The Night the Artist’s Tools Took Over the Studio

An Anthropomorphized Tale – After hours artist’s materials do their own thing.

The Artist had left the studio for the day. Her materials breathed a sigh of relief. Their workday was finally over and it was time to  play.  

The micron ink pens wiggled their way out of the package and rolled across the table toward the drawing pad. “What will it be tonight?” the .30mm asked. “How about a nice linear seascape” the rigger brush suggested. So it was that the ink pens sprung into action and sketched an outline of a simple linear landscape. First, drawing a rectangular box, wider than deep, then the outlines of rolling hills and striated clouds, along with a round orb hovering on the horizon. Standing back, hands on ‘hips’ they surveyed their work. “It’s a good start” an older stub of a graphite pencil said, balancing on his almost used-to-the-rim eraser. 

Next the watercolour box flipped open and the number six rigger brush jumped into action. First wetting its long hairs in a jar of water and then, rolling itself in a pan of colour, mixing up a warm teal and a light turquoise. The brush then deposited light layers of colour inside the inked-in lines. The painting tools finished up with some shading in the sea and sky sections and dabbed on a yellow-orange wash in the sun shape.  

Then the pens and brushes stepped back and admired their work. “Won’t the mistress be surprised in the morning” cooed one young liner in her high squeaky voice. “Hah, she will likely think she painted it and just forgot, the dolt” boomed the ancient, and well-used, 1” Aquarelle, to howls of laughter. ~ Patricia White (the dolt in question), July 5, 2026.

I hope you enjoyed this fanciful vision of art materials feeling the need to bust out of their servitude to the whims of the artist.

All artwork and creative writing is Copyright © of Patricia White. No use of this content or concept may be used without the express permission of the artist/author.

Finding Creative inspiration

“Imagination is more important than knowledge.” ~ Albert Einstein

Love this quote from one of my art instructors at the Dundas Valley School of Art (Ontario, Canada) back in the 70s.

Gordon Perrier was not only a renowned painter, but a creative thinker of the first order. I feel fortunate to have had the opportunity to attend his courses.

The expansive way I’ve grown to think about the arts, painting, drawing, plastic arts (mostly hand-built porcelain clay works), creative writing, etc., was influenced, in part, by these early creative experiences.

Where do you find inspiration for your art or creative writing? Leave a message in the comments.

All artwork and creative writing is Copyright ©️ of Patricia White. No use of this content or concept may be used without the express permission of the artist/author.

The Great Orb

“As the great orb hovered above the land, it felt sadness. It was time to depart this place, this existence. To move on where others need its presence. “Peace be to all living beings who inhabit this space. May your way forward be a gentle journey.” ~ Patricia White

I often write a paragraph or two as a story idea reflecting my Daily Notes app sketch.

Above is an excerpt from the The Great Orb work-in-progress:

This Daily Drawing is part of a recent series of posts showing work that was created in the Apple Notes App (essentially a writing app) using just the basic drawing tools within the text-based app. The basic art is sometimes resized and enhanced in Procreate 5  on my 12.9” iPad Pro. Over the past year or so I have experimented with simple drawings made with these rudimentary drawing tools iPad Pro using a second-generation Apple Pencil as my sketching pencil, ink pen and paint brush. 

This drawing exercise has been an effort to show that all the bells and whistles contained in dedicated paint applications are not always needed to create interesting art. If you try the experiment of sketching in the Notes app with its in-app drawing tools, please post a link to your work in the comment section.

All artwork and creative writing is Copyright ©️ of Patricia White. No use of this content or concept may be used without the express permission of the artist/author.