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Sunday, October 9, 2011

Maryland Renaissance Festival

The Jousting Arena

I attended the Maryland Renaissance Festival this weekend out by Annapolis. I enjoy the food, the costumes, and the Shakespeare, but the highlight for me is always the joust - which is also the official state sport of Maryland. The sketch above is from a visit in 2009, but this year I decided to focus on the horses and riders. They move quickly, but I managed to get some quick gestural sketches in when they paused to re-arm:


Jousting KnightsJousting Knight

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Martin & Albert

Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial
Guido beat me to the new MLK Jr. Memorial, but I was very happy to be able to finally get a chance to see and sketch it myself. Judging from the crowds of people trekking across the mall it obviously has an immense amount of meaning for everyone who visits it.

While I was on the Mall, I thought I would check out one of my other favorite, albeit less well known memorials on the Mall. The Einstein Memorial by the National Academy of Sciences.
Albert Einstein Memorial

Saturday, October 1, 2011

School Zone


A walk down the street reveals many things. Overlapping images in scale.

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

MLK Memorial Washington DC


MLK Memorial Sketch during the opening week August 2011. 1st sketch done of the memorial by a member of the public since opened.


Abraham Lincoln Memorial


I love Abraham Lincoln and his Memorial is super cool, this time a lot of kids wanted to see what I was doing and take pics of me.

Washington Monument


Washington Memorial, sketching after work and I got the attention of the Secret Service for doing so.

Capitol Hill


Capitol Hill, I began to have followers and I got a lot of positive complements from people in the area.

Thomas Jefferson Memorial

Sunday, September 25, 2011

When It Rains.

How does the saying go?
Something like this...



Monday, September 19, 2011

Congressional Cemetery Sketchcrawl

Showers of rain drops dissolved the water based ink in this sketch. I liked the effect it had on the linesso I kept working through the shower.
Patrick Crowley took us on a tour of the cemetery including a look in one of the 150 year old vaults . That added so much to the experience to hear the history and see some of the hidden places. 

Fellow sketcher Robin M. seated among the graves. 

Two vaults recently restored still waiting for sod to cover the vaulted roofs. 

Public Vault had roses and sedum blooming and sat under a nice red Japanese Maple tree. Former first lady Dolley Madison rested here for five years while funds were raised to take her home to be buried with her family.  


First sketch was the wrought iron gate sign that was knocked down by a dump truck too large to pass under it's delicate iron arch. 


Congressional Cemetery

Congressional Cemetery Statue; Marie Estelle Kretchmar
A bunch of us were itching for another sketchcrawl, so we gathered up at Congressional Cemetery (near the Stadium Armory Station) this past weekend. We started by getting an extremely interesting tour of the grounds from former chairman of the board of the Cemetery Preservation Association & sketcher himself, Patrick Crowley. We had a great overview of the grounds, peaked into a vault or two and learned quite a bit about the cemetery and DC history. Elbridge Gerry (see: gerrymandering) John Philip Sousa and J. Edgar Hoover are just a few of the guests on the grounds. While it's not as grand or well known as Arlington National Cemetery, its absolutely lovely and worth a visit. With an absolute over abundance of subject matter to tackle.
Congressional Cemetery Wm. Lambell Vault
After our tour I began the sketch of a burial vault, and managed to halfway finish it before being interrupted by the rain. Now some of the other sketchers braved the rain better than I and made some beautiful work, but not I. So I took a break and walked around a bit, searching for a beautiful little statue Patrick pointed out on our tour. "Marie Estelle Krachmar" caught my eye with her broken legs, eroded surface (marble is vulnerable to acid rain) and the fact that everyday someone puts a coin in her lap. So I began sketching her when a there came a lull in the rain. That lull was short though, and ultimately I had to finish both sketches at home, but the group has talked about coming back on a sunnier day that may be more conducive to sketching outdoors. I'm looking forward to it.

Sunday, September 11, 2011


Tracks




Since my time at VCU in Richmond VA I have always found trains and the track system as a source of inspiration. Sounds, repetitions, speed and momentum.



ORANGE CONES
Charcoal and Chalk on Paper



GRAFFITO
Charcoal and Chalk on Paper



TRAX
Charcoal and Chalk on Paper


When it rains...it pours.