This one was an old sketch of mine which I had abandoned nearly immediately. It was part of a study (I have graduated from using rough drafts or rough sketches to calling them studies!!) for a painting I was planning on doing for my friend’s wedding gift. I abandoned it as soon as I knew that I wasn’t going to be there for her wedding…
Often solace is found in things left incomplete.
She was, and still is in parts, a free spirited girl who loved the world and embraced it in its entirety. I really couldn’t get a scan of it as it had very light lines, and this is what a quick picture looks like. She loved the sea, but had not seen much of it.
I am currently working on the Life series (basically a bunch of sketches/paintings all named Life and placing various aspects of life in contrapposto). Let’s see if I stick to it…

Who is the person with the wings?>>I really cannot comment on the sketches as I am illiterate in that aspect.>>Okra
Dear Okra,> I have no clue who that person is!!! ๐ฎ
Ah !! that lady finds so much of peace on the rocks with her hands outsretched towards the horizon….>>wishing to see more…..I can criticise with my big mouth :-p
Nice to see someone who doesnt rush to some shop, flash his credit card and purchase something in the name of gift.
this wudve made a very sweet wedding gift ๐
Hi Phantom,> She sure is at peace. ๐ I would share them, but I am saving some of them for the journal. Once, I decide on which ones to include, I shall put the “rejected” ones up on the blog. This was a definite reject as it was abandoned, and I can’t get myself to complete it.>>Hi B,> Some people find it cheap not to go out and buy them gifts!! ๐ >>Hi P,> It might have, but I couldn’t have matched her sweetness! ๐
“Often solace is found in things left incomplete.”>>Ideas have their own time and place. And I have often returned to unfinsihed sketches, even years later. Like a book one may be compelled to buy-but-not-read until a moment connects one to its message. >>In this study, I like your economy of line. It would be interesting to see what palette you might have chosen to paint it with, what mood your colours would imbue it with.>>A female figure with her back to the viewer, arms stretched to the sky. Open and ready to fly…Will the winged figure below her lift her up?>Or will she become the beacon that leads him out of some abyss? He appears almost Greco-Roman, and she of another time and place. He is near, she is far: will they ever meet? >>Your image inspires the question; what happens next?>>I look forward to seeing more of your sketches, if you chose to post them at some point.
Dear NotR,> I suppose you don’t realise that I truly look forward to your comments. I thought you didn’t like the sketch enough to comment on it (till now). Consider the one you posted above. ><>Like a book one may be compelled to buy-but-not-read until a moment connects one to its message.<> >So true. I have a huge collection of books which are yet to beckon me. I simply buy them and then hope that someday I would read them or complete reading them. ๐ฆ>I have a confession to make to you and to Okra above: The winged creature below (yes, I was trying to mimic Greco-Roman style of drawing and wanted to convert that into a clay sculpture, but wants rarely materialise into deeds) has nothing to do with the girl. I took a picture of the girl in the breeze sketch and my camera captured a part of another sketch too. ๐ฆ>But it is interesting you raise so much out of their juxtaposition. ๐>I would love to see more of your sketches too. You do them very beautifully. No no, I am not reciprocating niceties. ๐
Thank you Eroteme,>>I did not comment initially because I did not wish to intrude too much on your fine blogging community. My hesitation had nothing to do with your sketch (which I liked from the start).>>Yes, their juxtaposition is interesting. I have found that the best ideas unfold seredipitously, just as you’ve described. Quite by accident.>>Clay is a favourite medium of mine. But I have never been able to create a successful clay sculpture from a drawing. For some reason, the idea never translates well if worked from a blueprint sketch. Instead, the clay speaks a language of its own and leads naturally from an initial idea into something happily unexpected. >>Still. >>It would be great to see your Greco-Roman figure displayed in front of your sketch of the horizoned-girl,>if you exhibit your work. The unexpected relationship is definately an interesting one.>>Thank you for your kind comments on my sketches, btw.