I do some artwork when I’m travelling, but there’s no time to do completed pieces. I’m not there to carry on working but also I don’t want to miss the chance to do something creative in a new environment, so this time I decided to try and record the colours of a place, to create a pallete of local colours, using Winsor & Newton Cotman watercolours. Here’s my Dead Sea pallete, on a warm but misty day which made the land and sea look quite smudgey. I’m on a beach in Jordan, looking over to the West Bank.
Dead Sea Pallette
17 Dec- Comments 4 Comments
- Categories Arty Stuff, out and about, Travel drawings
- Author Rosie Scribblah
4 Responses to “Dead Sea Pallette”
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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
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- Pushing Through The Fog January 19, 2021
That’s a great idea when time is limited.
Yes and a good technical exercise 🙂
so meditative
It certainly gets me immersed in my surroundings