When I started blogging my drawings I was working in small bound books (Moleskines), one drawing a day: bound drawings that somehow maintained a daily narrative, inseparable from their collective physical context. As time went on, the drawings became more complex and more enmeshed in an on-going thought process. They start one day and finish whenever they finish and I work in several sketchbooks at the same time, of various sizes. And the pages are now removable.
I work with internal (anatomy, a continuing fascination) and external (flux of experience and environment). And, over the last 10 years I’ve been experimenting with in-image captions, more and more in Spanish.
(Drawings are pencil, ink, watercolor, whatever on paper: various sketchbooks, going one book to the next. And the pages are now removable. All art copyright Sharon Frost, [email protected], sharonfrost.net).
Vale, pues sí, en el F. 17 de abril, 2012. Okay, yes, on the F.
" And it's that there time hangs heavy. Nobody keeps track of the hours, nobody worries about how the years add up. The days begin and they're over." Juan Rulfo.
5 7/8 x 9 in.; watercolor, ink, whatever, on Stonehenge paper.
Comments
Vale, pues sí, en el F. 17 de abril, 2012. Okay, yes, on the F.
" And it's that there time hangs heavy. Nobody keeps track of the hours, nobody worries about how the years add up. The days begin and they're over." Juan Rulfo.
5 7/8 x 9 in.; watercolor, ink, whatever, on Stonehenge paper.