A sketchbook project, like this one with the bees, is easy to re-enter and exit when life gets complicated. To be able to focus on something familiar and settle the mind is wonderfully satisfying.
A sketchbook project, like this one with the bees, is easy to re-enter and exit when life gets complicated. To be able to focus on something familiar and settle the mind is wonderfully satisfying.
I love daily drawing projects. They’re a great way to get motivated and develop your drawing skills.
I often assign this kind of project to my drawing students. I ask them to complete a series of related drawings over a number of consecutive days. Before they start they need to develop a framework for their project; a set of parameters that determines the format of their daily drawings. These parameters must challenge their abilities and sustain their interest (both formally and conceptually) for the duration of the project. I ask them to consider the following:
Over the years my students have surprised and delighted me with their creative responses to this assignment. I’ve seen what someone ate for dinner every night, someone’s extensive makeup collection (drawn using makeup), the daily view outside a window and a series of intricate scribbles that moved across the pages of a notebook. There’s something very satisfying about completing a group of related drawings like this… they function as a diary, encapsulating a specific period of your life.
Today I came across a daily drawing project I completed in a small (3″ x 4″) notebook last spring, while my students worked on their own projects. Each coloured pencil drawing was of an item found within my office, that took no longer than 10 minutes. I included phrases from something I was reading on the day I did the drawing.