Showing posts with label astronomy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label astronomy. Show all posts

September 29, 2016

Latest Doodles


3x5, Zig & Sharpie


Introspection
3x5, Sharpie & Prismacolor


3x5, Zig & Sharpie


4x6 Zig & Sharpie


Desert Varnish
3x5, Bic, Zig, & Sharpie
**SOLD**



May 27, 2016

Coma Berenices

An expressive variation on my favorite constellation...

3x5, Sharpie & Zig

May 25, 2016

Variations on a Theme

I'm finding it harder and harder to be creative with these little sketches these days. I like them fine, but they seem more like variations on a theme, than anything truly original.

I think I want to start something a little larger format--get something going that I can dig into for a few weeks--turn the thoughts behind these little variations into something more like a symphony.

3x5, Sharpie, Zig, & Prismacolor

3x5, Sharpie, Zig, & Prismacolor

May 18, 2016

Star Shadows

Allergies and Benadryl had me completely drugged out and spacey a couple days ago, so I took the opportunity to doodle. My drawing music was the new Radiohead album "A Moon Shaped Pool," and the "Interstellar" soundtrack.

3x5 Zig & Sharpie






April 13, 2016

Midnight Doodle

Still practicing the digital drawing. There are techniques and tools I don't understand, but as long as I don't have internet at home to google them as I go, I figure doodling is as good a way as any to get a more intuitive feel of the medium. Experimental play...and then some googling later if there's something that really escapes me. Maybe one of these days it'll all come together, but for now I'm back in kindergarten...and heck, they probably do teach this stuff in kindergarten these days!

April 9, 2016

March 18, 2016

Moonlight Shadows

In the discussion about "dark sky" protection, most people only focus on the ability to see the really faint stuff: dim stars, deep sky objects, and the texture of the Milky Way. Those aspects are surely important, but I feel that moonlight--because it also interferes with seeing faint astronomical objects--is all too often overlooked. I love walking in the bright light cast by the moon as much as I love resolving a distant galaxy or star cluster, and the pure experience of moonlight is as threatened by glare from artificial light as our ability to see the faint stuff is. Next week I lead my first Bryce Canyon Full Moon Walk, and I look forward to guiding people though an experience of moonlight unlike anything that's possible in most of our urban/suburban communities. Wherever you are, as the moon is waxing this week, I invite you to find a dark sky nearby and enjoy the natural light cast by our nearest cosmic neighbor. You might be surprised by how it alters your perspective, and transforms the familiar into the sublime.

3x5, Zig & Sharpie.
***SOLD***

March 15, 2016

First Days at Bryce Canyon

I'm all moved in at Bryce Canyon National Park, and am now working full time as a Ranger!

Yes, I've still found time here and there to draw. I expect many upcoming doodles will have "hoodoos" in them. Also, for years sharpies have been my pen of choice, but I've found a new favorite: Zig Memory System Millenium pens. In these most recent drawings I've used both.

3x5, Zig Millenium & Sharpie

Since starting at Bryce, I've been reveling in the incredible views from the rim and down on the trails. A couple days ago I watched low billowy clouds hover above the Table Cliffs Plateau--15 miles away on the eastern horizon as seen from the rim of Bryce--and every evening, Jupiter appears as a brilliant "star" above that same plateau. This drawing combines elements of both scenes...and a little of my own imagination.

3x5, Zig Millenium & Sharpie

3x5, Zig Millenium & Sharpie

March 2, 2016

A new resolution

A few days after the New Year, I started thinking that I wanted to make some kind of creative resolution for 2016. I love drawing, but I haven't done much lately. I think this is mostly due to my tendency to imagine these huge detailed mega-drawings, then get lost somewhere in the planning stage before even putting pen to paper.

I dug through my art supplies and found a pack of clean white 3x5 cards. Close by was my usual stash of sharpies. I found myself wondering if I could fill one little card per day with some sort of sketch. And there it was.

I've decided to forgive myself if I miss a day or two here and there. Whether I complete 365 doodles or 150, it's still a lot of drawing. Certainly more than I had been doing. And hopefully enough to bust through my creative blockages. If--somewhere along the way--I start to formulate something bigger, I'll put the little drawings on hold and post each day's progress on the larger project.

I've been sharing these on Facebook since I started, but for those of you who aren't on Facebook, I'll start posting them here as well.

All are for sale at $25 each.

Enjoy:)



***SOLD***

What do you see? 

***SOLD***


***SOLD***


Inspired by "surface hoar" crystals I observed on a winter hike at Bandelier National Monument

***SOLD***

***SOLD***
Based on a scene from the book 2312 by Kim Stanley Robinson




***SOLD***
Coma Berenices: my favorite constellation

***SOLD***
Self Portrait

Inspired by an ice waterfall I discovered at Bandelier National Monument


***SOLD***
Landscape inspired by Canyonlands National Park, Island in the Sky



***SOLD***
"You cannot stay on the summit forever; you have to come down again. So why bother in the first place?
Just this: what is above knows what is below, but what is below does not know what is above.
One climbs, one sees. One descends, one sees no longer, but one has seen.
There is an art of conducting oneself in the lower regions by the memory of what one has seen higher up.
when one can no longer see, one can at least still know."
--Rene Daumal, from "Dream: the Art of Ascent," by Jeremy Collins


***SOLD***
A real tree on Bandelier's Main Loop Trail, sketched from life

Sunrise and "Nike swoosh" clouds at Bandelier


Dream Big

***SOLD***
Sunset over the San Miguels

***SOLD***


***SOLD***

Crane migration