Week 1 of long anticipated 'Extended Drawing for Artists and Makers' started with introductions to the year long course but moved quickly to the first 3 week project with Amanda Knight ' Surface Divides' . The main aim was to communicate unseen environments using the act of drawing for speculative thinking, exploring illusory space.
In pairs, we were asked to describe (imaginatively!) what the interior of various fruit and veg might look like and then draw that interior based on your partners notes.
As a botanist with 40+ years of experience cutting up plants and understanding of plant structure and function I found this extremely difficult ! How do you unknow decades of knowledge?
So it was just as well that I was working from Sandy's playful and poetic description ( I think he struggled with my rather prosaic description of the interior of the radish! )
We were working on A1 sheets of paper with charcoal to quickly build up form and marks - I enjoyed depicting the velvety skin (' puppy-like' ) and the 'small hard seeds dispersed like currants' when I knew that they were dates with a single stone !
We were then asked to draw a section as cutaway ( like old medical drawings) showing both exterior and interior at the same time ( above) before imagining an environment of leaves etc . filling in the background ( below)
After lunch , we got to cut open our specimens and draw the actual interiors using a variety of media and techniques. I started off by applying ink to the cut surface of the radish I'd described for Sandy and then using it to make prints . If you zoom in , you can see the vascular bundles in the thickened tap root but it's very subtle !
I then played around with taking rubbings of a torn paper edge to represent the soft velvety texture of the skin
Other people had more exciting material to work with, I loved the textures of the ' bitter melon ' Momordica charantia and worked with soft graphite contrasting with an overlay on tracing paper using a fine pen .
We stuck our very varied drawings on the wall but didn't have much time to look at them ( particularly as I had to rush off for the train). We were also introduced to various artists , looking at the pre-renaissance medical drawings of Avicenna , Aristotle and Galen and how graphic annotation had been used in illustration by Leonardo da Vinci to expand the level of information in a drawing ( and using it as an element in it's own right to enhance the composition)
The use of paper flaps and foldouts for medical drawings was also looked at .
I missed week 2 as I was in Puglia on course 'Mapping a Sense of Place' with Matthew Harris , but Amanda has sent me the handout on constructing a personal folly based on James Wyld's Great Globe' and the paper architecture of Brodsky and Utkin
I'm looking forward to what tomorrow's session brings !
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