Exploring Artists Through Their Sketchbooks (2024)

In studying an old master artist’s body of work, sketchbooks can prove to be invaluable resources. Many museums and libraries exhibit their collections of artists' sketchbooks online, allowing the public a chance to pore over page after page of these preserved treasures.

Were they ever intended for such a purpose? Perhaps in some cases, they were, when the artist was keenly aware that their records would be shared and diffused to the world at large. For others, however, the opposite is the case and the artist’s sketchbook is meant for the eyes only for the one who created inside.

Taking a glimpse atartists'sketchbooks through the ages is like sitting side by side and peering over the shoulders into the most intimate, personal recesses of who they are. We're able to see how they structured their sketchbooks and what motivated their process. They can be more instructive about the life and method of the artist than even their final finished works.

Here is a small selection of artists through the ages and some pages from their sketchbooks which have been passed on through the ages and the different ways in which their books were kept.

Sketchbooks as a collection of notes and research.

Leonardo Da Vinci (1452-1519)

Leonardo da Vinci’s notebooks are collections of drawings, studies, experiments, that illustrate the master’s great curiosity and interest in a vast number of subjects and areas. As an artist, we see the breathtaking renderings of drapery, plants, and the human form among them. As a scientist, engineer, and inventor, we seeDa Vinci's observations and records lay the groundwork for various fields of study such as botany, mechanical engineering and hydraulics, and ideas for inventions that would only prove possible centuries later.

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Leonardo da Vinci, study of weights and friction, c. 1510

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Leonardo da Vinci, anatomical studies c. 1510

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Leonardo da Vinci, spread from the Codex Arundel c. 1510

Albrecht Dürer (1471-1528)

A leading figure of the Northern Renaissance, prolific artist, printmaker, and theorist, Albrecht Dürer, had an enormous output of paintings, prints, drawings, and notes that have been left to us. He wrote books on human anatomy and proportions, geometry and mathematics. In Durer’s Dresden Sketchbook, we see the artist compiling the preparatory studies and illustrations to accompany his writings. Through these drawings we see a highly analytical mind attempting to codify the human form through meticulous, systematic diagrams.

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Albrecht Durer, page spread from Four Books on Human Proportion

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Albrecht Durer, page spread from the Dresden Sketchbook

Sketchbooks for poets and writers.

William Blake (1757-1827)

An artist, poet, engraver, and mystic, William Blake kept a sketchbook for thirty years which he filled with studied drawings, preparatory sketches, poems, and writings. The spread below contains two of Blake’s most famous poems, “The Tygre” and “London.”

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From William Blake’s sketchbook, this spread contains two of Blakes poems

In the sketchbook spread below we see three illustrations including Blake’s self-portrait on the right page and a collection of poems. In the bottom left of a rough outline of what would later become the print Elohim creating Adam.

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From William Blake’s sketchbook: Pencil and ink on paper

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William Blake: “Elohim Creating Adam”, Colour print, ink and watercolour on paper, 1795-1805

Jane Austen (1775-1817)

At the age of only 15, English writer Jane Austen wrote “The History of England,” a parody of the typical school booksat the time. The book both imitated and parodied the historical textbooks, at times including fictional elements, such as works by Shakespeare within the history. Integrated within the text are small illustrations of England’s monarchs, illustrated by Jane’s older sister Cassandra to whom the work was dedicated.

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Jane and Cassandra Austen, “The History of England,” ink and watercolor on paper, 1791

Sketchbooks as a travel companion.

J.M.W. Turner (1775-1851)

The British painter Joseph Mallord William Turner would sketch relentlessly during his travels abroad to continental Europe. In his sketchbook, we can sense the master’s quick hand as he moves across the paper making marks and notations to capture entire cities, mountainscapes, and coastlines.

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J.M.W. Turner, “Hals and Burg Hals from the Hillside near Passau,” pencil on paper 1840

Often his sketches would be used later as references for paintings that he would complete upon his return to London:

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J.M.W. Turner, “San Giorgio Maggiore and the Zitelle across the Bacino, Venice, with the Porch of the Dogana in the Foreground, from a Balcony of the Hotel Europa (Palazzo Giustunian)”, pencil on paper 1840

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J.M.W. Turner,The Dogano, San Giorgio, Citella, from the Steps of the Europa,” oil on canvas 1842

Eugène Delacroix (1798-1865)

Of the 19th century French painter Eugène Delacroix, poet and art critic Charles Baudelaire wrote, Delacroix “had a passion for notes and sketches and made them wherever he was.”

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Eugène Delacroix, “View of Tangiers,” sheet from one of the Morroccan albums, Watercolor and pencil on paper, 1832

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Eugène Delacroix, Spread from one of the Morroccan sketchbook, Brown ink, watercolor and pencil on paper, 1832

Years later, Delacroix wrote about his time in North Africa and the sketches he made there that could serve as a helpful guide for artists today about how to approach their own sketching.

“I began to make something tolerable of my African journey only when I had forgotten the trivial details and remembered nothing but the striking and the poetic side of the subject. Up to that time, I had been haunted by this passion for accuracy that most people mistake for truth.”

Sketchbooks as a record of ideas.

Pablo Picasso (1881-1793)

One of Picasso’s sketchbooks which has since been called the Carnet de la Californie (named after the house that Picasso lived in Cannes, “La Californie”). The sketchbook is an important record of what Picasso turning to images of Old Masters, including Delacroix and Rembrandt, as well as early sketches that would eventually be turned to paintings.

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Pablo Picasso, spread from “Carnet de la Californie,” pencil and pen on paper, 1956

This spread from January 14, 1956, is particularly fascinating as we see the initial approaches to what became two very different final results.

On the left, we see geometric designs and patterns that led directly to his black and white painting “Armchair California” painted later the same year. On the right is a copy after the painting, “Man with a Golden Helmet” once attributed to Rembrandt. Fifteen years later, Picasso made a painting, “Man with a Golden Helmet" (After Rembrandt),which bears a faint resemblance to the original, but we do see a bull figure holding a golden helmet, similarly shaped to the figure in the school of Rembrandt portrait.

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Pablo Picasso, “Armchair California (Fauteuil a 'La Californie),"Oil on canvas, 1956

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Pablo Picasso, “Man with the Golden Helmet, after Rembrandt” (L'homme au casque d'Or aprés Rembrandt) oil on canvas, 1969

Sketchbooks as intimate and the mundane.

Frida Kahlo (1907 - 1954)

Frida Kahlo’s sketchbooks are more like illustrated diaries; some pages burst with imagery and color, other pages filled with beautiful sprawling text. Kahlo’s book is like seeing someone’s waking dreams alive on the page with expressive collaged imagery and symbols. For someone who was confined to her bed for so long because of her shattered back, we can feel the sketchbook as a form of release for all her ideas, creativity, sorrow and pain.

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Frida Kahlo, page spread from her diary, mixed media on paper

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Frida Kahlo, page spread from her diary, mixed media on paper

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Frida Kahlo, page spread from her diary, mixed media on paper

David Hockney (1937 - present)

In the sketchbooks of British artist David Hockney, we find simple, expressive sketches of the everyday views from Hockney’s immediate surroundings. Even on a voyage to Iceland, we find not only views of the landscape, but also little snippets of items around the house, such as a full ashtray, or shoes on the floor. These “mundane” subjects bring an immediacy and intimacy with the artist that is quite striking, like we're right there in the same room with Hockney, sharing his experiences.

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David Hockney, pen and marker on paper, from the Iceland Sketchbook, 2002

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David Hockney, watercolor on paper, from the Circus Filey Sketchbook, 2004

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David Hockey, pen and marker on paper, from the Iceland Sketchbook, 2002

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David Hockney, watercolor on paper, from the Circus Filey Sketchbook, 2004

Looking at sketchbooks from artists in the past allows us to catch a glimpse of what an artist is doing at a certain point in time in their lives.

We are having access to something that perhaps we never should be able to see, but in this way we are able to see some of the most personal, profound and intimate works created by these great artists.

"What an artist is trying to do for people is bring them closer to something, because of course, art is about sharing. You wouldn't be an artist unless you wanted to share an experience, a thought."- David Hockney

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Jun-Pierre Shiozawa is an artist and illustrator based in Nice. Jun-Pierre teaches watercolor painting in workshops all over the world. He believes that sketchbooks are for everyone--not just artists--and that one should carry a sketchbook with them whenever and wherever they travel.
Exploring Artists Through Their Sketchbooks (2024)

FAQs

Why are sketchbooks important for artists? ›

A lot of artists like to use them to record the things they see, rather than take a photograph, sometimes making a quick sketch can capture a lot of movement and feeling that can be taken back to the studio and developed. Another benefit is the record they keep of our progress.

How does sketching help artists? ›

Through sketching or drawing, you develop the ability to convey ideas, emotions, and narratives visually. To enhance your visual communication skills, consider sketching people, capturing their expressions and gestures, or creating visual stories through sequential art.

What famous artists are sketch books? ›

Leonardo de Vinci, George Robert Lewis, JWM Turner, Frida Kahlo, Vincent van Gogh, to name but a few… Historical sketchbooks have given us the privilege to look back at some of the initial stages and beginnings of the most iconic work the Art World has ever seen.

What are two ways artists use sketchbooks? ›

Artists often use their sketchbooks to make quick sketches, studies, and doodles of things they see around them, such as people, objects, landscapes, or animals. Ideas and concepts: Many artists use their sketchbooks to record ideas, concepts, and.

What are the rules for sketchbooks? ›

NOTE: Always work to fill your page – avoid putting a small image in the center of your page. Also avoid letting things fall off the edges of your page. Failure to label and spray-fix entries will result in a lower grade. Do not draw on the backsides of your pages – only draw on ONE SIDE of the paper.

What is the value of sketchbooks? ›

Keeping a sketchbook helps your ideas grow and helps you develop new ones. It allows us to make random connections and juxtapose ideas.

How does sketching improve creativity? ›

Having a drawing practice offers the gift of putting ideas on paper to explore them and figure out what we want to do next, what product or princess we can design, or simply to get your creative juices flowing.

What does sketching teach you? ›

A sketching habit strengthens fine motor skills and hand-eye coordination. New pathways form and, according to studies, increase blood flow to the reward center in your brain. You are training your eyes to deliver visual information to your brain, which, in turn, communicates with your hand.

Is sketching a skill or talent? ›

Drawing is a skill, not a talent. It doesn't matter if you can draw or not, with practice you can be the best.

Who is the No 1 sketch artist? ›

For many, Michelangelo is still the greatest artist of all time. His mastery over different disciplines—painting, sculpture, architecture—is unparalleled. At the core of his creative practice, however, was drawing. Before each painting and sculpture, the Italian artist created numerous sketches of the human figure.

What is the highest paid sketch artist? ›

Average starting Salary for Sketch Artist in India is around ₹1.0 Lakhs per year (₹8.3k per month). No prior experience is required to be a Sketch Artist. What is the highest salary for a Sketch Artist in India? Highest salary that a Sketch Artist can earn is ₹6.5 Lakhs per year (₹54.2k per month).

What sketchbook did Van Gogh use? ›

She said that the sketchbook, a commercial ledger, had been given to Van Gogh in 1888 by Joseph and Marie Ginoux who owned the Cafe de la Gare in Arles. He sketched the Provençal landscape around Arles in the ledger and continued to work in it during his stay at a mental asylum in Saint Remy.

What are the 3 types of sketching? ›

Types of sketching
  • Interior sketching. It is very important to comprehend the laws of perspective for this kind of sketching and train your eye to determine measure and proportion. ...
  • Fashion sketching. ...
  • Industrial sketching. ...
  • Travel sketching.

What makes a good sketchbook? ›

Look for sketchbooks with acid-free paper. Acid-free paper ensures your artwork won't yellow or deteriorate over time. A good quality paper will also resist bleeding and feathering of inks and paints. In Menorah Sketchbooks: For versatility in mediums, it's essential to choose a sketchbook with medium-weight paper.

How do you make a sketchbook interesting? ›

You can also cover your sketchbook with newspaper, pages from a novel, or sheet music. Another idea which sounds a little crazy is to cover it with old shopping lists or other scrap bits of paper you find with handwriting on. You can also doodle patterns on the cover.

What is the benefit of sketchbook? ›

You can have one sketchbook for everything or, like me, you have separate ones with different purposes – do whatever works for you. So to round up, they help you heal, they help you develop new ideas, you can re-evaluate older work and they allow you to understand your 'why' so much more!

Why is sketching important in painting? ›

The purpose of sketching varies; it can be to try out a range of different compositions and angles, especially when it comes to still life paintings – it will help to mould the final artwork. Sketching can also help the artist to be expressive and get initial ideas down onto paper.

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