Sketching as a way of seeing and understanding the environment
Sketching as a way of seeing and understanding the
environment
Fig. 1 View
facing Sydney Harbour from Centrepoint Tower (Pencil and ink)
On a recent trip to Sydney I, like countless other tourists,
used a smartphone to take many photos as a record of having being somewhere
perhaps. Possibly, to have photos to
show other people or to look back on and reminisce. However, it occurred to me
after the first hundred or so photos that I was unlikely to look at many of
these images again and possibly only when deciding to delete once the phone
memory was full.
So, I decided to sketch from a few select photos and have
included a few here for reference.
Fig. 2 View
facing Sydney Harbour from Centrepoint Tower (Pencil and ink with graphic
design markers)
Fig. 3 View
facing Sydney Harbour from Centrepoint Tower (Photograph taken 27 December 2023)
Fig. 4 View of
Circular Quay (Pencil and ink with water colours)
Fig. 5 View of
Circular Quay (Photograph taken 26 December 2023)
Fig. 6 View of
the redeveloped Sirrius social housing project at The Rocks (Pencil and ink
with water colours)
Fig. 7 View of
the redeveloped Sirrius social housing project at The Rocks (Photograph taken 28
December 2023)
Fig. 8 View of
Newtown (Pencil and ink with water colours)
Fig. 9 View of
Newtown (Photograph taken 26 December 2023)
Fig. 10 View of
Century Hotel on George Street, Sydney (Pencil and ink with water colours)
Fig. 11 View of
Century Hotel on George Street, Sydney (Photograph taken 27 December 2023)
But why… when the photo is so much more accurate… simply for
the enjoyment of it! It was a relaxing a
meditative process and each one occupied several evenings after work and I was
able to lose myself in the memory of my time at each place.
Another personal reason is my poor eyesight. With a prescription of minus 14 in each eye I
am extremely short-sighted and it puts me in the top (bottom) 1% of people that
wear glasses. Taking a photo allows me
to go back and zoom in and see what I missed, to see what people with normal
vision can see. The flipside of this is that my near-vision is quite good,
although I can’t focus on anything further than 5 centimetres away. This means
that when I’m drawing something detailed you will see me hunched over the
drawing with glasses off and left eye closed with my right eye hovering
millimetres above the paper.
As an unexpected consequence I learned a lot, as to try to
record something accurately you need to understand how it is put together and
built. I had to look at how the Sydney Harbour bridge was built – the
arrangements of steel members in tension – to draw it. Looking closely forces
you to appreciate the detail and the monotony of our built landscape, the
delight and the decay. Your memory of a place will be enriched, please trust me
on that. I would recommend this process to anyone.

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