Sketching Rome, A Firsthand Account
Writer and Blogger Toni DeBella recently came on a Sketching Rome Tour and had so much fun that she got inspired and wrote the following piece about me on her blog Orivieto or Bust. Check out the piece and enjoy!writer Toni DeBella at a local market.
Artist Kelly Medford is Taking It To The Streets September 4, 2013. It goes without saying that painters of landscapes love the out of doors, but for one American-turned-Roman resident, Plein air painting isn’t only a passion it’s a way of life. Riding around the Eternal City on her “tricked out” bicycle – two saddle bags swinging in the wind and trusty easel strapped to her back – it’s just another day attheoffice for artist Kelly Medford.
I met Kelly outside a book event in Rome last fall and mistakenly took her for a college student studying abroad. Perhaps it was her fresh face and wide-eyed exuberance that makes Kelly seem much younger than her 36 years, but make no mistake about it – this petite powerhouse of a woman is an accomplished painter with serious credentials.
Kelly Medford grew up in Washington, D.C., the only child of two left-brained scientists. Her emotional, expressive and free-spirited nature set her on a different path with its share of serendipitous forks in the road and twists of fate along the way.
Fortunately for us Kelly’s travels eventually landed her in Italy where she was accepted into the prestigious Florence Academy of Art. It was in the Renaissance capital that she spent a year of intensive training in classical figurative drawing, honing her skills and developing her techniques. But painting indoors made Kelly feel isolated and itching to spread her wings so, in 2010, she traded the dimly lit, heavy-curtained and controlled environment of Florence for the warm, golden sun-soaked locations of Rome. You’ll most likely find Kelly on a tiny lane or hidden piazza painting beautifully evocative canvases of Roman life or the surrounding countryside.
Kelly loves to paint. Kelly loves the outdoors. Kelly loves to share her love of painting outdoors so Sketching Rome Tour was born. “I created the tour so that people could have a different way of experiencing and remembering Rome. It’s such a beautiful place with so much history, that to take a photograph doesn’t really capture how you feel about a place.”No Experience Necessary. No Erasers AllowedI recently met up with Kelly and her sketch group at their morning classroom, the Pincio balcony adjacent to the Villa Borghese gardens. My fellow students were Joanie, a teacher from Palm Springs (paints in her spare time) and daughters Becca (likes art a lot) and Vanessa (an excellent doodler).
Following a brief but enlightening lesson on technique and tips for using our handmade-by-Kelly sketchbook and kit, we fanned out to draw…rocks, leaves, sign posts, statues…I was having so much fun I didn’t want the tour to end, but sadly it had to end…but not before gathering as a group for a little “show and tell”. Kelly urged us to continue our visual travel journals after the tour was over. “When you look at those drawings”, Kelly explained, “you’ll have a recall about the day, what it was like, who was there, the weather – just the place – and that’s why sketching is important.”
Memories, as I learned from Kelly, are extra-special when you can hold them in your hand.
For more information about how you can sketch your own Roman memories, contact Kelly Medford at Sketching Rome Tour See Kelly’s artwork at Kelly Medford.com Adventures in Painting by Toni DeBella
Click here to see the original blog post and to follow Toni DeBella’s Italian adventures.See recent paintings from Rome and around Italy here
Cory
September 17, 2013 at 11:50 pmGreat article!
Kelly Medford
September 18, 2013 at 4:17 pmThanks Cory, so glad you enjoyed it.
Joan T
October 11, 2013 at 11:00 amI was out painting with Jeanne Salucci the other day and she was telling me about the workshops you are doing in addition to your regular painting. It was fun to look back and see some of what you have been doing. Nice work and the article was great.
Kelly Medford
November 25, 2013 at 7:27 amHi Joan and thanks for leaving your comments. Toni is a good writer, I am lucky that she wrote such a nice article about me. Maybe I’ll see you painting in Italy next?
Kelly