Friday, January 15, 2016

New Year's Resolution


Some years I make a resolution or two, some years I don't.  As time goes by I'm less inclined to make definite resolutions, but rather challenge myself to do better without a specific end goal.  It's such a let down to not read those 20 books, loose those 30 pounds, or walk 400 miles.  This year I didn't have any resolutions in mind on the first, but then an idea hit on Jan 2.
The day had dawned sunny, but chilly.  Sun has been rare since the rains finally came.   Dale and I headed out with cameras and my sketchbook.  First stop was our local duck pond.  Normally I'd grab my camera and hop out of the car ... but it was chilly.  Instead I drew a great blue heron hunkered on a tiny island just a few feet off shore.  He seemed to be all pulled together avoiding the cold, just waiting for a little of that sunshine to sink in.  Another parking spot yielded a quick sketch of an egret hunting the pond edge, and then a double-crested cormorant drying off. 

Soon we were on to another park.  Varied thrushes were busy stalking worms and two sapsuckers were flying from one tree to another.  Into my sketchbook went one of each -- I'd drawn five species before noon!

Suddenly I got the bright idea to draw 100 species in 2016.  Five field drawings of different species in one morning was unusual, but perhaps 100 over the year was realistic.  As I mulled the idea over I got to wondering just how many species, separate species,  (field sketches, finished drawings, paintings) did I do in 2015.  I knew it had been a good year. 

That evening I checked my computer, my insect project, my journal, and a couple of sketchbooks.  The list kept growing.  Over 200 pieces of art yielded 109 species.  Wow!  That included 68 birds, 21 mammals, 18 insects and 2 amphibians.  -- Guess I don't need to challenge myself to draw 100.  But of course the idea kept niggling at me.  Maybe I should up the ante -- 150? 

About then a dash of common sense seeped in.  Drawing species just to see how many I can draw in one year just might not be all that productive.  I'm sure I could do 150, but I'd either be popping open my laptop or sketching far off critters just for the sake of adding to the list, not because I could really see them.  Better to just keep on drawing/painting as much as possible. 
Last week I knew I'd made the right decision.  We were at the coast.  At our first stop I knew Dale wouldn't stay long, so I started quick sketching -- an oystercatcher, a California sea lion and an elephant seal.  Then on to the next stop.  Some crows talking up a storm in the tippy top of a Sitka spruce caught my attention.  The air was damp, almost foggy, but I wanted to see what I could do with paint in spite of the dampness -- make it work for me rather than fighting it. 

Since it was so damp my initial paint took forever to dry; but I had two sketchbooks in the car so I started on another, this time of just one crow.

For once the air was still; it was just warm enough to paint without gloves on; I was surrounded by the sounds of one wave after another rolling in from the far reaches of the Pacific; occassionally a flock of oystercatchers below me gave out their tell-tale call; and nearby, the wonderful yammering of the crows.  Dale still hadn't come back so I even got a third sketch done -- more crows.  I love it when a subject stays in the area long enough and close enough for me to feel we've spent some some real time together.  

And sometime that afternoon I remembered the challenge I almost made.  I could have concentrated on a variety of species.  I could have added white-crowned sparrows, far off gulls, and a tiny pelagic cormorant; instead I thoroughly enjoyed immersing myself in crow shenanigans. 
.... and my last sketch didn't even have any critters in it.


8 comments:

  1. Hi, Elva, put aside resolutions though, I look forward to your lovely drawings and posts in 2016! Cheers, Sadami

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    1. May you have a healthy, productive and wonderful 2016, Sadami.

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  2. I really enjoy your work, Elva, and this particular set of artworks is especially and exquisitely beautiful!! I love the style used for the two crows, and for the last piece. Keep on creating in that style, okay?!?!

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    1. Thank you, Peggy. I appreciate your compliment.

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  3. As always, Elva, your blog and your art are inspiration! Resolutions are made to be broken; just keep doing what you do, where there's no need for "self-improvement." Happy 2016!

    - Tina

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    1. Today I sat in one spot and drew great egrets -- 6 sketches. I'm so glad I didn't make that resolution.

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  4. Elva, you always make it look so easy, but I know it's your dedication and practice that makes it flow out of you. Love that easy way you have. You don't need any resolutions to delight us.

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