11/17 Amphitheater and Richard Serra's Wake

8/12/17 Sketcher on the ferry
For Saturday, Day 2 of our extravaganza, we chose Bainbridge Island for an entire day of sketching. Meeting up on the ferry, most of us started sketching right away, and I spotted a woman I didn’t know who looked like she was sketching, too. When we talked to her later, it turned out Martha was aware of Urban Sketchers but didn’t know we would be on the ferry that day. A life drawing student, she simply enjoys sketching people on the ferry. Imagine meeting a sketcher in the wild who isn’t part of Urban Sketchers while we’re on our way to a sketch outing!

After the initial meetup in Winslow, I headed for the Bainbridge Farmers Market, where I was lured by music and the smells of good foods cooking. I had to leave the house so early to catch the ferry that I had skipped breakfast, so I ate a big piece of carrot cake while sketching Good Karma Blues, a lively band with a terrific vocalist.

8/12/17 Good Karma Blues at Bainbridge Farmers Market
8/12/17 Eagle Harbor
That was a lot of fun, and I could have stayed all day sketching nothing but the market, but I was on an island, after all, so I found myself gravitating toward the water. At Eagle Harbor, the sun started to break through the overcast sky as a few lazy boats knocked against a pier. 

After the sketchbook throwdown, the group split up – some going to Rolling Bay to take part in the art studio tour and some staying in Winslow for lunch and whatever. I opted for the latter, and after a leisurely lunch of symposium gossip, half the afternoon zipped by on island time. A few of us went to the Bainbridge Island Museum of Art, where local artist Bill Hemp has an exhibit of pen and ink drawings of island locations. Interestingly, the pieces are reproductions of his sketchbook pages that look like they are torn right out of a spiral-bound book.

While I often have opportunities to sketch ferries, I see them only when they are either stopped briefly at a dock or a long distance away where it’s hard to see details. I took advantage of a moored ferry near the Winslow terminal to squeeze in one last sketch before hopping on the ferry back to Seattle. I think being able to take my time to observe and draw all the details on this one will help me fake it a little more realistically next time I need to sketch a ferry on the fly.

8/12/17 Washington State Ferry at Winslow terminal

For our third and final day, we chose the West Seattle Farmers Market, one of Seattle’s few neighborhood markets that are open all year round. As I was driving across the West Seattle Bridge, the drizzle on my windshield started looking like it could be “measurable” rain, which made me wonder if we had finally ended our record-breaking spell of consecutive dry days. I also started wondering if our sketch outing would end in a soggy mess. As it turned out, we did end our dry streak with 56 consecutive rainless days, but I needn’t have worried about sogginess – the measurable drizzle stopped as quickly as it had begun, and it was my favorite sketching weather – a comfortable temperature, not windy, the sun darting in and out of clouds just often enough to provide shadows or light, whichever you need at the moment.

8/13/17 Bluegrass band at West Seattle Farmers Market

I hardly sketched any people in Chicago, so today I made up for it. A lively bluegrass band, a young cellist, and a guitarist standing in front of a huge mural all provided the tunes for a fun morning at the farmers market.

8/13/17 guitarist and mural
8/13/17 cellist at the market

8/13/17 Junction Plaza Park near the West Seattle Farmers Market 

Despite the iffy weather, we had a small but stalwart turnout for our pity party finale. And Sue and I get the prize (each other’s respect!) for participating on all three days!

Stalwart sketchers at the Day 3 finale
Sue and I made it to all three days!

Sunday, August 13, 2017

Chicago Inspired Pioneer Square Sketches


Saul Steinberg drawing at CAI.
I saw the Saul Steinberg exhibit at the Chicago Art Institute and was inspired to try his more minimal, high-contrast style of capturing architecture. I did a couple while still in Chicago, and continue to explore drawing without ink washes now that I'm home. An added bonus is seeing my town through different eyes and a whole new subject to look for when sketching. 

Then for something completely different tried to draw the running water at the Waterfall Garden. 


Pioneer Square Doorway

First Ave Building

Waterfall Garden, Pioneer Square.