Tag: pencil

  • Sedge Walking

    Sedge Walking

    This pencil sketch is the first concrete concept for a new direction I’m exploring. The series centers on the quiet, ancient presence that occupies our fields and prairies, using a recurring horned entity as a narrative anchor. I’ve been drawing inspiration from the looming, watchful nature of old-world land spirits like the Leshen, mixing that folklore with the indifferent vastness of our own open plains.

    With this specific piece, titled Sedge Walking, I wanted to play with a very quiet, localized scale of cosmic ambiguity. On first glance, you see the entity cresting the far ridge line, surveying the landscape. But if you look closer at the foreground, tangled and collapsed beneath the rough blades of the sedge, there is a second figure.

    By pulling that detail into the frame, the entire relationship shifts. It moves the work into a space of forlorn loss and raises questions I have no intention of answering cleanly. Is this ancient presence an active participant in this person’s quiet end, or is it merely a cosmic custodian performing the final, silent funeral rites for what the earth reclaims? Is it a protector, or an accountant taking a cold inventory of the decay?

    Technically, keeping this in pure pencil on cold press paper allowed me to focus entirely on the texture and the weight of the environment. The fine, dense linework builds the chaotic grain of the grass, burying the foreground figure in a way that forces the viewer to slow down and actually look for the story. Future pieces will continue to track this entityโ€”or the trailing remnants of its presenceโ€”through various field settings, establishing a running dialogue between the observer and the soil.


  • Rockwell Church Farmhouse

    Rockwell Church Farmhouse

    I am sharing another graphite piece today that keeps us grounded in Barrow County, Georgia. Not far from the historic church I sketched recently sits this abandoned farmhouse, quietly decaying along Rockwell Church Road.

    Like much of my work, this drawing began as a photograph taken through the lens of my Pentax. There was something immediately striking about the isolation of the structure. For the translation to paper, I chose Staedtler Mars Lumograph pencils. The grading of these pencils allowed me to push the contrast, digging into the heavy, dark textures of the weathered siding and the deep, impenetrable shadows lurking beneath the covered porch.

    To enhance the feeling of quiet observation, I emphasized the barren, skeletal tree branches sweeping across the foreground. They act as a natural frame, pushing the farmhouse further back into the landscape and adding to that subtle, Southern Gothic atmosphere that permeates these forgotten spaces. It is a study in texture, memory, and the slow reclamation of rural architecture.

    Technical Details:

    • 9×12 hot press Fabriano
    • Staedtler Mars Lumograph pencils

    Rockwell Church Farmhouse-Distance1
  • A Fleeting Thought, Held

    A Fleeting Thought, Held

    This piece explores the visual and emotional dialogue between the enduring and the fleeting. The foreground is dominated by a vibrant bloom of bluebonnets, rendered with a delicate touch to emphasize their ephemeral nature โ€“ like a beautiful, transient thought taking tangible form. Their cool tones offer a moment of respite within the overall warmth of the composition, a temporary splash of serenity.

    The choice of a strong, almost cadmium orange-yellow for the sky was deliberate. It serves to create a sense of visual tension, a feeling of being enveloped or even constricted by the intensity of the atmosphere. This deliberate contrast in color and feeling aims to highlight the preciousness and temporary nature of the bluebonnets, making their ephemeral beauty all the more poignant against the persistent, almost weighty sky.

    Technical Details:

    • 9×12 140lb cold press
    • Sakura Pigma pens
    • Acrylic brush and swipe
  • Flowers and Undergrowth

    Flowers and Undergrowth

    I am sharing a new piece today that steps away from the ink and mixed media for a moment to focus entirely on pure pencil work. There is a specific kind of quiet intimacy that comes with a graphite studyโ€”it feels like a direct, unfiltered look into the sketchbook.

    This drawing is a study of the wild, tangled details of the undergrowth. My main goal was to play with extreme contrast and negative space. By heavily shading the background to create a deep, soft, almost hazy shadow, I was able to push the untouched white of the cold press paper forward. This allows the delicate petals of the flowers to catch the light and practically glow against the darkness.

    To keep the composition from feeling too heavy, I used sweeping, thin lines for the tall grasses. That fine linework gives the piece a lot of kinetic energy, which balances perfectly against the heavier, more textured shading in the centers of the blooms.

    It is a quiet observation of the forest floor, relying entirely on shifting values to find the light hidden in the shadows.

    Technical Details:

    • Mitsubishi graphite pencils
    • 9ร—12 140lb cold press

  • Mountain Stream and Masonry

    Mountain Stream and Masonry

    There is a quiet permanence in a stone bridge that I find endlessly compelling, especially against the backdrop of the Blue Ridge Mountains. Unlike the shifting water beneath it or the skeletal branches of the trees above, the bridge stands as a testament to craftsmanship and time.

    In this piece, I wanted to capture that contrast. The challenge was in the sheer variety of textures found in this mountain landscape: the jagged, individual faces of the foreground rocks, the weathered masonry of the bridge, and the delicate, almost ethereal network of the winter trees.

    Working in this monochromatic style allows me to focus entirely on the โ€œarchitectureโ€ of the sceneโ€”how light hits a rough surface versus how it filters through a dense thicket. Itโ€™s a meditative process of building layers to find the true weight of the place.

    Technical Details:

    • Mitsubishi graphite pencils
    • 9ร—12 140lb cold press

  • Illustration: Solitary Summer

    Illustration: Solitary Summer

    Illustration of an abandoned shack at the peak of an old farm field.

    Technical Details:

    • Arteza graphite pencils
    • 9×12 140lb cold press
  • The Farthest Part of Memory

    The Farthest Part of Memory

    This piece is an exercise in minimalism and the emotional power of negative space. The composition is intentionally sparse, using washed-out earth tones and the spectral forms of flowers to immediately evoke a sense of nostalgia and loss. The acrylic ink washes are allowed to bleed and fade, mirroring the way a memory dissolves at its edges over time.

    The entire landscape is designed to create a powerful visual path toward the dark, definitive horizon line. By placing two minuscule figures there, rendered with delicate pencil work, they become the narrative anchor of the entire piece, their smallness only magnifying the vastness of the separation. Itโ€™s a testament to how the simplest elements, when placed with intention, can carry the most significant emotional weight.

    Technical Details:

    • Surface: 140lb cold press
    • Dimensions: 9ร—12
    • Medium: Acrylic, Pencil
  • Drawing Historic Rockwell Church

    Drawing Historic Rockwell Church

    I am sharing a new graphite piece today that focuses on a local Winder landmark: Historic Rockwell Church.

    This drawing is derived from a reference photograph I made several years ago with my Nikon. The image was captured during the golden hour of a late summer afternoon, a moment when the light is harsh yet warm, casting deep shadows that define architectural forms.

    For this study, I used Mitsubishi pencils on cold press paper. Working purely in graphite required careful planning of values to contrast the delicate, aging white woodwork against the dense, almost impenetrable wall of foliage behind it. I wanted the texture of the wooden siding and the foundation brickwork to feel tangible, as if you could reach out and touch the history etched into the building.

    It is a quiet study of structure, light, and enduranceโ€”a moment in late summer frozen in graphite.

    Technical Details

    Medium: Mitsubishi Pencil, Derwent Graphite
    Surface: Fabriano Hot Press
    Dimensions: 9ร—12