The second oldest flowers still surviving in their vase were given to me on 14th February by BB;
A romantic bouquet of a dozen red roses... the water in the jar must be long gone but the roses haven't dropped.
I used the 'crayon' on my drawing programme on my tablet.
....
I always assumed that my school teachers were right when one after another they all informed me that I couldn't draw.
Huh. Those teachers. What were they there for if not to teach?
Decades later, after years of teaching piano to anyone aged 7 to 70 who came for lessons, I realised that many - most - things are learned; a decent teacher works out the best way to enable their student to learn. Of course we're not all going to be concert pianists (I include myself!) or commercial artists or superb brain surgeons, but most of us can sing (I've taught many a 'growler' to be able to sing in tune, aged from 3 to 80 years old) and draw and write and rhyme... if only teachers who SHOULD HAVE KNOWN BETTER hadn't destroyed their potential instead of teaching them.
Rant over.
I applied the way I teach piano to teaching myself to draw. The books I've found most transformational were these two;
(The title of this one always makes me laugh... I expect Ang would giggle too)
What woke me up were her worksheets; you are supposed to copy each shape into the blank square below.
My advice is, make a start, set your bar very very low, and follow the instructions. Then be kind and encourage yourself along the way.
It's like anything; if I don't spend the time at the piano I can't expect to play as well as Lang Lang...
....
Today's line is 'Heaven in ordinary, man well drest'
'To see a world in a grain of sand, and a heaven in a wild flower' says the poet William Blake.
Heaven can be found in the ordinary things around us.
As for 'man well drest'; our clothes would never be grand enough... but utterly doesn't matter to God, he sees past our clothes to the soul inside, and by Grace we're good enough.
I came across this poem as an introduction to a book today, 'Walking the bones of Britain ' by Christopher Somerville (99p on kindle, but I managed to resist)
The January Man by Dan Goulder
The January man, he walks the road in woollen coat and boots of leather.
The February man still wipes the snow from off his hair and blows his hands.
The man of March he sees the Spring and wonders what the year will bring
And hopes for better weather.
Through April rain the man goes down to watch the birds come in to share the summer.
The man of May stands very still watching the children dance away the day.
In June the man inside the man is young and wants to lend a hand
And grins at each newcomer.
And in July the man in cotton shirt, he sits and thinks on being idle.
The August man in thousands takes the road to watch the sea and find the sun.
September man is standing near to saddle up and lead the year
And Autumn is his bridle.
And the man of new October takes the reins and early frost is on his shoulder.
The poor November man sees fire and wind and mist and rain and Winter air.
December man looks through the snow to let eleven brothers know
They’re all a little older.
And the January man comes round again in woollen coat and boots of leather
To take another turn and walk along the icy road he knows so well.
The January man is here for starting each and every year
Along the way for ever.
Heaven in ordinary.
Here it is sung by Mike Harding
As a bonus, here's 'the song of the plough'. I found this while hunting for something about everyday people, who would have been living an everyday life, wearing everyday clothes. Even his 'Sunday Best' would have been fairly rough and ready.
Love that picture! Thanks for the info about the books. I have to go look them up. I would love to learn to draw, at least a little bit. I'd love to do a nature journal on the things I see each day.
ReplyDeletePlease do have a go! Just... go for it! It's only paper, after all...
DeleteI found two things help me keep going
to enjoy the good bits of any drawing and not pay too much attention to the bits I didn't like,
And to leave it until the next day before I passed judgement.
I'm catching up on the last few posts, and I need to tell you how much I'm enjoying your art - it seems so joyful. I'm also grateful for the music and prayers that you share. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteYou're very welcome; I don't think I'm 'good at art but I've learned to enjoy what I do.
DeleteWhen I read “Drawing With Children” I immediately pictured someone holding a child by the ankles, dipping its head into paint to use the hair as a brush.
ReplyDeleteMe too!
DeleteI think your drawings are lovely and you have a style of your own which is charming. I had a wonderful art teacher Mrs Fairhead who always wore artists smocks she made herself out of very colourful material. She was patient, kind and encouraging very good traits for a teacher. She also listened to what her pupils had to say, we all loved her. The poem today is very good, thank you. Regards Sue H
ReplyDeleteHow lovely to have had such brilliant art teacher. I am envious! Do you still draw or paint?
ReplyDeleteYes I do little scribble drawings quite often but nothing more intricate or involved. I have a little sketch pad and pastels handy in case I am so moved. Some days I just have to draw it is a real need. Regards Sue H
DeletePastels! Wow. I've tried them but gave them away in the end.
DeleteSo agree with you re teaching approaches. As a teacher of SEN I found that every child needed a different approach, mostly consisting of major encouragement, raising sense of value etc etc. Had an elderly Art teacher who saw potential and was so good at finding the right road for everyone.
ReplyDeleteYes, it's a case of finding they key that unlocks the student.
DeleteI wonder if there's a 'Drawing for Dummies' book?
ReplyDeleteThere is! I haven't tried it. I'll put the first lesson of the Mark Kistler book up on my blog; all you need is a pencil and a bit of paper...
Delete