Pencil and pencil crayon in Moleskine sketchbook.
www.ruthrosengarten.com
Drawing and photography are central to my practice. Both make pressing - if sometimes fictitious - claims to the capture of lost moments.
19/04/2010
18/04/2010
Feline for a change
Pencil and pencil crayon in Moleskine sketchbook.
The cat on the right side page was drawn separately from the one on the left page, that's about to nestle in the cushions. That's why the cushion looks wrong in relation to the cat on the right, ie it's a separate drawing. But I like straddling the ditch of the open sketcbook, so I let the cushion overlap anyhow, whereas in the next drawing I've kept the two drawings separate.
Pencil and pencil crayon in Moleskine sketchbook
I don't often draw cats as I don't have many models to hand, as opposed to dogs that have always been in my world.
One of the problems with posting drawings from a rather quiet life in the countryside - especially at this time of year when everything is burgeoning and beautiful - is that it makes one's life look a bit twee, very cosy and content, perhaps a bit smug. So in case anyone is imagining me in Laura Ashley prints eating muesli... ha! perish the thought. My uniform is all black, and I'm as ill-humoured and irate as the next person (actually, probably more so! :)
17/04/2010
Sinfonia Pastorale

The sky is perfectly clear, blue and luminous, the lawnmowers are humming, all the blossoms are out, all the local dogs and doing walkies, running and swimming in the nearby river; lambing has happened in all the fields around us. How much more bucolic can it get? This continues to be life in the fast lane!
16/04/2010
15/04/2010
Camera
Ink pen, brush marker and watercolour in Moleskine sketchbook.
I take hundreds of photos, but only yesterday did I think of drawing my camera. Yesterday's drawing didn't come out very well - I liked the marks, but then the camera looked crumpled and curved, like it was hunching its shoulders (in shyness, someone said!) so this is a second attempt. The angles are still a bit wrong, but let's say it's expressive!
Renal diet
Pencil and pencil crayon in big sketchbook.
Possum and her twin brother Tushy, who lives in Portugal, now have to be on a special diet. As senior citizens, they're forgiven for having slowed down a bit. As they're not allowed protein based treats, it's fortunate that they both love carrots.
14/04/2010
Day in Cambridge
Black and sanguine Pitt pens, pencil crayon and watercolour in Moleskine sketchbook
Pencil and pencil crayon in Moleskine sketchbook. Black and sanguine Pitt pens and pencil crayon in Moleskine sketchbook.
Pencil and pencil crayon in Moleskine sketchbook.
I spent the day in Cambridge yesterday, doing some reading at the University Library, taking photographs, drawing, several cups of tea and coffee and a salad at Pret, an excellent film. Forget travel: this constitutes a great escape!
I find pencils the easiest drawing implement to use. The permanence of ink is scarier and consequently, my line gets even scratchier. I find the possibility of correcting with a rubber (ie eraser!) a great comfort...
13/04/2010
Lost and found
Black ink pen and watercolour in big sketchbook.
Black ink pen, watercolour and pencil crayon in big sketchbook.
I'm always misplacing things like bags and phones and keys and sunglasses. Sound familiar anyone? The paper's buckled because I've used watercolour and the paper's a bit too thin for that.
12/04/2010
Visitor
Pencil, pencil crayon and watercolour crayon in big sketchbook.
Black ink pen and watercolour in big sketchbook.
Pencil and pencil crayon in big sketchbook.
While Possum greets any human being into the house with the doggie equivalent of open arms (ie a hop, skip and jump with big tail waggle and extreme requests for attention), canine visitors do not receive the same welcome. Kato is with us for a few days. He's an occasional visitor and Possum thinks he deserves no hospitality. Mostly, she is very worried that he might eat her food. He used to be ingratiating to her, but now he's learnt to ignore her subterranean (and, it has to be said, innocuous) growl. Pity about the hand in the second drawing. Oh well.
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