Monday 25 August 2014

learning and using one thing to drive another

Got the blues when the sketching course ended and went to the House of Illustration which made me yearn to draw even more.

With one click I signed up for 'learning how to learn' during  the second week. Week 1 taught me about focussed vs.diffuse thinking and Dali's and Edison's methods of falling asleep thinking of a problem and waking up when what they held in their hand fell to the floor and clanged to invoke diffuse thinking and hopefully solutions.

As I dozed off wondering what I should be drawing, I decided I would draw/paint the course notes. So I did the first drawing and enjoyed it.

Then the second drawing came to me when I had the urge to draw 'eat your frogs first'. By now, I was having a lot of fun. I also found that I was recalling this image when I had to get on with things.

The third drawing was notes for harnessing your inner zombie and tips re procrastination and memory. 
Strangely,  having visual metaphors helping memory made this a meta drawing for memory. I kept on visualising the pomodoro in the drawing and setting my timer to get on with eating my frogs first!
The memory palace idea of visualising my shopping list has not yet worked. I keep recalling the technique  but not actually using it!

Don't forget...to get your body out of fight or flight state, remember to breathe. 


Additional tip : Then tackle the hard thing, and drag youself away to the easy stuff if you struggle too long. This allows you to mull it over in the background. 


The assignment for the course was to present what you learned in the course in a different way which seemed perfect for a blog post for these drawings hence your seeing these in this one collection. 



drawings plus circuits

Light off


Light on


Thursday 14 August 2014

Slumber with a key


Background :Visited House of Illustration which was pretty inspiring - their Inside Stories exhibition by Quentin Blake was on and included his illustrations for Sad Book, a painful and beautiful book.

I wanted to try to illustrate or draw something from my imagination again rather than from seeing things like I have been practicing.

Later that day, found yet another online course on Coursera called Learning how to Learn.
One of the things they mentioned was the power of diffuse thinking and referred to Edison and Dali who used to capture that point at which you fall asleep. Dali called it the 'Slumber with a key' method.

So I decided to illustrate it.

Saturday 9 August 2014

a sketchbook roundup








Spreading the joy of tinkering

For the 'tinkering' coursera course, one assignment was to do one of the other assignments as facilitation exercise i.e. watch and encourage someone else tinker.

This seemed tricky as I needed to find a volunteer and a location. Luckily, someone said yes.

Things I learned:
  • Location is important - nice settings help. I chose a garden that actively uses materials inventively.
  • The activity you choose has to be fun and compelling to get them over the hurdles
  • Let them voice their inner critic and ignore it
  • Stay silent...you will see them work it out
  • Seeing them work it out is brilliant
  • Seeing them enthused is brilliant
  • Seeing them tell you their plans to modify is infectious

This short video (0:26) encapsulates all the moods your volunteer will go though.

Monday 4 August 2014

Inspired by Andrea Joseph

Inspired by Andrea Joseph and her klass today for Sketchbookskool

A collection 

Hand lettering

Objects in blue