The Middle Of June

Pizzas and Pints 3rd St Davis CA A few more from June 2025, more buildings in Davis with a tree in front, and some without. Above is the restaurant Pizzas and Pints, which I have never eaten (or drank) at, but I have drawn it a few times, including while it was being built. It’s on the corner of B and 3rd opposite the Bicycling Hall of Fame (which I still haven’t visited, except to use their toilets; as previously discussed, I can’t draw circles, so I shy away from drawing bikes. I like trees though. I quite like pizzas, and pints, but obviously not enough. As I drew one of the people who worked there came over the street and asked if I was drawing the building. I think they wanted me to come in and show them when I was done, but I didn’t. It was a Saturday afternoon and I was tired; it was Flag Day and I could feel myself flagging. So I went for a milkshake and rode home. It was Father’s Day the next day, I was tired, in fact I was Dad to the world.    B St Davis Enough Dad jokes. A few days earlier I did a lunchtime sketch a bit further down B Street, this is part of the Aggie Inn hotel. Triangle, tree, view straight across the road, looks like one of my sketches. If I sound repetitive and predictable, it’s because I very much am. Who’d want to be innovative and exciting? Not me. I’m not really a brand. Maybe I should consider being a brand. I don’t wear a distinctive hat, or have a catchy web-name.  I wear football shirts a lot. I hold my pen in a funny way, that could be my brand. I don’t want to be ‘The Davis Sketcher’. I’ve never liked when people call themselves “The [Insert place name here] Sketcher” when there are definitely other sketchers who sketch that place too. Maybe call yourself “A [Insert place name here] Sketcher”. Some people probably earn the ‘The‘, sure, but it’s pretty arrogant, so no I’d never call myself ‘The Davis Sketcher’. Saying it like that makes it sound like ‘The Boston Strangler’ or ‘The Yorkshire Ripper’. Maybe ‘The Fire Hydrant Sketcher’, or ‘The House With a Tree In Front Of It Sketcher’. Imagine that book. After about thirty houses with a tree in front of it you’d be thinking, I can’t wait for the fire hydrants book, when is that coming out. 1st st Davis Anyway hold onto your hats because here is a building without a tree in front of it. There are a couple of bushes but that isn’t the same thing. This is just at the edge of campus on 1st Street, down the road from the Aggie Inn actually, part of a child development center I think. I liked how the shadow made an interesting shape underneath the awning, and the telegraph pole in the background. This was an after-work sketch I think, judging by the length of the shadows. It’s the shadows that interested me most here, and those are the bits that change the quickest, so I drew those in before much of the other details. I stood next to a bin while sketching this, I remember it was a bit smelly, but I was able to rest my paint set on it. If I ever write a ‘How-To’ guide at the back of my Book of Sketches I’ll point out that if you stand next to a bin you can rest your paints on it, but you might have to hold your nose. Top tips.

crepeville davis CA

Here is a different view downtown, to prove I can mix it up a bit. I stood in a little bit of shade on 3rd St and drew Crepeville across the street. I like Crepeville, they do good food, though I don’t eat here often. I do eat out in Davis, I make it seem like I don’t, I just tend to always go to the same places a lot, I don’t mind being repetitive and predictable. This would have been a Monday, the first Monday of Summer. The First Monday of Summer sounds like a terrible album name. Summers are full of hope and dread. As a kid they were great, no school for six weeks, no homework or playground politics, maybe going away somewhere warm like the seaside, or maybe somewhere cold like the seaside. Staying up all night reading fantasy gamebooks, mostly for the illustrations. Playing outside with the other kids in the street, until parents or big siblings shouted us in for dinner. Eventually you’d have to go back to school and wear the uniform and eventually you get bigger and leave school and do something else with your summers, which for me was travel to other countries as soon as I had any money in my pocket, and eventually I got older, got married, moved to California, got a job and drew everything in Davis in my spare time for twenty years. That about sums it up. Twenty years in America, as of last month, twenty years in Davis as of next month. I feel like I should commemorate it in some way, maybe write a book full of drawings of houses with a tree in front, or a bush, or maybe even a lamp-post.

Davis Community Church

And finally, Community Church, which sounds like a card from Monopoly but isn’t. I’ve drawn this one a few times too, it’s a good one to come back to from time to time. Another place I’ve never been inside, actually. I’m not a religious person but I do love a bit of church architecture (when I say that I sound like one of those football blokes who says, “I’m not an Arsenal fan, but I bloody loved Dennis Bergkamp, he had the deftest touch I’ve ever seen”, which sounds like “I’m not a Catholic but I bloody loved Pope John Paul II, the had the deftest wave I’ve ever seen”). I really like sketching cathedrals, especially old ones in Europe, I’ve always wanted to do a tour of them, with a big sketchbook and I don’t know, an artist fellowship to pay for all the hotels and a publishing deal. ‘Gothic Cathedrals With a Tree Outside Them’. I was commissioned once to draw a cathedral, and they came back and said it’s great but can we lose the fire hydrant in front, to which I said absolutely not, I’m The Fire Hydrant Sketcher, ain’t I. That would be an Ecumenical Matter. I did actually have a grouping of framed prints of my cathedral sketches going up the stairs at one point, I am getting quite a collection now.

the last day of the long February

C St, Davis Community Church 022825

Been a little while since I posted, nearly a month in fact, but in my defense I’ve not felt like it. No that’s not really true, I always feel like sharing my drawings and random thoughts, and in this ever-changing world in which we live in, that’s more and more and more important. As much as we are allowed to share our random thoughts. In my defense, I have been very busy, not just in general life and the labours of the world, but also in my sketchbookery. In fact this March was probably my most sketch-tastic March in a while, since maybe the last one. I did draw quite a lot last March now I think about it, when I went to LA and Riverside, and then later to Zion and Bryce Canyon, with some Vegas thrown in. This time I went to San Francisco, Washington DC and New York City, which was not bad. I did a lot of sketching in the last two places, I’ll tell you that. New York is a great city, I have to stop leaving it so long between visits (nine years since the last trip). But before all of that, more of Davis, the usual places, the same old streets. My task is to draw the whole town over and over, and that I will keep doing. Above is another panorama for my Davis-in-landscape-format book that I have been publishing in my head for well over a decade now. If I ever publish it outside of my head, well you should take a look at it, it’s brilliant. Until then, it doesn’t exist, except on these digital pages. I think in this non-existent book the best bit is that I don’t really write much, I just let the drawings do all the talking, to give myself the air of an ‘artist of mystery’. “I bet he is really deep, this artist,” they will say, inaccurately, “or maybe he is really boring and has nothing to say,” their friends who also read the book will say, half accurately. I keep thinking about one review on Amazon (a 1 star review, I’ll have you know) to my last book which came out nine years ago now, which said: “The writing is so long-winded that by the time he gets to the point I have forgotten what he was talking about.” Or words to that effect. In that book I actually edited my writing down really well, it’s not my blog, but my first reaction was “they must know me in real life!” I stopped looking at Amazon user reviews after that. I do like to tell a story though. I decided when I was a kid that I never wanted to be rich, I just wanted to have a lot of stories to tell. Which doesn’t help when someone wants to borrow a tenner. Most stories are boring anyway, so I draw. I think if I just have a book full of pictures it may be missing the personality behind them, but it also may give others the chance to look at them and pretend that the pictures are illustrations of their own life, or could be, and they put their own stories on top of them, stories that have a lot more meaning to them. I always think back to the two books I have by Karen Neale, “London in Landscape” (vols I and II), as inspiration behind the idea of a book just of my two-page spreads, with no stories attached (although she does write some stuff around the edges, it doesn’t get in the way of or alter the story of her very detailed and lively on-location sketches) but there is a glossary at the back with her notes and stories related to each of the sketches. I look at those books quite a bit for inspiration, and to remind me of London at the time I left it behind, the mid-2000s, but I really love the little bits of writing that are in there too. I’ll get around to my currently non-existent Davis book some day. Some day.

Oh by the way, the drawing above is Davis Community Church, as seen from the edge of Central Park on 4th block of C Street. It’s a couple of blocks up from the panorama in the previous post on C Street. There were not a lot of people around. A car did park there for a while, and a man even walked over and said something to me cheerfully, but then it moved before I even noticed it had gone. Another car was parked to my left, a woman sat in there on the phone for a very long time. Someone else came and sat on the bench for a while, pushing a shopping trolley full of bags and clothes, and the local ice-cream van also pulled up for a bit, playing its horror-movie music. The ice-cream van that you see prowling around these parts is not the colourful big-windowed Mr.Whippy type van that we used to chase down the street back when I was a kid. This one is more the type of vehicle that would show up in those kids public information films that your loud-meowing cat would warn you not to go near. It gives me the creeps. Anyway I kept an eye on it in case it tried to lure me away and show me some puppies, and carried on with this unreasonably detailed drawing. After spending so long drawing branches and windows I coloured in some of the trees but then did the rest of the painting at home. I was listening to more Terry Pratchett audiobook. Now it is April and the sneezing has begun, and I am still nowhere near finished with scanning all the sketches from my trip. I’ll add in posts here and there, maybe even with more interesting writing, or not.

In fact, I just realized I already posted this sketch, as the secondary drawing in the previous post. But I have taken the brave decision to keep this one up, because I added to the story of it, and it was a good sketch so I am just giving it some more airtime. Like when you release a single off of an album that has already sold well, except not really anything like that. Hey, it’s a confusing time. Stay tuned for a lot more sketches.

across the C street

C St McNeil Manor 022525

Two more from February, both panoramas (that is, two-page spreads in my watercolour Moleskine), both from C street in downtown Davis, albeit a few blocks apart. Above, the symmetrical apartments called ‘McNeil Manor’, near 1st Street, which I have wanted to draw for ages. It was a bright late afternoon and I wanted to draw it from the very middle so I could show the mirror image reverse identical twin look of the two main buildings, with the shadows of the trees breaking up the uniformity. I was happy with how this turned out. I was listening to another Terry Pratchett audiobook, both while drawing onsite (where i did the outlines, many of the details and about a quarter of the colouring) and back at home, where I filled in the rest; now when I see this I can hear Jon Culshaw’s fantastic character voices in my head. I think it was the last one in the City Watch series, Snuff, which one of the only few Discworld books left that I have not read. This week marks ten years since Sir Terry Pratchett died, far too young, and so he is on my mind a lot. I started reading him while I was at school; I have been saving reading those last few, plus some of his non-Discworld books (I heard ‘Nation’ is very good), because while they are still unread it’s like he is still alive. I have been devouring the newer audiobooks lately, all of the City Watch ones first (except ‘Night Watch’, which wasn’t available; I have bought the paperback to read myself, though I read it when it first came out and loved it, almost all of my Pratchett books were left in England when we moved, and are now lost). I don’t know why, but these buildings remind of some flats in Mill Hill, London; they don’t actually look like them, but they remind me of them. The ones where my cousin lived when I was a kid maybe, or other ones that I sometimes pass by on the 221 bus, but these would not look out of place there.  C St, Davis Community Church 022825

Above, a building I have drawn a lot of times, the Davis Community Church. Sorry it looks so small on thei blog. If you click on it, and the one above, it will take you to my Flickr page where you can see it bigger. I like the view from the side. This was a Friday, end of a long and frankly stressful week, a headache inside a tumble dryer, and scenes like this bring some serenity. I drew much as I could there and then, and coloured in the foreground trees to get them looking the way my eyes see them, but finished the rest at home. February was ending that day, and I was glad of it, though March has not proven to be any improvement. The news of the world continues gloomily onwards. The clock went forward a couple of nights ago, nobody told me, though I wish they could have gone a few years further forward. I don’t wish that, of course, don’t wish your life away. There weren’t many people passing by, the occasional one, maybe a car that would park in front and then leave a little while later.

January’s gonna January

C St Davis

How’s January going for you? Actually no, don’t tell me, Januarys are rarely fun. I mean, ours started in Maui so that was fun, but then you have to come home and get on with January. I like being busy, it helps when there is a lot to do and keep organized with. We’ve so far not had the massive wet and windy storms that we suffered last January, in fact there has been a decent amount of blue sky weather so I was out a lot in the first couple of weeks doing some sketching, all those January shadows. Here are some from downtown; above, the building on the corner of C and 3rd, not far from my optometrist (where I spent a lot of money before Christmas ordering new glasses, my most expensive ones yet because my eyesight is getting so bad, still waiting for those). As I write, it’s just after 3 in the morning, and the rain is coming down outside. We are expecting big storms this weekend, wet and windy, hopefully we don’t get so many trees down like last year. We had planned to go up to the mountains this weekend, but the weather will be bad. So we’ll stay inside watching movies and drinking tea and hot chocolate, I mean there are worse things. I’ve had an issue with one of my teeth that’s made this week pretty annoying; the visit to the dentist will mean more expensive visits to the dentists, so the next few weeks I’ll be anxious about that. Back in London my dad’s been in hospital since Christmas so that’s been a big worry, I just heard he is getting out now thankfully, but I’d still like to try and get over there soon. And globally, well there’s never good news these days is there, it just feels like the world is spinning the wrong way sometimes. Work is picking up; its’ faculty recruitment season, and our campus also launched a new financial system we have spent years preparing for and are now struggling to get to grips with, a classic ‘did it really need changing to something far more complicated?’ moment. At least it keeps us busy. Anyway, we all keep pressing on. I’ve been drawing a lot, but there’s nothing new about that, even if it’s a lot of the same places over and over. Draw your little part of world to make sense of it.

C & 4th Davis Community Church 010724

The first weekend of the new year, I popped out on my bike to sketch downtown. I had decided in 2024 I would draw at least once every day; yeah even with my productivity that’s not happening. I draw more than most as it is. Still I went down C Street next to Community Park and sketched the side of Community Church, it looked good in the sun. After that I cycled over to the bit of 3rd Street just over the railroad tracks, in the old east downtown, ‘Trackside Center’, and drew the scene below. I thought they were going to redevelop this whole place, that might still be in the works, talked about for a number of years now. the lovely chocolate shop is still there, but not much else. I like having that signage in the foreground, that’s one of my motifs I guess. I have not drawn a fire hydrant in the foreground for a while. This is because I tend to stand when I sketch a lot more than I did 10 or 12 years ago.

3rd St Davis 010724

Here’s another, from D Street a few days later, the weather starting to get cooler and cloudier, another ‘2 Hour Parking’ sign in the foreground. I stood outside the Pence, looked up toward Mustard Seed and Cloud Forest Cafe. The house on the right has been many things (I even exhibited some drawings there years ago when it was an artists’ studio) but is now called ‘Wines in Tandem’, that’s what the sign says anyway. Wine is nice, I don’t drink much of it though. My wife’s mother brought a nice bottle for thanksgiving and we had some during dinner, but never finished the bottle; it’s still there in the fridge, because we can never finish a bottle of wine. Never had that problem when I was 22, student parties and so on. I’m a lightweight now with wine. I’m a lightweight with beer too really, but it’s a bit easier on me. I never liked drinking spirits, but I do like a nice cocktail, and we had a few in Maui swimming in the pool. And there in the middle of the sketch is the red phone box, famous in Davis, symbol of my old home country. When my son was very little we would come downtown on the bus (the “real bus” he would call it) and we would pretend that the red phone box was like a rocket ship, and go to Saturn and look around, and then come back to Davis. Those were the days. One of my earliest downtown sketches was of that phone box, back in the summer of 2006, and I’ve drawn it many times since. Lego just came out with a new red phone box set that I am going to have to get, to put on my shelf at work with my other London Lego sets. If only that phone box was a real teleporting ship, I’d use it go go back to London more, I do miss that big annoying wet crowded expensive old city, even in January when I know it’s at its worst. Davis is a nicer place to be in a month like this, no doubt, but the storms are coming in. Every year has a January, the Monday morning of months.

D Street Davis

round our way the sun shines for ya

Davis Community Church

Before I dive into the Manchester posting I thought I would jump back to the present day (Manchester was like less than two weeks ago) and show you some of what I’ve been doing since I got back. Here is Davis Community Church, on 4th Street, sketched while squeezing the curving perspective lines to fit the image in. In truth I wasn’t actually squeezing them – this is how they looked from where I was standing. As you get closer to a building those parallel perspective lines to curve more. I have wanted to redraw this building for a long time so this was a fun way to do so; after taking Paul Heaston’s workshop in Manchester I realized I need to squeeze in those perspectives even more, to get the bigger picture. I had just gotten my hair cut (finally! it was too long while I was in Manchester, too long for me) and the weather was hot but not bad. My body was aching and tired still after my trip back, my back being still a bit stuff from the cramped journey across the Atlantic. Although I complain there’s nothing left for me to draw in Davis, it’s still nice getting back to the old familiar streets.