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Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Dorie Cooper. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Dorie Cooper. Sort by date Show all posts

Saturday, April 8, 2017

Giving a THUMBS UP to #DrawaBirdDay (2017)


Today, April the 8th, is an official time to celebrate an unofficial holiday, which dates back to the 1940's and is known as Draw A Bird Day. In honor of the event, I've posted a drawing of a blue jay that I did as a very young child. As you can see, drawing was not my strength! When it comes to pictures of birds, I'm better off rendering them photographically, rather than with crayons, but being an accomplished drawer is not a criteria for participating in this holiday.

Here's what MNN (Mother Nature Network) has to say re the event: "Although it's not a recognized holiday, it's celebrated worldwide on April 8 as a way to find joy in life's simple pleasures and to help people temporarily forget their suffering. According to the Draw A Bird Day website, the holiday dates back to 1943 when a 7-year-old British girl named Dorie Cooper went to visit her uncle who'd been wounded in the war. The man was distraught after losing his leg to a landmine, so in an attempt to distract him, Dorie asked him to draw her a bird. He drew a picture of a robin, and Dorie laughed, saying he wasn’t a very gifted artist but that she’d hang the drawing in her room anyway.

"The young girl's honesty and acceptance lifted the soldier's spirits, and every time Dorie visited after that, he and the other wounded soldiers would have a contest to see who could create the best bird picture. In a matter of months, the ward's walls were covered in bird drawings. Tragically, Dorie was hit by a car three years later and killed. At her funeral, her coffin was filled with bird pictures drawn by soldiers, nurses and doctors from her uncle's hospital. She was remembered as the little girl who brought life and hope to a ward of suffering, and since her death, people have been honoring Dorie by drawing birds on her birthday."

MNN goes on to say that "anyone can participate in celebrating Dorie's life by drawing a bird on April 8 and sharing it with someone." 

Therefore, in memory of Dorie Cooper, I'm honoring the day by posting the following images of bird drawings that were on a chalkboard inside a store on the UWS of NYC;





as well as a drawing of a bird that was on a pop-up chalkboard (as seen below) outside a shop near to The Wild Bird Fund, the only bird re-hab facility in NYC.

Wednesday, April 8, 2020

Draw A Bird Day 2020

MOCKINGBIRDS ARE FEATURED IN VOLUME3

Today, April the 8th, is an official time to celebrate an unofficial holiday, which dates back to the 1940's and is known as "Draw A Bird Day" and because drawing is not part of my skill set, I honored the day by taking pictures of a Northern mockingbird (one of my photos is posted directly above) who stopped by my garden for a snack.

Monday, April 8, 2019

Draw A Bird Day 2019

A picture of a hand used in a drawing of a bird.

Today is Draw A Bird Day, a longstanding holiday which was created in honor of the dearly departed, Dorie Cooper, who died when she was a child. In bygone years, I have written about little girl and her "role" in the  creation of the holiday. 

Within some of the aforementioned entries, I've included a a copy the photograph atop this post that features one of the ways I was taught to draw a bird by using my hand as a model. In any event, it seems birds learn to draw humans in a similar manner, as evidenced in the cartoon directly below.

A cartoon featuring a bird teaching a bird how to draw a person.

That being said, in terms of humans drawing birds, Charles Schultz often comes to my mind.

Sunday, April 8, 2018

#DrawABirdDay (2018)


Nearly one month ago, on the evening of March 10th, I took a walk through Central Park and went to the Metropolitan Museum of Art. While I was there I met the talented Daniel Lockhart, who was sketching, as seen in the image atop this entry.

Because of some very painful experiences with art teachers in elementary school, my not being able to draw has always made me uneasy. And seeing Daniel in the act of sketching is far from the first time that I've gotten a pit in my stomach when I've witnessed someone drawing.