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Earth and the Elements

                                        IT MAY SEEM PERVERSE to start a chapter titled "Earth and the Elements" with an image
                                            of the Moon, but it can be seen as a lens to our observation of this planet. It is Earths

                                        satellite, our companion, and its draws the tides of the seas. Just as NASA photographs

                                        of Earth have had a profound effect on the way we view our fragile home, so John

                                        Russell's tour de f o r c e drawing (opposite) was a masterpiece of observation in his time.

                                        This is the world's first accurate image of the Moon. It now hangs on the staircase of the

                                        History of Science Museum, Oxford, England, surrounded by the bright instruments of

                                        centuries of navigation, speculation, and experiment. The pastel drawing was constructed

                                        from myriad telescopic observations almost 200 years before the Apollo Moon landing.

                                        The forces of nature, as opposed the physicality of Earth, are the real subjects in

                                        great landscape drawings. Look closely at works by many artists and you will see that

                                        they have not represented hills, trees, rivers, and the sea. What they have drawn is the

                                        force of nature on these properties: how the wind heaves the night ocean; how the

                                        mountain cut by ice and rain is now fleetingly lit; how the soil is scorched, or has

                                        cracked and fallen under the weight of water; and even how the Sun illuminates, and

                                        meteor impacts have scarred, the face of the Moon. By drawing such momentous and

JOHN RUSSELL                            everyday events, artists see for themselves that which is momentary and eternal.
A portrait pastelist to King                  William Turner is said to have had himself lashed to a ship's mast to comprehend the
G e o r g e III o f England, a n d a n
astronomer who dedicated                storm (see p. 199). Richard Long, a contemporary environmental artist, makes his work by
20 years to studying the                the act of walking, marking the ground with lines of footprints or by turning stones,
Moon. Russell d r e w this, the         arranging them in perfect circles on the mountainside or in lines drifting out of sight
first-everaccurate image of             beneath low clouds. There is a sense of the heroic in drawing outside—we race to catch a
the Moon's surface, t w o               form before the tide engulfs it, the sun comes out to blind it, or the wind carries it away.
engraved maps k n o w n as
The Lunar Planispheres, a n d                 Weather is essential in all landscape drawing. Beginners will often choose calm,
a m o o n globe called the              sunny days, when little stirs and empty blue skies offer even less to latch lines to. These
 Selenographia. H e also                conditions are very difficult to express well. It is better to get up before dawn; to be
produced an album of 180
exquisite pencil drawings;
pages of softly illuminated
craters and lunar "seas"
covered in mathematical
and shorthand calculations.

                                        ready to draw the new light as it breaks across the land. Take chances against the rain

Moon Pastel Drawing                cm)  and work with the wind or fog; they are the animators of your subject. In this chapter
  1795                                  we experiment with charcoal, learning to draw light out of dark, and take bold steps in
                                        emulating the swell of clouds and the forces of torrential water.
5 f t x 5 ft 6 in ( 1 5 2 x 1 6 8
J O H N RUSSELL
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