I’m carrying on with my 30 minute drawings of Baby Boomers and here’s another. It’s a lovely experience for me, I get to draw and also to sit and talk with lovely people as well. I’m not sure it’s such a nice experience for the people who sit for me – being stared at by me for half an hour. A lot of my sitters are local, well, all live locally, but some are from other places originally and it’s interesting for me to listen to their experiences and how they differ from mine. Most of us have something in common – we share a similar culture and history, but many differences as well.
Archive | 20:17
A Shared History
17 Jan- Comments 1 Comment
- Categories out and about, People watching
- Author Rosie Scribblah
To buy my work on the Swansea Print Workshop site please click the image to the left.
Inspired by drawings of the taxidermy collection at Swansea Museum. I have given these antique artefacts a modern twist by combining them with images of rubbish – old fruit nets, bubble wrap and plastic – highlighting the problem of human pollution and how it affects wildlife.
20 percent of the cost of each screenprint sold goes to support Swansea Print Workshop, which receives no public funding.Hunting The Wild Megalith
Pasta Machine Printmaking, The Movie (with added cat)
Me and my model
Man Child from George Morris Film on Vimeo.
Rosie Scribblah RSS
- A Bit Of Faff February 26, 2021
- Faking With The Cat – The Film February 25, 2021
- Free Zoom Art – Skulls And Sticking February 23, 2021
- Another Fake Finished February 22, 2021
- A Timelapse of Matisse’s Cat And Goldfish February 21, 2021