Urban Sketchers Take on Seattle

| No Comments

Jane & Gail w sketches.JPG

In the beginning, if you wanted to record what something looked like, from woolly mammoth to soaring cathedral, you used the stub of a burning log and the side of your cave, or a pencil and a sketch pad. Then along came dgital cameras, along came the internet, and pretty soon there were a million photo blogs. But the old-fashioned way of seeing things, eye to hand to pen or brush or pencil to paper, never went away.

Drawing and sketching are back in vogue. (The New York Times has had great success lately with a series on drawing human forms, not to mention the Pulitzer-prize quality sketch-blogs by Maira Kalman.) The goal of the new wave of sketchers, whose epicenter is here in Seattle, is to render the world, one drawing at a time.

Sketch by Jane Wingfield.JPGThe Seattle Times's popular feature, Seattle Sketcher, features the work of one Gabriel ("Gabi") Campanario. In addition to his newspaper illustrations, the Spanish-born Campanario also has a blog where he discusses his work. A year ago he founded a group called UrbanSketchers, which quickly went global. There was a world-wide meetup of urban-sketching bloggers in Portland this summer.

So just as Salon's Julie/Julia Project launched ten thosuand food blogs, Campanario's success and initiative have triggered a cascade of sketchers. The international blog, UrbanSketchers.com, highlights contributions by an parade of virtuoso artists. The Seattle group meets monthly to train eye and pencil on a specific subject (Sunday it was that old chestnut, the Pike Place Market), then gathers after two hours to share and discuss.

Gail's sketch.JPGThe dean of the local group is Frank Ching, a prof at the University of Washington. He quietly mentors newbies, comparing lines and perspectives on cellphone images and paper sketches. The group's monthly meetup is managed by the talented Gail Wong, an architect and UW professor. Stars emerge: Jane Wingfield, for example, lives in Olympia and came to Sunday's event with her sister. No question that her sketches belong in a category that could be deemed "commercial" without being condemned as "sell-out."

Here's the group's "manifesto" (perhaps "mission statement" would sound less dogmatic):

1. We draw on location, indoors or out, capturing what we see from direct observation. 2. Our drawings tell the story of our surroundings, the places we live and where we travel. 3. Our drawings are a record of time and place. 4. We are truthful to the scenes we witness. 5. We use any kind of media and cherish our individual styles. 6. We support each other and draw together. 7. We share our drawings online. 8. We show the world, one drawing at a time.

One comes away from with this meetup with a profound sense of hope.

It's not just that nothing escapes the notice of these artists (who have the inestimable talent to record it); it's the reassurance that evanescent electrons may fade and fail, but --be it on the wall of a cave, on a papyrus, a canvas or a Moleskine notebook--a human being's memory of what we created here will endure.

Seattle Sketchers meetup.JPG

Above: early arrivals at Pike Place Market for this weekend's meetup of Seattle Urban Sketchers. Top: Jane Wingfield (left) and Gail Wong with the sketches they completed in a couple of hours.

Leave a comment

About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by Cornichon published on November 29, 2010 10:30 AM.

Getting and spending, Westlake edition was the previous entry in this blog.

Fearless Critic vs Cheap Bastard vs Insider is the next entry in this blog.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.

Archives