Done this summer. Sitting in the truck just in front of the “gate” with the AC running to endure the extreme heat. It is a little hard now in November to remember how hot it was- though we've not had any winter yet. The iris have not had enough freezing weather to turn them all yellow! This drawing of a simple country setting is offset by the details in the foreground, which give it a linear feel. In this case, the detail of the unmatched panels adds just enough specific touch to let you know that this is a real place, a local bypath. Real people set up this scene; It has been waiting for someone to draw! Not sure what the structure had been used for in the past, but it is mostly idle now. There may be some machinery inside. I suppose there is a chance that someone even lived in the place for a time.
Sunday, November 18, 2012
Wednesday, October 31, 2012
Monday, October 29, 2012
Stockton Rest Stop
Every year we make a trip into
Missouri to one of the lakes where there is a big reunion for Gramma
Ruth's family at a shelter with lots of food and the lake in the
background. This year it was at Stockton Lake on the 6th
of June. Stockton lake is where the waters of Turn-back Creek make
their journeys end- That is the creek some miles to the south on
which the Kerr family had their beginnings, at Gum Spring. Grandpa
and her used to always make the trip to the reunion from Oklahoma when they lived
there, before Dad passed away. We had stopped this year for a break for Gramma when I did
this quick drawing before we were ready to roll again. The drawing
gives little indication of the heat that day- I know it was hot, but
did not seem too bad at the lake. This house is in town on the main
highway headed south to take you to the lake. It sits on the west
side. I have no idea who owns or who lives in the little place,
fairly neatly kept. If you are passing that way you may need to keep
your eyes open to find it as I like to find the nondescript places
that have seen some wear.
Saturday, October 20, 2012
Across Saunders Field
Yes, this field was at one time part
of Liberty Memorial High School. After the HS was at first at 9th
& KT and before the building became Central Junior High. So did
the High School play their varsity games on this field in those early
days? Or did they play even then at Haskell Stadium? There was also
to my understanding a grade school or old rural school building at
the east end of this property which was used for years before the
town extended south from there. Does that explain the jog in
Connecticut Street as it approaches 15th from the north?
Kim may well remember this view -hah hah!- from her First Grade days
at the original Lawrence Christian School the church building which
also sits near this site. You can find a link on my profile page if
you have comments or info about this area. I am not sure when the
place in this drawing was actually constructed.
I have been thinking of this for quite
awhile as a nice motif for a drawing. It has been in my mind for
awhile and finally has materialized! If you can find the place from
this short description I would be interested in hearing about it.
Here is a hint below.
You can go to the link below and see
what the High School looked like from the air in 1925. The trees
directly east of the building on the north have long been gone. The
entire field has been open for years. You can also see a pic of what
the original High School looked like at 9th and Tennessee;
now only the first floor rock is original I believe.
Here is a link to info about John
Saunders – amazing...
Saturday, October 13, 2012
Georgia Crape Myrtle.
This drawing done on location on a
recent trip is not out of the ordinary for me, though it is for this
blog. It is a record of one detail when we were in Georgia. We were
at our son and daughter-in-law's in “Middle Georgia”; Warner
Robbins to be exact. The drawing, though not as exact as a photo,
may well be remembered longer, and has a little more personal touch
to it, and can be tweaked to emphasize what ever you would like. The
drawing definitely took a little longer to get! Though I did check
it with a snapshot afterward. Actually the drawing was done like
other drawings with a sketch on the spot and some of the finishing
done later after we arrived back in Kansas.
These myrtle was well established when
Matthew first moved into the place but needed lots of attention to
get 'em to be a reasonable accompaniment to the deck. Looks good the
way it is now, though it may take some work to keep it that way. You
can see these trees from the kids dining room and kitchen windows, or
sit under them on the back deck. I like the look of the mature
myrtle bark. Similar to the sycamore of the midwest in the way it
peels leaving 2 tone rounded shapes on the surface. Interesting!
The crape myrtle is almost as common in the south as the black gnat!
Those bugs are unresponsive to DEET but fortunately survive much less
time than the tree! We do not see many crape myrtle in Kansas,
though it is rumored that some will survive most winters, especially
with this climate change.
Saturday, October 6, 2012
Northside Shadow
The original sketch for this ink drawing was done like the one from last week in the middle of a hot dry Kansas July. It was evening time, with the sun sinking low and sneaking around the north side of this farmhouse. (You can see it from the barn in the drawing Gold to Gray that was posted 8/25.) It is just a couple miles south of town. When I see sunlight striking diagonal across a surface like this it is hard to resist picking up something to scratch a record of what is so fleeting. In this case I was somewhat prepared with my sketchpad. Later near the end of the month I put ink to the sketch but was not yet satisfied with the results, so it sat until another month had passed. Matthew our son suggested posting the ink drawing when he saw it in Georgia in early September, so when I brought it home I finally did a little more ink work with it, and this now is the result.
These ink drawings are done with India ink and a stick soaked with the ink. There is little else that I know of that will give the same result. It can be very spontaneous looking and I guess is sorta difficult to control at times. I have been experimenting with this technic since the late 1960's I am sure. But the look can almost be oriental in some places it seems. I like the combination of depth and single dimensionality that can be obtained. The textures will depend greatly on the surface of the paper, as well as the shape of the wood stick used to apply the ink. Paper and ink- what can be more durable?
Friday, September 28, 2012
Roots
Something besides that tree put down their roots in Kansas prairie...
One gets a day from time to time that gives you enough of a break to do some sketching on location. Thus you are taught some amazing things: There are many places and things that inspire a creative record. There are as well many places that are way beyond what you can get on the page in a few minute sketch. Even though there are sometimes when a few minutes is all you have. So work quickly! And how do you instantly "get over" the fear of that blank sheet of drawing paper staring back at you? This recent piece is one in which all the "details" were recorded in a short time and were then evaluated and expanded over the next couple weeks.
Sunday, September 16, 2012
Pasture Edge
Another country drawing! This is a drawing from awhile back that actually is a blending of a couple motifs. Can you tell from where the style might be recognized? I think it is way too obvious! I get some good comments about many of these drawings that I have posted; but not a negative one yet! If you have a critique of something feel free to say so – this is the Internet- duh. Would be happy also to give some input on drawing you have done that you want to evaluate...adult or child.
Tuesday, September 4, 2012
Delaware Uphill
Here
is another one from Delaware Street in Lawrence. This India ink line
drawing was done a couple years ago. Not a "cityscape,"
what would you call it, a "town scape". A straightforward
perspective of the east side of Lawrence. I am sure though that this
haphazard perspective would probably not satisfy the exacting eye of
Betsy McCordic our Prairie High Art teacher . (And some others
perhaps!) Oh well, the end here was some spontaneous interpretation
of an interesting view of an historical part of town. I have drawn
nearly every building along these 2 blocks of Delaware. This particular
drawing may tell us more about the layout of the street than any of
the others. I hope you enjoy it. The Murphy-Bromelsick house is just across the street to the east of this in the next block south.
Saturday, August 25, 2012
Gold to Gray
Here is a drawing just finished up this weekend. This is the purpose we started posting drawings - to get me to do a little more drawing, and to figure out how to get it presented half decently. This piece is actually a followup for an earlier post - Gray and Gold - but done from a much closer perspective. The former, an evening sketch; the later, a morning one. A morning in which the sun was casting shadows over all the weathered wood. The paint if there had ever been some is leaving very little evidence now of its presence. I had a little time a few Saturdays ago while Grandmother Ruth was getting her hair done! so I beat it across town and was able to get the sketch which this weekend turned into a drawing. (It's a thin line I guess in my case between a sketch and a "bona fide" drawing.) It was a warm, dry, sunny morning but still a little before the sweat began to roll! This is one of those subjects that could inspire a bucket full of drawings.
Saturday, August 18, 2012
Sibleyville Rd.
Sunday, August 12, 2012
"Tell Me"
Here is another study of negative space.
The branches with the roof line produce good negative space.
I have not been able to locate this place again.
One of those drawings the idea for which
I know came from somewhere close by here.
But where I cannot tell. Anyone have any ideas;
maybe you can tell me!
Also I think the drawing has a symmetry that does it well...
Kim, I do think I have figured out how to get consistent formatting each time. We will see!
Saturday, July 21, 2012
7/20/12 Bonanza Street Maple
If
you have been to our house you have been under this old Maple. This
is the view from our front window. It was not a young tree when we
came here 30+ years ago now. You can see the 2 stumps only a little exaggerated from low branches the kids used for climbing. Even the
stumps are gone now, but grandkids still do climb it some, but it
takes a little more effort. The
wall was started at the time- added to from time to time, and now
mostly covered with ivy. The concentration here was in the angles
of the branches and negative spaces they create against the backdrop.
What do you call this style? It has a graphic flavor, and is a little
change not only in style, but also subject. One of these days one of
these chunks of tree will fall, and put a big crease in the house or
a vehicle... so I guess some day soon it will have to go.
Wednesday, July 4, 2012
'ol K-10
This is the house Dave Penny called the "Brouse House" I think after the man who lived and farmed there. It is also I think some of the trees of which Dave was speaking in his introduction one recent Sunday morning during Family Bible Hour at LBC. Maybe Dave can clarify some of this... This drawing was done from the road going into Dave's shop and finished in the mid to late '90's. Just to the south of this property is old K-10, now 83rd street, as you pass through the bottoms east of DeSoto. The house and barn are now gone, and maybe the other structures as well; some as an act of God, some of man. Shannon may have a watercolor done from the same property. The house and outbuildings in this setting follow a pattern often seen in hill country. They were lined up along a narrow strip of ground suitable for building that gives you level and easy access to everything. There is a road to one side and rough and hilly ground to the other; or as in the case of the Brouse place, floodplain. Old K-10 is the road we made many trips down heading to KU Medical Center in the early '70's when Kimberly was there often. That is another story...
Monday, June 25, 2012
Well here is another drawing finally. This comes from a special group of drawings of places our kids have lived. The notes on this pretty much speak for it. Luke was less than 6 months old that Christmas. The ink drawing of this is now hanging over Jeremiah and Heather's piano in Eldorado. Am I right in saying there were 2 places in Baldwin where they lived before this? We had a lot of good times here with those grandkids early on! I had actually forgotten there was a pencil of this house.
Wednesday, June 20, 2012
Tuesday, June 12, 2012
The Ol' Garage
This pencil was done on New Year's Day in 2003. The sun was low on the southern horizon. I was able to grab a moment and do a drawing as the day's activities were winding down. The old garage- too small for most modern cars- and too inconvenient with its homemade doors and no opener- reminds me perfectly of the one we had as a kid at the parsonage in Trenton, NE. We are talking late 50's early 60's. Seems like Dad may have parked in it a few times but not often- I don't believe the '59 Fairlane would fit end to end. The broom in this drawing gives something away.... this is a concrete floor- very little use for a broom in a dirt floor garage like the one I remember!
Sunday, June 3, 2012
Up North
6/3/12 Well,
here is a new title drawing up there now. Needed to do that for
awhile. Don't ask me where it came from!
Now for a new post. I
skipped a week; not only was there too much going on around here, but
I wanted to sort out some of this stuff...
Off North 75
From
memory a few years ago after a trip to I think the Circleville Quarry opperated by
Hamm Cos. This may have been done from a thumbnail on an old scrap
of paper, I have not come across the sketch but that is no supprise.
Old barnyards from the backside are always fun! I remember a story
related to this. I was doing some sketches on location for Beth
Khaler of her parents place north of Topeka; actually also west of 75
highway but not as far north as this one. I was suposed to be
keeping the project a secret – yea, that is likely to happen! Her
dad was coming out of the house and wandering around, trying to not
look too obvious, but was very currious as to what I was doing!
(Some 'ol boys would just have gotten out the shotgun and chased me
off the property!) Some of the better sketches that day came from
the backside. Not ones that Beth's mother was very happy to be "on
display".
Monday, May 21, 2012
05/21/12 We
have had company all weekend, and graduation parties to attend, so
this is a little late getting posted. Hope you have not been waiting
on pins and needles to see what was coming.
13th &
Rhode Island
Not a large place, but well appointed with 19th
century details. Many such places are not cared for well, nor is
Kansas humidity kind to wood structures. This one however has not
suffered much from neglect or the passage of time. It is impossible
to imagine all the stories little places like these could tell. Some
histories can be dug from the past I suppose, otherwise we will just
have to let the image do the talking.
Friday, May 11, 2012
Gray
and Gold
If you head out of town north on 24-40 and then take
Highway 24 east past the Tee Pee to the first bend in the road, you
will come to the dirt road heading east and the intersection where
this old place sits just east. Another abandoned farm. Everything near
is farmed, and the close in grass is very healthy and kept neat, so
someone is taking some care of the place. It is full of memories and
history for some folks probably mostly departed now...
I was sitting in the shade of a small turnpike bridge over the seldom used dirt road heading south from the place as I did this sketch. It was winter, but this year not at all cold. Paint less structures in the late afternoon sun. The perfect motif for a future water color perhaps.
I was sitting in the shade of a small turnpike bridge over the seldom used dirt road heading south from the place as I did this sketch. It was winter, but this year not at all cold. Paint less structures in the late afternoon sun. The perfect motif for a future water color perhaps.
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