Candid shots of
T-town in pen, ink and watercolor
Published in the Weekly Volcano, Autg. 11, 2016
“Theater District Downtown Tacoma,” masthead sketch for Urban Sketchers Tacoma website by Mark Ryan |
The Urban
Sketchers exhibition at Handforth Gallery in the downtown Tacoma Public Library
is delightfully lightweight.The walls are filled with quick sketches in pencil,
pen and ink, watercolor and other media of mostly local scenes familiar to many
Tacomans—some by well-known local artists and some by artists known only to
friends and family.
Urban Sketchers is a nationwide movement for artists who love to draw the area where
they live, work, or visit. Their works are executed while looking out a window
at home, from a cafe, standing by a street-corner, or other convenient
location.
The local group, Tacoma Urban Sketchers, typically meets at a designated spot in the morning and then disperses to sketch until noon. During the summer, there is an afternoon sketching session. There are sketch outings on the first Saturday of each month and on the third Wednesday year around.
The local group, Tacoma Urban Sketchers, typically meets at a designated spot in the morning and then disperses to sketch until noon. During the summer, there is an afternoon sketching session. There are sketch outings on the first Saturday of each month and on the third Wednesday year around.
Works from this group currently on display in the library
are like candid photos of local people and places,
only they’re not photos; they are artworks typically done in a loose, free and
quick manner.
“Neck Brace Guy,” a pencil sketch by Helen Phillips pictures a man
wearing a neck brace seated in an airplane as seen from the side and back. I
can imagine he never suspected he was being drawn. The style looks a lot like a
lithograph, which is interesting because it lends to the picture a gritty
texture not usually seen in pencil drawings.
“The Breakfast Club,” pen and wash by R.J. Lane, is one of
the few pieces in the show not of a Tacoma-area scene. It is a sketch of
patrons in Carla’s Country Kitchen in Morro Bay, Calif. The great casually
rendered expressions on their faces are fun to contemplate.
A watercolor called “Blanket Stories” by Kate Buike
pictures the great sculpture by the same name that is on permanent display
against the front wall of the Tacoma Art Museum. It is cropped and pictured
from an intriguing angle with the dome of Union Station seen in the background.
“Fort Nisqually Southwest Corner” by Ken Fulton is one of
a few almost pure line drawings in the show, with strong dark and light
contrasts in the rare shaded areas.
A similar drawing, but less sketchy and more nicely
controlled is Frances Buckmaster’s ink drawing “Breakwater Marina, Point
Defiant.”
There are three excellent line drawings by Paul Morris:
“Union Station,” “Thea Foss Waterway” and “Downtown Library Alley View.”
A couple of other works of note are
K.D. Keckler’s “Swiss House Gathering,” another scene of diners, and Roy
Steiner’s “Abandoned Van Lierop Farm,” depicting an abandoned barn painted blue
with tall grasses and a leafless tree in front of it. This is the only picture
in the show that has no line-drawing element. The media was not listing on the
wall label, but it looks like gouache.
Find out more
about the local Urban Sketchers at http://urbansketcherstacoma.blogspot.com/ and https://www.facebook.com/groups/UrbanSketchersTacoma/
Handforth Gallery at Tacoma Public Library, 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Thursdays-Saturday, through Sept. 6, 1102 Tacoma Ave. S, Tacoma
Handforth Gallery at Tacoma Public Library, 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Thursdays-Saturday, through Sept. 6, 1102 Tacoma Ave. S, Tacoma
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