Monthly Archives: August 2019

Melbourne Museum Drawing Studio

A few times a years the Museum invites people to register to attend the Drawing Studio and you can request a specimen from the Museum’s collection to draw. I attended this special event at the Melbourne Museum once before in February and wrote about it and shared my drawings from the day here.

 A Melbourne Museum staff member was in the room all day and if we wanted the specimens moved on the table to a different angle they donned their gloves and shifted these fragile objects. Some have also been preserved with arsenic,so they are hazardous too. Wet materials were not permitted, so I was not able to use my waterbrush in the room. I got around this by adding lots of marks and colour with watercolour pencil on the page and then leaving the room and adding water to the page with my waterbrush just outside the door.

At 10am I started immediately on my sugar glider.

The drawing is in a A4 Moleskine Watercolour Sketchbook. I drew the shape lightly on the page to make sure I would fit him on the page. I worked on him solidly all morning. In hindsight, I probably should have done a few quick sketch from different angles, just to get in the mood. Next time I will take that approach. Yesterday I kept adding colour and detail til lunchtime.

I did not know how the specimen would be positioned when I ordered him. He is not in full flight. There is a membrane between the front fingers/paws and the back leg which allows the gliding between trees. In this specimen you can see all of the folded fur that would stretch out when gliding. His nose is a little missing and scrunched. They are usually pink, And I could not see his paws and claws on the branch.

I chose a sugar glider as we had seen them when I was young when we went on a camping trip at a National Park. I remember seeing them in the trees and feeding them, but I don’t think I saw them gliding.

After lunch I decided to move to other specimens in the room that other people had requested.

This hare looked simple, but was very difficult to draw. Three of us were sketching him from different angles and all agreed that it was a lot more complex that we all thought it would be. Not sure why…

Above are some birds from the collection

And now some real life live birds. Sketched on the way to the Museum. These two rainbow lorikeets were loudly screeching on the street sign above me. They never stay still for long. I was going to take a photo and decided to try for a very quick sketch, So glad I did. I sketched this in only a few minutes. I then walked up to the Melbourne Museum to spend over two hours on my next drawing of the sugar glider. From one extreme to another.Both were immensely fun an satisfying.

sketching daffodils in Fitzroy Gardens

Saturday was a very Spring-like day in Melbourne, with sun shining with warmth and blue skies. I walked through the Fitzroy Gardens in Melbourne,looking for ducks to sketch, but they were not there as their pond was being drained. I easily found another source of inspiration in the Gardens in the form of daffodils!

Below are photos I remembered to take as a work in progress.

I sketched the city skyline and the daffodils.

drawing nostalgia at home

This weeks blog is all about drawing to capture personal memories. I do a lot of quick on location sketch to capture the moment. The other part of my sketching is a little slower, with more thought behind the choosing the object or scene, and more time spent putting watercolour pencil to paper.

On a recent visit home I continued my drawings of everyday objects from around the house I grew up in. These are things that only mean something to me and some members of my family. I am sharing this to open your mind to the concept of capturing special memories on paper. These objects are not always big and exciting, but sometimes the small and everyday. In fact, the everyday can resonate more than bigger things. Objects that were meaningful to me , did not have the same connection for my brother.

I do not want to actually own or take away any of these, so drawing them is away of keeping them. I also would like to find out the history of the object – where did we get it, when was it used. I want to write down my memories and other family members’ memories .

Other family history and memory drawings can be seen at :

drawing my dad’s shed – This is one of my favourite posts and I get very nostalgic reading it

all in a flickr album. I have drawn family history items as well as everyday objects. Looking back over these I start to feel all nostalgic. Here are are few previous drawings

I draw these with the object on the table in front of me.

I finished the weekend by drawing the front gate. I started by sitting out on the footpath and realised that I wanted more time to get more detail (and it was cold). I took several photographs and am still working on this. I return home again a few weeks and have a few more things I want to draw!

In essence, it is all about drawing objects that I have have a connection with, no matter how obscure or ‘everyday’ it is. I hope this inspires you !

sketches on a flying visit

I had a flying visit interstate on the weekend. These are the sketches on the way there and back again on Airnorth airline.

at Melbourne airport

on the plane

coming into land in Toowoomba

Looking out the window flying into Toowoomba The land is so brown and dry looking. The drought is very real here

… and flying back Toowoomba to Melbourne