“Buzzards Wood Hollow” – sketch

“Buzzards Wood Hollow” [9th June 2021] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, sketch with 3H HB 3B pencils signed in black ink on A4 250gsm Artist’s paper.

I photographed a few compositions of the entrance to Buzzards Wood via the central hollow from Meadow Three. This opening is directly opposite to Ridge Willow and Wrens Wood. There are three additional entranceways into Buzzards Wood.

There are four pathways within and immediately surrounding Buzzards Wood. Whenever I’m writing regarding Buzzards Wood I’m usually referring to the Nature Reserve area. However, Buzzards Wood technically also encompasses the wood to the rear (bow, north) beyond the Nature Reserve itself, in my opinion.

Buzzards fly regularly over the meadows, woods, and towards the north, where there is a local fishing pond. The post at the lower right of my sketch actually used to be a wooden bench. I rather hope it is restored as a bench as this is a great sitting place, centrally in Meadow Three.

Further along to this bench is a ‘watervole ground stone’. Rabbits do seem to enjoy using the flat stone surface as a convenient toilet, haha. A ‘rabbit ground stone’ can be viewed inside Buzzards Wood at the pathway crossroads, nicely covered by the shade of trees to enjoy. Rabbits frequent all three meadows, the private land to the west and all around the 29 acre lake to the south.

Another ‘ground stone’ meets with you to the left as one enters Meadow Three from Meadow One, walking up a small number of steps.

My sketch style in this article strongly reminds me of the beautifully artistic childrens animations I used to watch as a boy.

In keeping with that theme I included fanciful eyes and faces, Picasso-esque, to add fun to some of these series of artworks.

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Triple Seismic Waves with Oscillation #1

‘Triple Seismic Waves with Oscillation #1’ [July 2020] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, dip nib ink pen on A3 180gsm paper.

Spontaneously sharing my latest dip nib ink pen artwork using iron gall ink entitled ‘Triple Seismic Waves with Oscillation #1’.

Electronic oscillation produces pleasing visual effects.  This artwork seeks to replicate the idea in drawing form using my free hand technique for the curved lines.  I love scientific art.  Curves, electronics, seismographs, oscillators, earthquakes, sound waves, along with the beauty of artistic courses.

For this artwork I use a nib that creates a double ink line due to the noticeably distant ‘tines’ of the metallic nib.  The flow of ink is important with dip nibs where one is wishing to produce a continuous line across a ‘decent measure of time’ once upon the paper.

The effect of oscillation can been seen vertically in this artwork.

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Oak Branch Astronomy

‘Kinin Valley’ [copyright 7th May 2020] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, digital photography.

Imagine NASA has just this second received new images from their distantly galactic travelling satellite probe. Kinin Valley, shown above, could have been photographed 100,000 miles from space. Detailing its epic landscape of cavernous valleys and Mars like red rock formations.


‘Nebulaic Cyclones with Wormhole Striations’ [copyright 7th May 2020] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, digital photography.

As the deep space probe passes over this alien lunar surface we see a huge meteor has struck an immensely dry area to our left in the above image, Nebulaic Cyclones with Wormhole Striations. Upper right we can make out what appears to be storm scars of ancient water erosion.

At the lower mid section of the image we observe heavy sloping, a natural quarry descending downwards towards us. An alien species has perhaps eaten into the landscape in worm-like striations, burrowing strange etches into this now lifeless moon.


‘The Helix Whorls’ [copyright 7th May 2020] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, digital photography.

NASA gathers together a team of specialist scientists to categorically figure out ‘The Helix Whorls’ phenomenon.

A time traveller probably visited last Wednesday, one million three hundred thousand years ago, at a time when sturdy shell covered creatures roamed this moon’s macro-phasic atmosphere.


‘Robur Canyon’ [copyright 7th May 2020] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, digital photography.

Mythical legends have spoken of monsters lurking in structures exactly as described in Robur Canyon. Dark matter without discernible mass, form or measurable depth causes disenchanted quietness upon anyone approaching its entrance ways – shown above, to the right and lower right, at two distinctive places.


‘Inescapable Monster Moon’ [copyright 7th May 2020] by Matt The Unfathomable Artist, digital photography.

Similar in idea to our own Man in the Moon, this image conjures a vivid resemblance with the terrestrial deep sea Fangtooth, Anoplogaster cornuta. Actually the pit to the lower left could be 20,000 feet deep!

Imagination is Art.

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