In need of a creativity boost I organized a workshop with the great Malaysian artist Ch’ng Kiah Kiean on 20 & 21 October. It was a wonderful weekend.
Ch’ng Kiah Kiean is a generous teacher. His specialty is sketching with dry twigs and Chinese ink.
Here’s his website: https://kiahkiean.com/
First KK (We call him KK, as it’s easier for Europeans to pronounce…) brought for all of us 10 participants our new drawing tools: we made our twigs and ink pots with gauze. We also had a hard brush and recipient with sponge and ink to make the shadowing.
Drawing with such unusual and new tools is the perfect creativity boost. The perfect way to get out of your comfort zone and train new drawing muscles and a whole new way of seeing and putting what you see to the paper. How do you look at the objects to draw? And how do you draw?
I already did a workshop with him during the Manchester Urban sketching symposium 2016 and it changed my way of drawing also with other tools. It’s very simple: after that workshop I felt finally I could draw anything I wanted ! It was so liberating! Before that workshop I wouldn’t even have dreamed of drawing the Musée du Louvre. Now that’s exactly what we started drawing that Saturday 21st October! It takes away the fear. Some of the participants didn’t have a lot of drawing experience but this really doesn’t matter to go urban sketching. Everybody is welcome. And everybody did start somehow as a beginner, so fear is unnecessary. We just want to have fun and joy in drawing!
The most important change that happened to me was that I got rid of FEAR : fear of making a bad drawing, fear of judgment of others, fear of not being able to draw this or that, fear of missing out the important details, fear of making a fool of myself…
Let me share you some of his tips.
First the tools: dry twigs. KK draws with Water Jasmine twigs, but really: you can pick out any twig and make a point to it to draw. I also tried bamboo twigs you can buy in art supply stores but those are quite hard. It’s better to take a twig of another tree. The point has to be long and fine.
Then you put cotton gauze in a small bottle and pour ink on it. Take Chinese ink with resin. It’s water proof. The cotton gauze is needed so the point of the twig wouldn’t be dipped in liquid ink. It avoids dripping on the drawing paper.
After the drawing of the lines KK uses a hard brush (like bristles to paint with oil) and a container with a dishwasher sponge with Chinese ink on it. The ink must feel 90% dry. You must be able to make dry brush strokes.
After shadowing the drawing with ink we finish it with watercolor, so use nice watercolor paper. For my drawings I used Saunders Waterford paper of St Cuthbert Mill.
How do you look at the building you want to draw? How do you look at the Musée du Louvre to draw it? If you look at it as the Musée du Louvre with the impressive perspective and sculptures, cold sweat and fear will take over. If you look at it simply as a bunch of lines that you want to suggest on the paper (and so it doesn’t matter really if some of them will be missing), then it starts to be fun. So don’t see the building as a building, and don’t try to draw everything. And also: it doesn’t matter if you drawing isn’t “correct” ! Who cares? If we want to see all the lines and all the sculptures it’s better to take a photograph, isn’t it?
So why I love drawing with this twig and ink is because it takes me out of my comfort zone and especially because it gives me the permission to draw in a looser way: it’s impossible to draw correctly and carefully the details of the building. The building becomes a fun bunch of lines going in specific directions and that’s what we try to render. KK holds his twig very loosley and pulls it in all different directions, turning and twisting it.
To be able to see the building as a bunch of lines, what you have to do is look with your eyes, and not with your brain ! Look with your eyes to the lines and draw them. Don’t look with your brain to the building/chair/glass or whatever you want to draw.
What is your most important obstacle for having fun?
Enjoy!
Hi Barbara! KK is one of my favorite artists too. This summer I tried using a bamboo pen and other twigs and I found it very difficult to hold ink like normal pens. Did you have this experience with the twig too? Trying to get a twig to hold ink took up so much of my time drawing that I eventually gave up on using it altogether. Thank you for your posts and encouragement!
Hi Ramon,
I think the twig holds more ink than the bamboo pen, but indeed you have to dip often into the ink. You can see that also on the video…
But somehow that doesn’t bother me. It makes the drawing look goofy 🙂
Thank you for sharing your comment! Maybe we can draw together and try twigs again on the urban sketchers symposium in Porto in July?
Love,
Barbara
Amazing Creation! Truly enjoy watching the making of a beautiful piece of artwork. The music in the background is truly delightful and give an air of total sophistication.
Thank you so much Angela ! 🙂
Ah, great to see the “missing Pyramides” on the Louvre drawing above (it is the Louvre, right:)
That’s what I’ve ment with my comments on Flickr: it has to be clear/straight lines building the (non visible/visible) pyramids . fine work..
.. as always 😉
Ah yes it’s the missing pyramid:))
thank you so much Jörg!