How To Draw With Your Funny Bone
APRIL 17, 2015
For the past several weeks, I’ve been preparing for a workshop, talk and book-signing to launch my newest book, "How To Draw With Your Funny Bone" that will take place at the Norman Rockwell Museum in Stockbridge, MA on May 2nd. I intend to have a lot of fun and I hope those attending the event will join in on helping me create Funnyville, a small town in Elwood’s World. I’ll begin with a short drawing class and then we’ll begin making drawings to inhabit Funnyville’s landscape. I’ll be right there at their side, encouraging and coaching each participant.
It’s my contention that everyone can draw, even though they often think they cannot. We all drew wonderful pictures; fanciful, often funny characters when we were kids. We were not inhibited by our inability to make representational imagery. We just hunkered down with a fistful of pencils or crayons and created small worlds. By the time most kids became teenagers, they began to abandon drawing, possibly intimidated by other kids who had better hand/eye coordination and made more “realistic” pictures. Or maybe they jettisoned picture making because greater emphasis was given by their educational system to learn spelling, sports and math.
It’s interesting, though, that later in life many adults take up life drawing classes or watercolor and oil painting classes. The art of imagery, like the sound of music, is a great source of joy and, while we delight in visiting art museums and attending concerts, it is equally (or possibly more) satisfying to the soul, to make our own music and art.
Encouraging people without formal training to begin creating art again is not an original idea, but I think the emphasis on creating art as an unobtainable goal for ordinary people, is silly and there is not nearly enough support for alternative ways of artistic self expression. I wrote my Funny Bone book--and I am creating this workshop--with intentions of inspiring those who attend, old & young, to begin drawing again, to create meaningful imagery without intimidation. I will show them great artwork that has been created by self-taught, “naïve” artists and by more well known artists, like Picasso, Paul Klee and Dubuffet who embraced childlike imagery. Sophisticated drawing skills are not important in Elwood’s World. In fact, traditional drawing techniques are not welcome. I want everyone to draw pure, simple, wobbly shapes infused with childlike fancy for Funnyville, even if it means drawing with the wrong hand or scrawling on paper while blindfolded to get them out on the page.
So, if you know someone who might benefit from this workshop at the Norman Rockwell Museum, please send them this link:
Funny Bone art NRM
Thanks for stopping by!
-Elwood
© 2024 Elwood H. Smith