Sketching with Watercolor at the Medici Fountain in Paris

In Paris last month I did some sketching at one of my favorite spots, the Medici Fountain in the Luxembourg Gardens.

This is a little video preview of me sketching. The full 10-minute video sharing the process of creating these two sketches is a free bonus course available to my atelier Members on the Courses page.

The statues on the fountain are by Auguste Ottin, and represent the giant cyclops Polyphemus, in bronze, discovering the sea-nymph Acis with her human lover, Galatea, in white marble. In the Greek myth, jealous Polyphemus kills Acis, so Galatea transforms her lover into an immortal river spirit.
 

 
The fountain and grotto were designed for Marie de' Medici's Left Bank palace, created in the 1620's. In 1811 the fountain was restored and moved to its current location, and the statues were added at that time.

I first discovered the fountain on my high school trip to France, in 1988. I sat and sketched the sculptures on that trip as well, in a long-lost sketchbook unfortunately. I visit the fountain every time I return to Paris since then.
 

 
This is another watercolor sketch I did last summer at my kitchen table:

Drawing Materials
 
Blackwing drawing pencil
 
Blackwing long point sharpener
 
General's white chalk pencil
 
Kneaded eraser
 
Stillman & Birn Nova Trio Series Toned Softcover Sketchbook
 

Watercolor Materials
 
Arches watercolor block
 
Watercolor palette in brass by TirraLyra

Watercolor tin pans by TirraLyra
 
Watercolor red sable travel brushes by Rosemary Brushes
 
Collapsible tin water cup by Fulangpa
 
Guache: Zinc white, Winsor & Newton
 
Daniel Smith Extra Fine Watercolor Tube colors:
 
Raw Umber
 
Indian Yellow
 
Quinacridone Rose
 
Cerulean Blue
 
Chromium Green Oxide