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Saturday, Aug. 30: Leschi neighborhood
Showing posts with label Travel Sketch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Travel Sketch. Show all posts

Saturday, September 29, 2018

dispatch from Japan: Shimanami Kaido

I’ve been traveling solo in Asia since the end of August and it’s been amazing. I have so many sketches to share with you, but I’ll start with a small but particularly great part of my journey: biking the Shimanami Kaido cycling route in Hiroshima prefecture in Japan. It’s a 70km / ~45 mile cycling path crossing through 6 islands in the Seto Inland Sea. 

I started in Onomichi and went south, and the bridges spanning across the water got longer and more stunning each time. I was struck by how similar the landscape looked to the Puget Sound (a Japanese Seattlite I met there agreed with me). I wish we could have such a nice bike path in the San Juans - or please advise me if it exists already! The route was so easy to navigate, you just had to follow a blue line painted on the side of the road, and all the hills up to the bridges were graded so it was a very accessible ride for all levels. I saw hardcore cycling groups decked out in spandex, as well as people in day clothes casually riding.

The weather wasn’t the best for plein air, but I managed to fit in several sketches during the 3 days I took to explore the area. I feel like I just skimmed the surface here, even though I ended up biking 200 km (125 miles)!
 
The bridge between Innoshima and Ikuchi Islands. This was maybe 1.5 hours of cycling from Onomichi, so I had a snack and sat on a retaining wall. I liked the contrast of the town cluster below the bridge, and the distant island hills. 


Takara Bridge: this is maybe the most famous one, or at least the one I knew from watching anime. I wanted to show how BIG it is! There were rain clouds looming, so I was going fast with the knowledge I might have to stop at any moment. These islands grow a lot of citrus, so I drank some fresh local orange juice as I painted this, and made sure to include the distant orchards on the farther island. 


Ōshima Bridge: I stayed on this island for 3 nights, so I definitely have a soft spot for this view. Ōshima Island’s main industry is a granite quarry, so I watched boats leaving the stone yards as I sketched, as well as men fishing off the docks in the early morning. The small neighborhood shown here was really charming, with lots of old wooden Japanese houses clustered at the water’s edge. 



Takara Bridge, take 2: I wasn’t that happy with my first painting of this scene, so I found an observatory above the bridge to do a really fast sketch on my way back to Onomichi. it was raining a lot this day, and I needed to catch a ferry a few islands away, so I timed myself to finish in 25 minutes. You can see where it rained on my ink lines.
I was pretty happy with this one because the fast drawing has a lot of energy! But I still think it doesn’t show the scale of the bridge that well…it’s SO big, and really exhilarating to cycle on! 

I’d love to come back to these islands for even longer - you could easily spend a whole month in this area. There are many “island explorer” bike trails branching off the main Shimanami Kaido route with small charming towns and clean, empty beaches. I was constantly torn between wanting to stop to sketch and document where I was, and wanting to continue to see what was ahead.

Wednesday, May 14, 2014

UK & Ireland Travel Sketches

Back in Seattle after a few weeks traveling through the UK and Ireland. I had a blast sketching. So much to be inspired by - I could do this all day everyday!


 Blarney Castle, Blarney, Cork, Ireland

Gothic Church at Kylemore Abbey, Connemara County, Ireland


Alley in City Center, Cork, Ireland


Temple Bar Pub, Dublin, Ireland


  
London Eye, Westminster Abbey, and Big Ben on the River Thames, London, England


Tuesday, April 2, 2013

An artist's view of Paris - October 18-27, 2013

View of the Louvre through the Orsay Museum clock window
Paris Art Beyond the Louvre
You're invited...
FREE SLIDE PRESENTATIONS/INFORMATION SESSIONS
Saturday, May 4 at The Savvy Traveler 
112 5th Ave S,
Edmonds, WA
Tuesday, June 11, 6-8pm at Seattle Central Community College
Room 1139B, lower level. (Enter at 1716 Harvard Ave.)

“For a painter, the Mecca of the world, for study, for inspiration and for living, is here on this star called Paris.” Voice-over introduction by Jerry Mulligan (Gene Kelly), An American In Paris (1951)

Those who know me—even just a little—know that I have an unbridled passion for Paris. The city has over 200 museums filled with the greatest art the world has known. Art is everywhere—from inside the Louvre to historic back streets and passages.  

I have been to Paris eight times and counting; whenever I am there, I discover new and wonderful sights and sites, much of it off the beaten tourist track. I have long wanted to share my Paris experiences with other art enthusiasts, so I have organized an 8-day creative arts excursion to Paris in partnership with Seattle Central Community College and American Institute of Foreign Study (AIFS).   

Each day the group will explore a particular area of the city, with designated time for sketching, photography, writing and group discussion and sharing, in addition to planned visits to major and lesser-known museums, art venues and neighborhoods. A planned yet flexible itinerary will offer varied options to suit individual preferences.

In addition, two major arts events will be going on during our time in Paris: FIAC—International Contemporary Arts Fair and the Festival of Autumn.  And yes, we will have a guided tour of the Louvre.
 
For more information (and some cool links) please check out:
www.seattlecentral.edu/continuinged/paris

www.facebook.com/ParisArtBeyondtheLouvre
email sharon.hager@seattlecolleges.edu
call 206.934.4141





Wednesday, December 12, 2012

KRob Award for Travel Sketch to India



I found out about a month ago that one of my travel sketches from a trip last year to India won an award in the 2012 international KRob architectural delineation competition sponsored by the Dallas AIA.  I am so excited and very honored!

If you want to see the categories and other images that received awards, go to
http://www.krobarch.com/winners.asp?winner_year=2012
The competition received around 350 entries from around the world for all the categories, including student and professional, digital and hand images.

India was an amazing place to visit and even more amazing to draw.  I was able to fill 2 Moleskine watercolor books with mostly pencil drawings during the 3.5 weeks my friend Nancy and I traveled.

Sketching in India and Nepal was very challenging most of the time, as people were very curious and within seconds, there was a crowd (literally) looking over my shoulder. And we were constantly on the go so I had to draw fast, usually sitting in the dirt!  For this sketch, we were visiting Fatehpur Sikri, Akbar's palace compound and mosque outside of Agra.  I found a spot on a platform up high where I could sit and draw without interruptions.   Looking at it now, I can remember the sounds of birds, the heat and dust, the Hindi being spoken around me.  I loved it and would go back to India in a heartbeat.