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Home / Books / Outdoor Sketching: Four Talks Given before the Art Institute of Chicago; The Scammon Lectures, 1914

Outdoor Sketching: Four Talks Given before the Art Institute of Chicago; The Scammon Lectures, 1914

by Francis Hopkinson Smith

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Francis Hopkinson Smith's "Outdoor Sketching" comprises four lectures delivered at the Art Institute of Chicago in 1914, focusing on techniques for painting directly in outdoor settings. The work emphasises the importance of observing nature firsthand and discusses practical aspects such as composition, use of watercolours, and charcoal drawing. Smith advocates for spontaneity and speed, sharing his personal experience of completing sketches often in a single session using minimal equipment, like a stool and umbrella. The lectures reflect the author's preference for immediacy in outdoor work over studio-based creation, illustrating his methods and philosophical approach to landscape sketching.

Set within the early 20th century, the book provides insight into American art practices of the period, particularly the emphasis on plein air work. It offers guidance rooted in Smith’s extensive outdoor painting experience, aiming to instruct practitioners on capturing natural scenes with accuracy and immediacy. The lectures serve as a practical resource for artists interested in outdoor sketching and landscape art during this period.

From the opening pages

My chief reason for confining these four talks to the outdoor sketch is because I have been an outdoor painter since I was sixteen years of age; have never in my whole life painted what is known as a studio picture evolved from memory or from my inner consciousness, or from any one of my outdoor sketches. My pictures are begun and finished often at one sitting, never more than three sittings; and a white umbrella and a three-legged stool are the sum of my studio appointments. Another reason is that, outside of this ability to paint rapidly out-of-doors, I know so little of the many processes attendant upon the art of the painter that both my advice and my criticism would be worthless to even the youngest of the painters to-day. Again, I work only in two mediums, water-color and charcoal. Oil I have not touched for many years, and then only for a short time when a student under Swain Gifford (and this, of course, many, many years ago), who taught me the use and value of the opaque pigment, which helped me greatly in my own use of opaque water-color in connection with transparent color and which was my sole reason for seeking the help of his master hand. A further venture is to kindle in your hearts a greater love for and appreciation of what a superbly felt and exactly rendered outdoor sketch stands for—a greater respect for its vitality, its life-spark; the way it breathes back at you, under a touch made unconsciously, because you saw it, recorded it, and then forgot it—best of all because you let it alone; my fervent wish being to transmit to you some of the enthusiasm that has kept me young all these years of my life; something of the joy of the close intimacy I have held with nature—the intimacy of two old friends who talk their secrets over each with the other; a joy unequalled by any other in my life's experience. There may be those who go a-fishing and enjoy it. The arranging and selecting of flies, the jointing of rods, the prospective comfort in high water-boots, the creel with the leather strap, every crease in it a reminder of some day without care or fret—all this may bring the flush to the cheek and the eager kindling of the eye, and a certain

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