Sunday, January 20, 2013

SKETCHBOOK: "A Knight at the Museum"

Decided to go visit the Nelson-Atkins Museum in Kansas City this afternoon.  Today I learned that you can't use ink-pens to sketch in the galleries.  (Thank you, Mr. Security Guard Man...who was kind enough to pull a pencil from his pocket so I could keep drawing the "Bullock Cart" sketch below).  So, my sketches didn't turn out quite the way I would have liked.  The Knight (above) was drawn using a "B" lead pencil.  I needed a much softer lead for the kind of contrast I wanted to achieve.  I pushed my luck trying to throw on some washes...probably not allowed either.

The "Bullock Cart" earthenware sculpture below was drawn mostly with pen...until the nice guard came by.    I finished the sketch with the brown pencil I had on me (and added highlights with a white pencil).

The sketch below was the first drawing of the day...I got to the museum way before it opened at noon.  Apparently, there was no rule about not using an ink pen, as long as I stayed in my car in the garage while drawing.

Friday, January 4, 2013

SKETCHBOOK: "Return To The Museum"


It's been a rather long time since my last post...the holidays were filled with many things other than doing artwork.  So, today, I tried to remedy that with a trip to Kansas University Museum of Natural History.  I love hanging out there...it will take many visits to run out of things to draw!  After four hours of sketching, this is what I ended up with.

Above is the rarely seen "Great Horned Jackalope".  (Yes...this was actually in the museum.)

Below is an American Kestrel in flight (well...mounted in permanent "flight" mode).


Next we have a series of skulls.  There are so many really cool ones there...I got a bit tired, so just got a few drawn.  The ones below are:
1. Western Lowland Gorilla   2. Human   3. Chimpanzee   
4. Bornean Orangutan   5. Rhesus Monkey   6. Black Lemur
The last ones are identified by name.
That's it for this time.  Hope you have a really good year in 2013!

Monday, November 19, 2012

SKETCHBOOK: "A Gazebo And A Python"

Okay, folks...this will be one of the more unusual posts I've done so far.  I'll start with the more predictable sketchbook entry...but hang on...it will soon round the corner to become one of the most delightfully "eclectic" experiences of my life!

Last weekend, I took a road trip to see some very dear friends of mine, Ken and Dana Davidson.  They just recently moved to Dana's family farmstead southwest of Wichita, Kansas.  It was there that I met Dana's mother, Frankie, and had two of the most enjoyable days I could imagine.  Actually...I couldn't imagine MOST of the visit...it was hilarious and magical, all in one!
I had hoped to do some sketching while there on the farm...and was able to, early on Saturday morning, just as the sun was rising.   Ken grabbed my camera, and took these shots.  The gazebo is a more recent addition to the property...the house was built between 1906-1908.
After drawing everything with a sepia colored pencil...I added some watercolor washes on the brown-toned paper.

When I first arrived, Ken and I put on our near-matching broad-brimmed hats, and jumped on the tractor for a tour around the 160 acres of land.
 Here is a great photo of Frankie, Dana and Ken.
Below are some of Frankie's friends that come visit her every day.  Her home is a true animal sanctuary, where no hunting is allowed.   Frankie feeds all the wild critters...they have no fear of her, nor she of them.  They come right up to the house!  In the short time I was there,  I saw several deer, armadillos, possums, and wild turkeys.  It was a bit spooky at night, as cell-phone reception was very limited out there...I had to walk into the field in the dark to send texts to my girlfriend, Judi.  I could hear large animals crunching in the leaves all around me...could have been raccoons or wildcats...I didn't really want to find out!!

Okay...now I get to the "unusual" part.  As you'll notice, I am wearing a HUGE skin of a giant snake!!!  As it turns out...this snake skin is part of Dana's family lore...a "legend" that involves Dana's Grandfather "Lem".
Before I got to see the snake skin, Frankie did the honors of reading a newspaper article written in the early 1930s.  Apparently, there was a "Demon of Dead Man's Lake" that had been killing local chickens, pigs, and even young calves in the area of the Chicaskia River in Kansas, south of Wichita.  The short version of this story is that Lem...Frankie's dad...teamed up with his best friend "Gus" to track that "demon snake" and bring it to justice.  After a furious battle with the beast ( Lem suffered two broken ribs from the encounter), the snake was lassoed, and died after a couple of hours of struggle...thus ending the "reign of terror".  Apparently, the snake was an East Indian Python that had escaped from a circus, and was feasting on the local cuisine.  Gus was a taxidermist, and agreed to give Lem the snakeskin, while he was to take the skeleton of the "tropical reptile of gigantic proportions".

After I posed for a few photos with the snake skin...Dana brought out a red photo album, and proceeded to show me proof of this whole story, with photos that have been handed down through the generations!  On the left is the python (sans it's skin) and on the right, is that skin hanging from the barn...over 25' long!
Below is a photo of Gus, holding a giant snapping turtle by the tail (with the gaping jaws of the turtle's head below right).  And the other gentleman is Lem...with what appears to be the "Demon Snake" in the story.
As if that saga wasn't interesting enough...it turns out that Gus is none other than "The Original GUS WAGNER - World's Champion Hand Tattoo artist and Tattooed Man!"  Gus Wagner was a "world traveler" and famous tattoo artist and showman from the early 20th century.  Below are photos of Gus tattooing his wife, Maud, who was also part of the sideshow.
According to my research online, Gus was covered with 264 tattoos, and claimed to be "the most artistically marked up man in America."  In his later years Gus diversified his talents, showing and selling busts and totems he carved out of wood. He also became a gem collector, taxidermist, and exhibitor of rare animals, reptiles, and birds. He continued to work as a showman in circuses and Wild West shows. Gus died after being struck by lightning, in 1941.

What a GREAT weekend!!!