Bird Lab
Migration,
song, and plumage. These are some important aspects of birds. Today we talked
about birds, learned about birds, and drew them. Dr. Matt Reudink gave our
class a presentation about birds. He explained that migration is a natural process,
whereby different birds fly over distances of hundreds and thousands of
kilometres in order to find the best ecological conditions and habitats for
feeding, breeding and raising their young. When the conditions at breeding
sites become unfavourable due to low temperatures, migratory birds fly to
regions where conditions are better. There are many different migration
patterns. The majority of birds migrate from northern breeding areas in the
summer, to southern wintering grounds. Migratory birds have the perfect
morphology and physiology that enables them to fly fast and across long
distances. However, their journey is often an exhausting one during which they
go to their limits. Matt mentioned how birds’ bulk up before their journey. For
example, the ruby-throated hummingbird will begin its journey weighing six
grams, then fly non-stop until it reaches its wintering grounds, and by the
time it reaches its wintering grounds, it will weight three grams!
After Matt’s guest lecture, the class watched a short
video on how to sketch birds. We all opened our field journals, chose a bird to
sketch and began to attempt drawing a bird onto our pages. In sketching these birds,
we are telling a story about the species. Telling stories with visuals is an
ancient art. We have been drawing
pictures on cave walls for centuries. It’s like the perfect picture book. The art
and the text stand alone, but together, they create something even better. Those
who need to can grab onto those graphic elements and find their way into the
story of these field journals. There is something sensitive in sketching, the
gentle strokes on paper create something that will not look like anyone else’s.
Sketching is like a dance, since it is process as much as it is product, and you
can turn your mind off and dissolve into the now. While in class I had trouble sketching an Eastern Meadowlark,
I found that I needed to relax with each stroke of my pencil and let my hand
form the curves of the head, body, and wings. The more I relaxed, the more I
became less worried about perfection; as a result, my drawing was proportioned
and accurate looking. Marc Chagall once said that great art picks up where
nature ends. It is difficult to re-create nature through art; however, with
some effort you can evoke the great outdoors.
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I really like how you compare drawing birds with the ancient art of drawing on cave walls and even you compare it with dancing. I also felt I had to relax and let my hand to form the curves of the bird, but it needs practice!
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