Category Archives: Urban Sketches

Friday Night at the Mall

Or The Drama of Aging

Nancy was lookiChinese Girl smallng for shoes. I was looking for someone to sketch. So while Nancy wandered through the shops, I parked myself in the middle of the mall and waited. I didn’t see her when she first arrived as I was trying to capture the image of a young man typing on his computer to my right. When I finished sketching him, I sat back, looked to the left, and there she was tucked inconspicuously in the corner. She was wearing an orange ski jacket, yellow scarf, and bright blue head phones. Her eyes were riveted to the lime green I Pad that she was pecking away on. The table in front of her held a computer that she typed on every few minutes before returning to her I Pad pecking. About every five minutes she reached into her jacket pocket and pulled out her cell phone to check for messages. She was Chinese and looked to be high school age. During the fifteen minutes that it took me to sketch her, she never once look up or around the room. She was completely ensconced in her own electronic world.

As I watched her sitting alone and invisible to the Friday night shoppers who scurried around her, something stirred inside of me. I remembered being an insecure adolescent transitioning to becoming a teenager. I too felt alone. I longed to be connected to friends who thought that my life mattered. I longed to be noticed, and I wondered apprehensively about the life that lay ahead of me. What is strange is that those same feelings have surfaced again recently, but I’m not fifteen now, I’m sixty-seven. What is happening to me? The next moment I looked to the right again and saw my answer.

Man smallSeated on the couch thirty feet away was an older man wearing a dapper red cap. He too was alone on a Friday night and I imagined that he had come to the mall just to be around other people. (Then again maybe he was waiting for his shoe shopping wife as I was, though I didn’t see a wedding ring.) I assumed that he was retired and when I did so, some feeling fluttered inside. Twice this past month I was asked if I was retired (No) and when I was going to retire (I don’t know). On both occasions I was irked by the question and felt defensive but didn’t know why. When I looked left and then right, at the teen and at the old man, it came to me. I was in a life stage transition again and the passage towards old age feels very similar to the teenage journey.

Life Transitions

For many of us as teenagers, the road ahead seemed foreboding. Unanswered questions related to college, career, and community loomed. Would we be able to find our role and place in the competitive, chaotic world of adults? Would someone notice us? Would we be able to find love? By the grace of God, I can answer “Yes!” to all of those questions.

But now a new set of questions loom. As old roles and responsibilities that created a sense of place in the world slowly slip away, as close friends struggle with cancer, as my creaky joints creak more and I imagine that my longevity on the planet could be predicated by a random lab test, I wonder, “Who sees me now? What gives me hope as losses increase around me? Where is my new place in the world?”

Christopher Bryant puts it this way, “Ideally the succession of little deaths which meet us from cradle to the grave, which we must undergo if we are to find fulfillment; can be met cheerfully in hope of what lies ahead and without backward glances. But owing to our condition of estrangement, we tend to cling tenaciously to the old and to face the new with reluctance and misgiving. We dread the loss of old security and of finding ourselves vulnerable. To overcome our dread our Author has come among us as a man among men, and as a man endured that dread at its extreme worst in order to break its power and rescue from its tyranny all who will trust themselves to him.”

Trust

It all comes down to a five letter word. Fifty years ago as a seventeen year old I heard the line, “God loves you and has a wonderful plan for your life. Trust Him!” I did and I am so grateful for what he has done. At age sixty-seven, the invitation is repeated, “Trust Him.” Not only is the word my source of hope, it is the source of hope for the girl in the orange jacket and the man in the red cap sitting at the mall on a Friday night.

The Hollywood Bowl


Last week we attended a concert at the Hollywood Bowl. It is one of my favorite places in Los Angeles. Built in 1922 in a natural canyon near the Hollywood sign, the band shell was initially designed by Lloyd Wright, son of Frank Lloyd Wright to serve as a concert venue. It’s a wonderful place to bring a picnic dinner, people watch, enjoy music under the stars, and see the firework finale. We usually sit in the cheapest seats in the upper deck where the laws of the United States don’t apply. This time we paid a bit more and sat one section closer. The sketch below is of people waiting for the concert to start, which is what I was doing while sketching.

Architectural Wonders of Downtown Los Angeles


I spent the day in Downtown Los Angeles. My wife was on jury duty so I drove with her and worked on a writing project. In the morning I read and wrote at the plaza of the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels. The structure was completed in 2002. The facade is the color of golden sandstone.


In the afternoon I worked at the plaza of the Colburn School of Music which is across the street from the Walt Disney Concert Hall. Designed by Frank Gehry and completed in 2003 it is a block away from the Cathedral. The structure is breathtaking. I loved the way the light reflecting of the surface of the building changed throughout the afternoon.

St. Etienne du Mont, Paris, France

This was sketched from a photo that I took a few years back when we visited Paris. I was looking for the University of Paris, which is next door to this church. John Calvin and Ignatius of Loyola were both students at the university at the about the same time. I stumbled upon this beautiful building as I rounded the corner. There has been a chapel on this site since the 6th century. Parts of this building date back to 1328. Blaise Pascal is buried here. To learn more, visit this Wikipedia article. In this sketch I goofed on the perspective and put the eye level line in the wrong place. I will keep practicing.

Sketching While Waiting

I enjoy sketching while waiting for someone or something to happen. In the top sketch I was waiting for my granddaughters to visit Minnie Mouse at Disneyland. I was intrigued by the line of strollers. On another day I was at the San Jose Airport where I got to listen and sketch a traveler playing the piano in the lobby. Then on a trip to Campus by the Sea, I saw a lady in a big floppy yellow hat. Drawing created a memory and helped me observe something interesting close at hand.

Green Street, Pasadena

Sketch 010 For ten years I had an office two blocks from this set of shops. On my afternoon walks to the Post Office, this was a favorite route past these buildings. Located on the corner of Madison and Green streets in Pasadena, the avenue is shaded by old and large ficus trees. The buildings housed an art gallery, interior design studio, and landscape design studio.

Morro Bay


I made this above sketch of the Morro Bay Estuary in 2008. The following four sketches were done over Easter break. They include Morro Rock, a sketch of the PG&E cooling towers, fishing boats, and Starbucks in San Luis Obispo.

Infrared Self Portrait


We attended a Science Awards Ceremony for Pasadena Unified School District that was hosted at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory last night. Since there was no place for me to sit in the meeting room, I wandered to the JPL Museum next door. One exhibit was an infrared camera used on numerous satellites to measure temperature of objects in space. The sketch at left is me. At right is a child playing on a padded bench in front of the camera. Blue is cool and red is warm. The experience was a new way to see.