Wild Drawing

Wild Drawing is a practice of experimental mark-making that prioritises the sensory over the rational. Shared through guided walks, it re-integrates and grounds the human experience into the natural landscape through ecocentric exercises, engaging qualities of reciprocity, play, empathy and wonder.


Drawing IN, OF & WITH NATURE

Whether we find ourselves in the middle of a city or a rainforest, Wild Drawing is about taking a moment to tap into and express our instinctual responses to the natural world.

The practice began with the belief that simple mark-making can help to strengthen our connection to the natural world without the need of formal art training, costly materials or endless hours to spare. Zooming into the micro and stepping back to observe the macro, the exercises engage our sensory and emotional responses to the landscape in ways that are playful, meditative and non-judgemental.

Developed during the pandemic, it has grown to become an essential aspect of the studio practice that continues to be developed through residencies with scientific, activist and cultural organisations. Alongside the studio focus, guided walks in landscapes from rural East Sussex to central Queens, New York, provide ongoing opportunities to share and develop Wild Drawing with members of the public.


Film on wild drawing during a Cultural Reforesting residency at Orleans House Gallery, London. Footage by Ellie Mackay, 2021.