st. mary’s cathedral

This was done on the basis of sketching at St Mary’s cathedral in Sydney. The initial sketching was somewhat amusing. I was sitting in a corner on the floor drawing away, and an old lady brought a tour group of private school boys past (I’m there in boots, dreadlocks and tartan pants) and she comments “now we won’t disturb the artist there” and then proceeds to explain some chapel I’m sitting next to. I looked around for a sec for this “the artist” before I realised se meant me. Kinda made my day, actually.

So, the big finished work is A0 in size, and was scaled up by hand using diagonal quadrants. It’s done in a combination of burned sienna and black ink, and I think is the beginning of my love affair with these to colours. There’s also some wax resist in there, where you draw with wax on the paper to repel ink from parts. Overall I think it’s strength is the layers of contrast which draw the eye through the piece, the virtual silhouetting of the foreground, the somewhat dreamy loose midground, and then he deep shadows heading off into the transept. Hopefully you get a feeling for the almost forest nature of the gloom and columns.