My sketchbooks are punctuated by weird landscapes. It was a practice. When I felt the need to draw regularly, to exercise my artistry, I worked on compositions for future paintings. And, when I had no idea what to draw, no composition in my head, I sketched my weird landscapes. They were fun and I got lost in them.
There was a blowback effect. I’ve never been a landscape artist. I considered my weird landscapes as not-serious exercises. Yet, they were made of scribbles and patterns and it became a game to collect patterns from nature. My not-serious exercises required me to look around. To get close. To look at the edges and splashes and etchings available in nature. To see. My weird landscapes became eye-opening meditations.
There are miracle-patterns in bark. Orchids, I recently learned, are a master-class of pattern, shape, and color. It is impossible to find a hand painted brush and ink painting as perfect or as spontaneous and lively as the strokes on the rattlesnake plant. Go to the garden if color combinations are in question.
I will never invent anything as imaginable, as impossibly beautiful, as what already exists in this world. I will never produce any painting as glorious as the paintings in nature. The best I can do is play. Look and marvel. And isn’t that a great relief?
read Kerri’s blogpost about RATTLESNAKE PLANT
eve © 2006 david robinson
Filed under: Art, Creativity, DR Thursday, Pattern, Seeing | Tagged: artistry, awe, david robinson, davidrobinsoncreative.com, ink and brush, Kerri Sherwood, kerri sherwood itunes, kerrianddavid.com, kerrisherwood.com, landscape, looking, marvel, meditation, orchids, painting, pattern, patterns in nature, play, practice, rattlesnake plant, seeing, story, studio melange, the melange |
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