About a drawing Chris McKimmie did…

Chris McKimmie had a desk in the college staff room that was against a wall. On the wall behind the desk lamp was a poster for a band called The Martinis, in which he was the drummer. I saw them play a few times at the Caxton Street Brasserie and at a party. The band was good, but I was really impressed by this poster which was on white paper and was a blend of two inks (a rainbow print) with black.

The poster was mostly lettering in ink with a brush and a pen, and every time I went to the staff room, I found myself glancing at it. The edges were torn off and the corners were peppered in holes from thumb tacks. The poster was about A2 size, and the drawing felt as though it was made at a smaller scale and blown up to the print size.

Today, I often think about this poster and I know why I liked it so much. It was because of the boundless freedom of the drawing and the energy in it. It was humorous, and classy and very graphic, without being slick. It was playful and effortlessly expressive. It was as though someone was whistling a drawing.

Looking at Chris’s picture books, I can see how much he was enjoying making them. He broke a lot of conventions in the way he made them (all the hand lettering in 4-colour process!). At face value, one could be mistaken that they were looking at a drawing for drawing’s sake, but the narrative always shone through.

I should have asked for a copy of that poster, but it seems like it’s seared into my memory and it and his teaching has been a real inspiration ever since.

Chris: shooting the breeze and drawing.

Medieval socks…

These medieval socks in the Victoria and Albert Museum are in really good shape. The accompanying label says that they are for wearing with sandals. They have satin lining too.

photo by david mackintosh
medieval feet © david mackintosh

Medieval feet.

Not that I know of…

Growing up, I thought Clive of India must have been the inventor of curry powder.

But no, he wasn’t. And he had nothing to do with the production of curry powder.

Artistic types…

“Paris was where the twentieth century was.” ― Gertrude Stein.

Drawn from photographs, which were popular at the time. Robert d’Humiéres, Ernest Hemingway, Jean Paul Sartre, André Gide and Josephine Baker.

Mykonos: the old, windy part of town…

I’ve never been to Antarctica, but there’s a part of that continent which is supposedly the windiest place on earth. I have been to Chicago, and that wasn’t as windy as it was made out to be. Then there’s Wellington, New Zealand, which can take your darn hat off.

But Mykonos must hold a flame to all of these. That’s why the Venetians built all the windmills they did along the north coast. I made some drawings when I was there and the sunshine together with the gale force winds helped my watercolour dry almost instantaneously.

Lincoln Green treehouse drawing…

Standing In for Lincoln Green is a picture book about sarsaparilla and responsibility.

Lincoln Green would sooner be playing in a treehouse than making his bed or mowing the lawn. I found a drawing of the treehouse in an old phone book. It’s quite close to what found its way into the book, but with some variations. Building a treehouse is actually very complicated and should not be done halfheartedly. But when you’re drawing one, you can be as carefree as you like.

The drawing found in the phone book.

I'm drawing here…

I found a notebook with drawings from a trip to New York. The notebook is only A5 and the binding is falling apart, but it has some good memories of a busy trip. I have lots of these notebooks and they are an essential part of travelling.

New York City drawing by David Mackintosh
New York City drawing by David Mackintosh

Sasha in the only sunbeam in Manhattan that day.

New York City drawing by David Mackintosh

Mykonos, by night…