
I had a lot of fun this year and learned a lot about metallic-on-black drawing. See ’em HERE.
https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.10156749579394465.1073741830.819434464&type=1&l=b71659ef5e
I had a lot of fun this year and learned a lot about metallic-on-black drawing. See ’em HERE.
https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.10156749579394465.1073741830.819434464&type=1&l=b71659ef5e
But this was a really fun experience. I had one friend, one family member, and one colleague playing along. That helped. Here’s my favorite:
I’ve set the whole collection to public in this FB album. I enjoyed playing by the rules, starting and (with two exceptions due to travel) finishing each drawing on its assigned day. While early on my husband was critical of the idea (“real writers and artists practice every day, not one month a year”) he was quickly converted to the wisdom of giving working stiffs like me an opportunity to rediscover talents I had let lapse.
For me, Inktober revealed surprisingly large pockets of my day that were available to creativity. I had lost them to TV, video games, staring at the ceiling, and occasionally exercise. I’ve only finished four ink drawings in the month since then, but that’s still 4/month more that previously. I’m not waiting until next year to make art that I enjoy making.
It prompted me to explore nature photography, to look at abstract concepts more concretely, and to see what is actually there. In other words, it helped me “see with ever more perfect eyes in a world in which there is always more to perceive.”