Learning to draw is good for you
This is Redford. He is my fourth project in the Crazy Cats class with Miriam Schulman.
This project felt a little more daunting than the others, somehow. It felt like it required a lot more drawing. I procrastinated a fair bit before I started this painting, and I think it was mostly because of the drawing aspect. That's the thing with watercolour, isn't it? Most of the time you really need to be able to start with a decent sketch, so if you are uncomfortable drawing it makes watercolour painting really hard.
Funnily enough, the part I enjoyed the most with this painting was the drawing. Having to spend a little more time on the sketch gave me a chance to remember that I really love the process of drawing. It is one of the most relaxing creative pursuits I can think of. If you can stop worrying about how it is going to turn out, and surrender to the process of careful observation and mark making, time slips by. You can escape the world for a moment and just be in the present, enjoying the tactile experience of marking textured paper with graphite. Taking the time to appreciate lights and shadows, shapes and lines.
And then as an added bonus when you are done you get to splash colour and water all over it. Can't think of a better way to pass an hour or two...