Here's a picture I made in biro, using a photograph I took in Budapest's Deak Ferenc Ter Metro Station: -
- and another, sketched from the deck of a flyboat, during a sightseeing trip along the Danube
Saturday, 18 November 2017
Sunday, 5 November 2017
14) Hungary - One Day in Budapest - Other Pictures
St. Matyas Church, Buda |
Chain Bridge, from Pest side of the Danube |
St. Matyas Church and the Fishermens Bastion, Buda |
Budapest Parliament Building - Buda - from Danube |
13) Hungary - One Day in Budapest - November 2017 - Required Elements
Alright, it wasn't exactly 1 day. I flew out on Tuesday 31st, but didn't arrive at the hotel until after dark. I did go into the centre of town by tram and metro, but it was too dark to make sketches. I spent all day in the centre of Budapest until after dark on Wednesday 1st, and flew home early on Thursday 2nd. Well, half term holidays are short, and you have to make the most of them. As such, I was pleased with the number of sketches I made on the day - although I will admit that a few of them were started on site, but finished in the evening back at the hotel with the help of photos I took at the same time.
I first saw this iconic bridge lit up at night. When I looked at it, being a Londoner, my first thought was - Hammersmith Bridge. Only, it doesn't look like the current Hammersmith Bridge very much. But I must have been thinking of the previous Hammersmith Bridge, since not only were they very similar, they were also designed by the same man, an Englishman called William Tierney Clark. Once I'd started comparing these Budapest bridges to bridges on the Thames, I couldn't stop. The next two bridges struck me as being like Chelsea Bridge and the Albert Bridge - even though the similarity is slight at best. As for the Chain Bridge, the original Hammersmith Bridge has gone, but Tierney Clark's Marlow Bridge in Buckinghamshire , which was built as a dry run for this one, is still there for a comparison if you're interested.
I did take a sightseeing boat trip down the Danube for an hour or so. Not as interesting as the Spree trip in Berlin, but more interesting than the Vltava trip in Prague. This is the castle complex in Buda. You can either walk up to it, or do as I did and take a ride in the funicular railway.I made this sketch while waiting for 15 minutes or so for the boat to depart.
The most interesting - slightly older looking trams in Budapest run along either bank of the Danube. I sketched this one by the stop just along from the Chain Bridge. Not one person in Budapest stopped to look at any of my sketches at all. I must be losing what little touch I ever had.
One of the things I love about a European trip is when you can leave your hotel early in the morning, and walk down the road a short way then hop on a tram. From my hotel you just had to cross the road to the tram stop, and take a 15 minute ride on the number 50 tram to the end of the line at the Hatar Ut metro station. These trams are pretty much as modern and efficient as you could ask - almost up to Berlin standards. In which case its such a shame that some of the passengers take them so much for granted, and show so little respect as to leave half eaten pizza on the seats and on the floor.
Budapest - Chain Bridge |
Castle - Buda - sketched from boat while waiting for sightseeing trip to start |
Heritage tram - Danube riverbank - Pest side |
Number 50 tram - Hatar Ut metro station |
12) Germany - Berlin - Other sketches - late August 2017
Domkirche - Berlin Cathedral |
Marienkirche - St. Mary's Church |
Brandenburg Gate |
Mozart - Haydn - Beethoven Memorial - Tiergarten |
Altes Museum - Museum Island |
Berlin Rathaus |
Siegsaule - West Berlin |
11) Germany - Berlin - late August 2017 - Required elements
Next on the itinerary, and the last chance to go anywhere during the long school Summer Holidays, was Berlin. My wife bought me this trip as a Christmas present back in Christmas 2016, and I'd been really looking forward to it. It was another European capital city, which was reason enough, but more than that it was fair to expect that Berlin is one of the great European capitals.
I had two full days and another half day in Berlin, and I found that I did spend most of that time in East Berlin. So let's get to the trams and the river and the bridges.
Okay - now I didn't actually make a sketch while I was on the river - although I did take a sightseeing trip along the Spree. I have to say that I enjoyed it more than the trip on the Vltava in Prague too. Berlin 's river, the Spree is home to an island which houses five of the world's great museums - hence its name of Museum Island. This is the Bode Museum, at the tip of the island, and is one I made sitting on the opposite bank of the river. It was one of several sketches which passers by stopped to talk about, I'm happy to say.
Ah yes. Now, I wouldn't say that the bridges in the centre of the city crossing the Spree are ugly. They're rather nondescript, though, and I was starting to despair of finding a real signature bridge for Berlin, until I found a photo of this, the Oberbaumbrucke, online. This is actually a road and rail bridge, as it carries one line of the U-Bahn, the Berlin underground railway to its ending. You have to go East to the end of the line, mind you, but it's worth it. I mean, let's be honest, this bridge is mad, almost Wagnerian, and I like it very much. It was a burningly hot day, though, and I burned my bald spot while I was painting this.
The Hackescher Markt is a large market in the centre of East Berlin. It's also a rather nice station of the S-Bahn, Berlin's other, rather grander metro system. This was another one which attracted some nice comments, from a group of Spanish people no less, who turned out to know Catral quite well.
I'll be honest, I couldn't get much enthusiasm for sketching Berlin's sleek, modern and highly efficient trams - this is the only sketch I made on the spot. This one was done from photos later-
.
I had two full days and another half day in Berlin, and I found that I did spend most of that time in East Berlin. So let's get to the trams and the river and the bridges.
Bode Museum - Museum Island |
Oberbaumbrucke bridge |
Hackesscher Markt S-Bahn Station |
Hackescher Markt - catching the M6 tram to the hotel |
.
10) Spain - Alicante Area - Catral-Dolores-La Marina area - Early August 2017
Church - outside Dolores |
El Pinet Beach nr. La Marina |
Catral - late breakfast |
Catral Saturday morning market |
Catral - evening in main street |
9) Spain - ALicante area - early August 2017
San Isidro Church nr. Alicante |
Backstreet roof garden San Isidro nr. Alicante |
Former San Isidro Station platform shelter - San Isidro nr. Alicante |
La Cerveceria - San Isidro - nr. Alicante |
San Isidro Street - nr. Alicante |
8) Wales - May 2017
After returning from Prague, I still had a couple of weeks on my sick note, as it were. I was aware of the therapeutic effect that making the sketches in Prague had brought me, and so I tried to get out and around in Wales to make some more sketches.
It's a source of shame to me to admit this, but before this, despite living in Wales for 30 years, and despite me being an English Literature graduate and English teacher, I had never previously visited Dylan Thomas' boathouse. Laugharne is an achingly beautiful place on a bright Spring day like this.
Laugharne has this really charming higgledy-piggledyness, being built on little hills which reach down to the sea, and I fell in love with this view, and stood there for about an hour, trying to get it all down before fatigue set in.
The Museum of Welsh Life in St Fagans just outside Cardiff is a place I've visited with my kids on several occasions. At a loss for what to sketch one cold day towards the end of April, I went and made this and the following two sketches.
Brecon is another Welsh town which has a charming randomness about its streets. In centuries past Brecon was an important market town, and the county town of Brecknockshire, and its streets still follow the medieval street plan.
Although I say it myself, I think that you can see how I'd started to develop a personal sketching style since returning from Prague - a more graphic style, with heavy use of shade and shadow to give texture.
I do like street scenes, and this sketch from Brecon is one of my favourites. Something as fiddly as this does take time though, and if there's no convenient place to sit you can get some very funny looks from people who pass on the narrow streets.
Finally, three street scenes from Cardiff. All of them are composite sketches - using the technique I used in Prague of adding a couple of figures at a time before sketching in the buildings to build up the whole picture
The two figures in the foreground here are my daughter Jess and future son in law Dan
I like the contrast between the dark, almost silhouetted figures, and the light buildings.
Dylan Thomas' boathouse - Laugharne |
Back alley - Laugharne |
St. Fagans Open Air Museum - former Aberystwyth tollhouse |
St. Fagans Open Air Museum - Gwalia Stores |
St Fagans Open Air Museum - Oakdale Institute |
Brecon, Mid Wales |
Brecon - Mid Wales |
Brecon - Mid Wales |
Cardiff |
Cardiff - nr. Cardiff Castle |
Cardiff - Hayes |
7) Czech Republic - Prague - Other sketches - April 2017
Vintage style car cruiser - Prague Old Town
|
St. Nicholas Church - Prague |
Watercolour - Prague Old Town Powder Tower |
Prague Legionariu Bridge |
Prague - Number 23 tram approaching Legionariu Bridge |
Prague Tram Café - Wenceslaus Square |
Prague - Church sketched while sitting on a bench in the street market off Wenceslaus Square |
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