Requiem II
Apr. 14th, 2006 08:29 pmYesterday's Sketchbook - Fooling around with Carrot (WooOOOooo! Okay, not in that sense.)
Today's Sketchbook - The second annual Dead Bird Drawings. Yesterday, a crow died in our yard. It had been hanging around looking pretty sick when I left for work in the morning, and when I came home it was sitting on the railing by the front door and didn't move when I walked right up to it, so I knew it wasn't long for this world. On one hand, it's sad because I like crows, but on the other, it's happy because I like crows but they can never hold still long enough for me to study them. Having one die in my yard is, in some perverse scientific disconnected-from-reality way, an incredible gift. I took about fifty pictures (which I can post online if anyone's interested) and drew a page of beak studies before it got too dark. I'll get out there early tomorrow morning and hopefully get a few more pages in before the CDC comes to pick it up and test for West Nile.
There's something so incredibly beautiful about the design of a bird... the way the different feather groupings interplay, the streamlined shape, the fan of the wings, the versatile and prehistoric-looking beak ... my childhood enthusiasm for ornithology has just been translated into an artistic fascination, combined with some sort of emotional attachment that I can't really explain but which is incredibly moving.
Today's Sketchbook - The second annual Dead Bird Drawings. Yesterday, a crow died in our yard. It had been hanging around looking pretty sick when I left for work in the morning, and when I came home it was sitting on the railing by the front door and didn't move when I walked right up to it, so I knew it wasn't long for this world. On one hand, it's sad because I like crows, but on the other, it's happy because I like crows but they can never hold still long enough for me to study them. Having one die in my yard is, in some perverse scientific disconnected-from-reality way, an incredible gift. I took about fifty pictures (which I can post online if anyone's interested) and drew a page of beak studies before it got too dark. I'll get out there early tomorrow morning and hopefully get a few more pages in before the CDC comes to pick it up and test for West Nile.
There's something so incredibly beautiful about the design of a bird... the way the different feather groupings interplay, the streamlined shape, the fan of the wings, the versatile and prehistoric-looking beak ... my childhood enthusiasm for ornithology has just been translated into an artistic fascination, combined with some sort of emotional attachment that I can't really explain but which is incredibly moving.
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Date: 2006-04-21 07:03 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-04-21 03:18 pm (UTC)