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From the Drawing Board

Sagrada Familia - by Hartwig Braun

It truly is a magnificent building, though maybe not quite my cup of tea! But I can appreciate it for what it is and the extraordinary amount of detailing work that has gone into it. When you look at certain details on the building I find the analogy to nature quite fascinating. There is this great combination between the traditional gothic cathedral elements and the references to nature – like parts of a tree, flowers, plants, even bones and skeletons!

I really enjoyed drawing this part on ground-level around the entrance, the portico, and playing about with the shape – to me it looks a bit like bones, with the columns almost like legs and feet! The lower part of the eight towers I really wanted to depict the internal staircases which wind around inside, and also by adding some shadow, light and highlights on the towers I thought this would be a nice way to show them in an appealing 3-dimensional form.

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The hardest part was definitely just straight above that, all those tiny little nibbles sticking out in different directions on the upper part of the towers (a very big headache!) as they’re supposed to follow the rules of perspective. Now I know I can bend the rules a bit but they’re not allowed to! So anyway, I persevered and finally got them in place. The entire building is just so incredibly detailed and of course, this makes it tricky to get just the right balance – the suggestion of very fine detail without crowding the drawing and making it messy (the cause of a few sleepless nights!).

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So, although back in Gaudi’s lifetime only part of the building was completed (and it’s still on-going work) you can clearly see his fascination with nature in all the details. You can see analogies to trees, for example, inside the church the internal columns look like trees with branches, the column bases as the roots of the trees. I find that when you see the tall towers it reminds me of a skeleton and bones, like in some parts you can see the shape of a skull. The tips of the towers look like grasses or lavender (yes, those nibbles again!).

The original first façade of the building reminds me of sand-castles – when you take wet sand and let it drizzle down in your hand and you can make lots of little shapes – with lots of intricate details of turrets, sculptures and ornaments. It also reminds a bit like a limestone grotto with stalactites and stalagmites.

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After Gaudi, the construction has been an interpretation of how would it have been in his spirit but you can already see that the front towers of this façade here are a lot more modern. Of course, they’re still full of detail but perhaps a bit more sober, more technical even. This is the one that I prefer and I enjoyed drawing it the most.

Viewing the Sagrada Familia from a distance, it’s a striking landmark that’s for sure, and then also when you see it close-up I can appreciate the detail, but I think looking at it sort-of medium scale, standing in front of the building – especially here, on this square in front I just find it too much, over the top. After seeing it in person I definitely knew from which side I wanted to draw it.

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Barcelona - Sagrada Familia - update

 

Just realised that I never completed this blog entry series regarding the Sagrada Familia image Hartwig finished last year - apologies!

I think the result shows this fantastically quirky building in a great way:

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Picking up from where I last updated on this - the next stage for Hartwig was to start the final and percise line drawing, which will later be scanned and coloured digitally.

This is the part I personally love the most as Hartwig, very patiently, picks out the details form the drafts in red below using his fine black marker:

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The next stage was to scan the finished line drawing and put it all back together again on screen to start the colouring process:

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Barcelona - Sagrada Familia - cont'd

A few more days into it and the image is getting more detailed. The volumes, which Hartwig defined in the previous drafts, are now being slowly worked on and details such as individual buildings, windows and trees are starting to appear.

Hartwig likes to use black and red pens when working on his drafts to emphasise details and distincindifferent areas of the drawing. He works out the perspectives as he sketches to create his playful trademark fish-eye effect style. Personally, this is my favourite stage of the drawing process as more & more details process every day and what initially looked like just big cubes drawn in perspective suddenly gets incredibly detailed. Each building could be re-drafted up to 20-30 times until Hartwig is completely satisfied with it - that's what I call patience!

The Sagrada Familia building is also a lot more detailed now and can be easily recognised in the centre of the image (last 2 photos).

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Barcelona - Sagrada Familia

Following our trip to Spain in October 2010 Hartwig has now started drawing Barcelona's most famous (and hopefully after more than 100 years soon-to-be-completed) - The Sagrada Familia by Gaudi. I personally don't know who was madder - Gaudi for designing it or Hartwig for drawing it. One thing I am sure of with no shadow of a doubt - no detail would be missed in the process...

This is what the draft layout drawing looks like a few days into it. Having defined the layout of the area around this monumental building, Hartwig has sketched a volume draft of the buildings around it to get a better feel of size and perspective. The famous Gaudi building can also be seen in draft form in the middle. The whole image would have to be redrafted again and again and again before the final sketch, which will be eventually coloured digitally. The whole process is fascinating and I will keep my updates from Hartwig's drawing board in the weeks to come...

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