November 7, 2010
My cat has been stalking me. I decided to stalk her back– with a
sketchbook. Nothing distracts potential ambush like a black book and
drawing implement whipped out in front of her face. I furiously scribble
impressions of feline interruptus curioso before she twitches again.
It’s been a while since I resumed the sketchbook. My work involves
mainly thumbnail drawings– and then it’s straight to canvas with
occasional stops to transfer images from tracing paper. With the
reinstatement of the sketchbook, came the faculty of “eye-drawing.” It’s
become my secret pleasure. I do it at work, on the subway, in
restaurants or walking down the street. Blame it on the cat, but the
looking and seeing required to draw anything again, has spilled out into
the world; refreshed my vision. Eye-drawing is performed without art
tools or supplies; yet an artist still needs to be present with what
they observe. It’s an exercise where everyone is viewed as a possible
drawing and how the results appear in the imagination. To prevent this
from turning into a prurient activity, I regard all who captivate my
interest with respectful appreciation. This actually isn’t hard,
provided I take casual, neutral glances and don’t stare. During art
school, attractive models were always a challenge to draw because I
found them least interesting. It was harder to glean human essence
overlaid by the glamour of good looks. With eye-drawing, I became once
again, more intrigued by prominent noses, girth, set mouths etc. The
fictional conté crayon described what animated the physicality of a
person much better when they had unusual or outstanding characteristics.
Often I just focused on body parts: hands (my favourite), profiles,
torso views. These were easier to do because lengthy observation was
less noticeable. Stop lights choreographed one-minute gestures from
pedestrians waiting for signal changes. Bank tellers, cashiers, service
attendants offered longer poses. Bus routes and the passengers within,
transformed into a cornucopia of models in extended positions. I used up
whole sticks of phantom charcoal on Toronto Transit alone. Then things
got weird. Sometimes I mentally x-rayed others through their clothes, to
discern structural anatomy underneath, and drew from there. The
strangeness had nothing to do with a “I see naked people” kind of thing.
I began to feel towards my subjects, a mixture of tenderness and
melancholy. By “stripping people down”, I exposed myself to their
humanity in mass proportions. I saw a television show once, about a
character who developed the superpower to hear everyone’s thoughts. She
was overwhelmed not just by the noise, but also the revelation of so
much longing, anguish and fear. My experience felt similar except on a
visual level. I understand now why life-drawing sessions need to be
contained by the structure and intent of a learning or studio
environment. What the hand interprets from visual perception, as well as
time limits set for poses, regulates how much information is processed
in a given period. It’s a good system; I appreciate it more than ever.
Haven’t suspended eye-drawing completely though; just cut back. Whenever
a tidal sense of over-identification with the humanity in front of me
threatens to engulf, I pause from tracing the figure in my mind.
Instead, I gently think: there goes another work of art.
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