The early bird
“gets” the worm.


When my granddaughter, Lucy was born, Judy gave me a “Grandmother-book” to write about events in my life as a keep-sake for my granddaughter. I thought it was a good idea, but writing has never been my first choice of expression. So I decided to draw stories & vignettes of my life for Lucy.
Some of my earliest memories:

I lived in Chicago until I was almost 5, so I got to play in the snow.

I had my tonsils out, and “had” to go on an ice cream diet. Back then the flavors were limited. choc chip now ( or Vanilla Swiss Almond from Haagen-Dax’s

We moved from Chicago, Illinois to Phoenix, Arizona when I was 5, so now I played in the sprinklers instead of snow.

I loved horses and drew them all the time. I got a real horse, Misty, when I was 10.
see Drawing Friends and Pets for my Granddaughter
PA
On doctor’s “orders” I’ve been struggling to lose weight. The biggest problem I’ve discovered is swallowing. Now that art classes have resumed I think I’ve solved the “swallowing problem” . . . I’m painting . . .



Peggy, too, loved it and made it into a poster. With Sharon’s urging we are donating one third of all profits to The Gentle Barn, Animal Rescue charity. (Judy)

(Proverbs 3:17-18)
When her boys were young she taught art in their elementary school classrooms. Carla explained, “There I was tasked (happily!) with keeping the lessons both fun AND instructional, and when I began teaching adults a few years later, I continued this approach as I found that many people felt nervous about drawing especially… it helped to keep it FUN! From those two teaching experiences Drawing Lab was born.”
She and her husband Steve live in Seattle, Washington, just 10 minutes away from their three beautiful grandchildren.
Carla Sonheim helped jump-start my (judy) drawing. Years ago, I took her on-line class “Silly” and have followed her on her blog and taken other classes since.
___________________
Here’s Carla’s response to the question of how she deals with feelings that “. . . art isn’t important and what the hell is art good for?”
” . . .My answer has three parts:
“I think this quote speaks to the first part of the above answer, where I feel that artwork I make — the actual drawings and paintings — really aren’t that important.”
“It’s very likely that my work is never going to be collected by art galleries or museums, and most of the artwork I make is never going to be seen by more than a few people. So why do it?”
“BUT! We’re forgetting the PROCESS if we think that way.”
“The actual making of artwork provides me with three things:
1. “When I draw or paint, I feel better. I feel calmer, happier. I’m doing something I like to do, which makes me a happier person, which makes my husband and the rest of my family, happier people.”
2. “When I draw or paint, I am solving problems and challenging myself, and there is satisfaction in that… humans love to learn!! A side benefit… these problem-solving skills I can take into the rest of my world, such as running the business or navigating a friendship.”
3. “When I draw or paint, I either have something I like at the end of it that I can share or something that goes into the scrap drawer to be painted over later… a physical piece of work.”
“You can see that the artwork itself is just one of the three things above, just 1/3 of the benefits! The other two things are arguably ways that you would encourage anyone to spend their time doing — doing something they love and learning new things.”
“Other people do it through sports or exercise, science, business, homemaking, cooking… we all have our things that we do that seem both frivolous at times (even cooking, does it matter in the grand scheme of things whether to use regular salt or sea salt?), but serve as the conduit through which we live our lives.”
“Therefore, it is “everything.”
Finally, even though I know the above is true in my head, I get off track on a regular basis and feel dumb about all of the hundreds (thousands?) of drawings I have in drawers and what have I done with my life?!!
I find life wonderful, but I also find life very hard.
I do have clinical depression and, though it is mostly managed, it kicks my butt some days. So sometimes I don’t do well at all with the feeling; I cast about.
Other days, when I’m feeling better, I can reach out to a friend and they can help remind me that I am okay just as I am, whatever I do with my time is my own business (as long as I’m not hurting people) and that taking an hour to draw a silly animal today is really okay.
Sometimes I read books by other creatives on the “why of creativity”… “The War of Art” by Steven Pressfield and “The Artist’s Way” by Julia Cameron are two that have helped me…
Mostly I try to remember that the feeling that I suck, my artwork sucks, life sucks… will pass. It always does (with the help of medicine and people around me… and drawing and painting).
The geeeeeeeorgeous model we had last life drawing class came back AND her body still did not have the lumps and bumps to match the drawings. So I focused on shadows.



Unfinished but good enough . . charcoal

My last life drawing post Nude No More I complained that the models were wearing clothes. WELL! This last model was nude AND geeeeeeeorgeous: Tall, long, lean limbs, beautiful body, beautiful face, long blond hair and she was really nice . . . I was soooooooo jealous.
Haven’t drawn for months as I stopped going to art class when I fractured my ankle (couldn’t drive). The fall semester of classes just started and I was curious to see if I’d lost all the progress I’d made.
I was even more curious to see how my energy held up since the fractured triggered the worst of all my fibromyalgia symptoms. My arms hurt during the 1 minute poses – probably because I was drawing furiously, holding tight to the charcoal, trying to stay in the saddle.

Charcoal

Charcoal (The model isn’t as volumptuous as I drew her)

Charcoal (See? She’s quite svelte)



The first international Women’s day was celebrated in 1908. A group of 15,000 women marched on New York streets, demanding their rights. Every year on 8th March the world joins in to support, raise, inspire and motivate women across all fields of work. The purpose of this day is to focus on themes such as innovation, portrayal of women in the media, or the importance of education and career opportunities.

Charcoal, 20 minute sketch

Charcoal 10 minute sketch each figure
#MakeItHappen
#womensday
#IWD2015
#internationalwomensday
#PaintItPurple




And I thought I was her favorite?

Charcoal on cardboard cereal box

Watercolor on cardboard muffin mix box


Charcoal

Conte on pumpkin (for Halloween) spice bread carton

INK

Charcoal 2- minute warm-up

Conte
Baha’u’llah, Baha’i World Faith
http://bahaiteachings.org/bahai-faith
During the month of November, Baha’i Blogging is hosting a post-a-day (or so) something related to or inspired by Baha’i Faith. Because so many of you follow both this blog and CATNIPblog Peggy & I will post our “dailies” here and Sunday “retrospectives” on CATNIPblog.com
the hashtag #bahaiblogging
Taoism

Courageous Love is the Gift, by Peggy
The Baha’i Faith is the world’s second-most widespread religion after Christianity, spanning the globe and working to unite it. Baha’is have no clergy or churches, gathering together in democratically-led communities and welcoming everyone.
The millions of Baha’is in the world come from every ethnicity, nationality, tribe, age, racial group, religious background and economic and social class. Diverse Baha’i communities exist just about everywhere.
http://bahaiteachings.org/bahai-faith
During the month of November, Baha’i Blogging is hosting a post-a-day (or so) something related to or inspired by Baha’i Faith. Because so many of you follow both this blog and CATNIPblog Peggy & I will post our “dailies” here and Sunday “retrospectives” on CATNIPblog.com
the hashtag #bahaiblogging
Thomas Merton

Antiquated & Outdated by judy
“This unprecedented administrative order, fundamentally different from any other system of religious or political authority, has now become the first functioning system of democratic global governance, vesting power and initiative in the entire body of the believers worldwide.”
http://bahaiteachings.org/
During the month of November, Baha’i Blogging is hosting a post-a-day-or-so something related to or inspired by Faith. Because so many of you follow both this blog and CATNIPblog Peggy & I will post our “dailies” here and Sunday “retrospectives” on CATNIPblog.com
The hashtag is #bahaiblogging.
Abdu’l-Bahá

Loving Touch by Peggy
http://bahaiteachings.org/
During the month of November, Baha’i Blogging is hosting a post-a-day-or-so something related to or inspired by Faith. Because so many of you follow both this blog and CATNIPblog Peggy & I will post our “dailies” here and Sunday “retrospectives” on CATNIPblog.com
The hashtag is #bahaiblogging.
I didn’t eat all the Cheerios in this box.

Conte Crayon on Cheerios Box

Charcoal on tinted painter’s paper from Hardware store

Charcoal on paper
Here’s what 1-2 minutes warm-up sketches look like. Suppose to catch the “essence” of the pose – like movement, body position.

Charcoal warm-up sketches

Oct 31 Prompt MASK
Posting a drawing a day on Curious to the Max with a once-a-week Sunday-7 Day Retrospective on CATNIPblog for those of you who just want to click- off the dailies!
http://mrjakeparker.com/inktober


Oct 30 Prompt FOUND

Oct 29 Prompt, UNITED

Oct 28 Prompt FALL

Oct 27 Prompt CLIMB

Oct 26 prompt SQUEAK

Oct 25 Prompt SHIP

Oct 24 Prompt BLIND

Oct 23 Prompt JUICY
Strolling by the Stream

Oct 22 Prompt TRAIL

Oct 21 Prompt FURIOUS

Oct 20 Prompt DEEP

Oct 19 Prompt CLOUD

Oct 18 Prompt FILTHY

Oct 17 Prompt GRACEFUL

Oct 15 Prompt MYSTERIOUS

Oct 14 Prompt FIERCE

Oct 13 Prompt TEEMING

Oct 10 Prompt GIGANTIC – It’s the Cheesiest

Oct 9 Prompt SCREECH

Oct 8 Prompt CROOKED – Which Way Witchy

Oct 5 Prompt LONG – Meowie

Oct 6 Prompt SHY – Bashful Meowie
I’ve hit a wall – the fibro has flared it’s ornery self and striped me of energy. My creative output is a bit puny.
The PROBLEM? – No one can tell and I ain’t getting no sympathy. I try not to be a whiner because I am sure others are as tired of my being tired as I am. This is the one place I can moan and grown cuz I know most of you won’t read it and are only interested in pictures of nude people . . .

charcoal sketch, 15 minutes
If you’ve followed Curious to the Max for a long time you know I’ve periodically participated in blog-challenges. Having a chronic condition like fibromyalgia sometimes derails me so I talked Peggy Arndt, my co-blogger from CATNIPblog , into participating with me in Inktober.
INKTOBER: 31 Days, 31 drawings, based on pre-set prompts.
Peggy & I have been doing ink sketches for CATNIPblog so here’s da plan:

October 1, SWIFT prompt, Meowie Rides Again


Oct 2, Divided prompt, Woofer & Meowie





“Nude?! Humans have no shame . .. “
(the kind you spread on the floor to protect it from paint)

Leaning on a chair – didn’t draw the chair cuz I didn’t want to!




Ink, Warm-up sketching

Charcoal

Charcoal
My favorite
The last class for this semester – I continued to play with water-color pencil.

Water-color
I tend to draw the heads too small . . . or . . . another way of “looking at it” . . . I make the bodies too big. Then again, he is a big guy.

The uneven jaw line is reflective of his beard and mustache.

Bob Blobfish sez: ” Until art classes start again she can practice drawing larger heads by drawing me in the nude”
During the break in the life-drawing class a few of us talked to the model. She said most people had no idea what life drawing was and believed that nude modeling was akin to porn! When asked what she did for a living her answer was “posing for people who were learning anatomy”.
First, It never occurred to me that most people weren’t familiar with life drawing. Second, her answer made sense. When drawing a nude model students are intensely focused on the anatomy, the line & shading that emphasizes or de-emphasizes the muscle structure, the curve of the spine and the “personality” of the pose – not on nudity.
It’s a bit like reading an engrossing story. Your focus is on the plot line, the images created, the messages conveyed, not whether the” book” is hard-covered, paperback or on a tablet.
I was pleased with this sketch as it catches the likeness of the model.

Water-color pencil
Wasn’t so pleased with this sketch so I took out colored crayons and just scribbled. Still not pleased but it was fun!

Water-soluable crayon
New model – not an ounce of body fat on the boy. The majority of students are well into their 60’s. I made note of how many of the women asked him to return to model ! . . I myself prefer the models with a bit of ballast around their belly. Gives me more room for error.
This class I ventured out of my comfort zone, put away eraser and went for it with permanent ink and no preliminary sketch in pencil.

Sharpie Pen, 20 minute pose

Water-color pencil, 20 minute pose

Ink with splash of water-color, 20 minute pose

Dali sez: “She obviously needs a bigger box . . . obviously.”
Clothed! The model was clothed! I actually found it easier sketching nude people with no distractions . . . like folds of fabric and print patterns and color.
The model had on an elaborate costume with intricate patterns and gold threads. I tried to eliminate all the “distractions”. Here’s my first attempts at using water-color pencil.

Water-color pencil, 20 minute pose

Water-color pencil, 20 minute pose
