How to draw en plein air

16 MINUTES

To become more attuned to the world around you, try sketching outdoors

Drawing en plein air is the act of taking one’s art practice out of the studio and into the outdoors to take inspiration from and render one’s surrounding environment. In this charming tutorial from the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York City, the US artist Bix Archer embarks on a plein-air excursion in the museum’s sculpture garden, which provides a dynamic setting rich with greenery, angles and reflections, as well as the movement of people, sunlight and corresponding shadows throughout the day. Archer makes for a genial teacher as she discusses the materials and techniques that tend to work best for outdoor drawing sessions, and places the practice in the context of masters including Hilma af Klint and Paul Cézanne. Throughout, she also frames plein-air drawing as a deeply embodied activity that prompts the artist to respond to changing sights, sounds and emotions – which, in Archer’s session, include a surprise marriage proposal.

Explore more

Impressionist painting of a green Japanese bridge over a pond with water lilies surrounded by lush greenery in a garden setting.

Monet understood the elusive power of a place’s atmosphere

The gist of a scene or place can subtly alter our very sense of being, an affecting quality captured by Monet’s paintings

by Pablo Fernandez Velasco

Two people in a worn-out room with an old TV, a mirror reflecting more people, and various items on countertops and shelves.

One Kandinsky, one viewer and one guard, in a Moscow power station

Directed by Nastia Korkia

Black and white drawing of stylised smoke or clouds rising from the ground in swirling patterns.

Why bad doodles can reveal more about you than good drawings

For Marion Milner, ‘not being able’ is a valuable state – one that allows for new and unexpected forms of learning

by David Russell

Large projection of a painting’s cracked surface with a person standing in front, focusing on a close-up of a smiling mouth.

Engaging with an artwork leaves you and the art transformed

When you engage with an artwork, a form of cognitive coupling takes place in which your mind and the art are transformed

by Miranda Anderson

A painting of a man and woman holding hands indoors with a small dog at their feet. The room is richly decorated.

To master the art of close looking, learn to hold time still

Visual literacy is a skillset that’s rarely taught, but it begins with learning how to look – and how to hold time still

by Grace Linden

Painting of a building under construction with workers in yellow jackets, blue and red backgrounds, and a neighbouring skyscraper with reflections.

What will an artist paint when a new high-rise blocks her view of New York?

Directed by Angelo J Guglielmo Jr

Surreal photo of a person wearing glasses and a hat with their face distorted, leaning towards a camera in a hallway.

This sculptor finds deep weirdness – not divinity – in the human form

Directed by Ben Berman

Abstract figure with tree-like head, green patterned torso and outlined suit, against a black background.

An improvised animation doubles as an absurdly fun lesson in creativity

Directed by Sasha Svirsky