From Scribbles to Doodles to Semi-Finished Work. This is the place to see Artist, Ana Tirolese's Sketchbook Journal. It will not always be pretty, but it will always be here.
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Friday, September 9, 2011
Bad Sketch
I debated whether or not to post really bad sketches. In the end, it is more honest to post all sketches from my sketchbook, excellent, good, medium, poor, bad, and horrid.
This sketch was done while I waited in a doctor's waiting room. I was facing the man who was staring at a television behind and above my head. It is not a great sketch, and does not really capture his likeness, except for the blank stare. I was listening to CBC's Laugh Out Loud podcast while I waited. I wrote down their URL so that I could go to the site and check something out.
The purpose of my sketchbooks are many. I use them to kill time while waiting, to draw things I want to remember, to practice techniques, to play with layouts and ideas for larger pieces, to record life events, as a visual journal, and just for the heck of it. Most of the images are just scribbles or quick studies. I rarely do any highly detailed finished-quality pieces in the sketchbooks. These books or more for my own edification and amusement and not necessarily for others to view.
So, why am I sharing these images publicly?
I am often asked to share my sketchbooks. People seem to like to see how artists' minds work. Of course every artist is different.
It may be helpful for some people, especially beginner artists, to see the process of keeping a sketchbook and to see that not all work is slick, detailed, and finished. It is okay to just have a few scribbles and doodles. It is okay to draw things that are ugly and unbalanced, to try new techniques, to experiment with styles, media, subject matter.
The sketchbook can have themes or be random. The beauty of the sketchbook is that it can be anything you want it to be. You can keep it completely private, for your eyes only, or you can share it on the internet for the whole world to see. There are no right or wrong ways to keep sketchbooks. There are as many ways to work in a sketchbook as there are artists.
I hope to encourage people to go out and draw, not be afraid to put marks on paper, whether or not they feel their images are good or beautiful.
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