Natural gestures, beautiful expressions, art mediums, sketching, drawing, and painting.
They are educational means, they are expression options, they are opportunities to beautify our world through simple means, lines spread across the notebook, sketches that germinate into extraordinary pieces of art in our very hands; inspiring and easy cool things to draw that can make a difference in this world.
Drawing, coloring, and making art come easy for a few, a mechanical pencil, some colored pencils, and a piece of paper might be all they need to create something epic. For the rest of us though, inspiration creativity, and a lot of practice are needed, and here this article comes into play.
From architects to painters and even musicians, a sketch, or a line can represent a multitude of items, a world illustrated on paper, one with the chance to become so much more.
In the following rows, extraordinary sketches of artists all across the globe have been curated. Dense, heavy-to-draw illustrations are there just as a few lines arranged by intuition to describe a scene, a building, or a landscape are present.
They are different, each one sends a different message, and each one portrays its setting extraordinarily differently, we invite you to cast a glance and surge inspiration.
We interpret these as a completely epic yet different way of drawing surrounding reality, the regular drawing ideas and things to draw that one imagines are reinterpreted by an artistic background or experience.
1. Swift Pencil Sketch by Alvar Aalto

Source Unknown
2. Villa B Sketched and Envisioned by Schneider + Schumacher

via archdaily
3. Awasi Patagonia Hotel Sketch Presentation by Felipe Assadi + Francisca Pulido

via archdaily
4. Botanica Sales Office & Showrooms Designed by Vin Varavarn Architects

Source Unknown
5. Swift Sketch Materialized by John Pawson

Source Unknown
6. Hue Plus in the Eyes of Schemata Architects

Photograph by Schemata Architects
via archdaily
7. A Delicate Watercolor and Ink Sketch
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via instagram
8. Entry Details in Pencil and Watercolor

via flickr.com
9. Detailed 787 Carroll Street Interpreted in Watercolor

via flickr
10. Small Familiar Home Doodle in Liner

via instagram
11. Fast Liner Sketch Portraying a Vibrant Shelter and Street Vibe

via twitter
12. Color Accents in Swift Liner Street Perspective

via flickr
13. Plaza de San Francisco en Cádiz on Cardboard with Ink & Colored Pencils

via flickr
14. Colorful Atmosphere Watercolor Sketch

via flickr
15. Bird-eye View in Watercolor and Liner

via Dawn Tritch
16. Tiered City Depicted in Fast Liner and Water Color Sketch

via Margaret Pagan
17. Intricate Ink Liner Sketch Detailing Dense Urban Living

via twitter.com
18. Extraordinary Wide-Angle Bird-Eye View Perspective in Grays

via Pinterest
19. Dancing Building Sketch by Frank Gehry

via google
20. Naturalness in Concept Sketch by Frank Gehry

via outnow.ch
21. Walt Disney Concert Hall Sketch by Frank Gehry 1

via whistleforthewind.blogspot.com
22. Concept Sketch by Frank Gehry for the Walt Disney Concert Hall 2

via arcspace.com
23. Skyscraper Concept Study Sketches by Frank Gehry

Source Unknown
24. Puente de Vida and Panama Museum of Biodiversity in Lines

via terri-brooks-text.blogspot.com
25. Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao Sketched by Frank Gehry

via thinkinginsomniac.wordpress.com
26. A Third Sketch Disney Concert Hall Sketch by Frank Gehry

via theatlantic.com
27. Scale and Materiality Grasped in one Sketch by F. Gehry

via google.com
28. DIFC Boutique Hotel Envisioned by Broadway Malyan

29. Detailed Exterior Home Sketch Exuding Coziness and Warmth

via instagram
30. City Depicted in a Liner and Shades of Gray Sketch

via Mayad Allos
31. Moesgaard Museum / Henning Larsen Architects

via archdaily
32. Rome, Via della Pace 1998

via flickr
33. Antwerpen by Gerard Michel

via flickr.com
34. Detail Sketch by Sir Norman Foster

35. West Kowloon Cultural District | Projects | Foster + Partners

36. Siemens HQ in Masdar City / Sheppard Robson

via archdaily.com
37. CGAC Museum/Bonaval Park, Santiago de Compostela, 2012

via plpa.es
38. Frank Gehry Famous Building Drawing | Urban Sketchers: Rain and rock at Seattle’s EMP Museum

39. La Ruche

Copyright Juliette Plisson
40. Beach St, Penang, by Ch’ng Kiah Kiean

via kiahkiean.com
41. The Widely Recognized Breve Valparaiso

via urbansketcherschile.blogspot.com
42. Rough Sketch of Vel Paraiso

via lugaresenpapel.blogspot.com
43. Barcelona Streets Ink Sketch by Joaquim Francés

Source Unknown
44. Carrer Argenteria, Santa Maria del Mar. Barcelona, Joaquim Francés -India Ink

via Pinterest
45. St NikolausKleinseite, Prag, CZ | Kleinseite

via flickr.com
46. Calle Sacramento – Cádiz, Spain, by JAS

47. Urban City Design by Japanese artist Yamikin Ushijima-Kun

via spx.tumblr.com
48. Oma/Rem Koolhaas Early Sketches – SOCKS

via socks-studio.com
49. Oma/Rem Koolhaas Early Sketches – SOCKS / Zeebrugge Sea Terminal’s Competition, 1989

via socks-studio.com
50. A Vintage Scenery by Amelie Fourmount

via Amélie Fourmont
51. Art of a Rundown Backalley from an Unknown Artist

52. Recovering From the Post Symposium Paraty by Paul

53. Seaview from the Top of Mount Pleasant, Staithes

via flickr.com
54. “The Most Beautiful Village in Essex”- The Telegraph

via flickr.com
55. Standing Tall; Standing the Test of Time by Agios Spiridon

via flic.kr
56. Coal Mining City, Petrila, Cityscape in White

© Portfolio Giuroiu Anton | Courtesy of Homesthetics Magazine
57. A Collection of Scenes Etched in Sketches

via plpa.es
58. Alvar Aalto, Iglesia en Lahti (Finlandia), 1970

via etsavega.net
59. Dibujo Tinta | Ink Drawing, Joaquim Francés

Source Unknown
60. Medina III, Nouakchott

61. Just a Regular Ol’ Day Inside a Campus

Source Unknown
62. Chefchaouen, Marruecos by Isabel Seidel – Urban Sketchers Spain

63. Vertical Naples As Seen in Simo Capecchi’s Exhibit

64. En el Café de Chinitas | by Luis_Ruiz

via flickr
65. Rustic Scenery by Amelie Fourmont

via Amélie Fourmont
66. Croquis – Lisboa – por Facundo Alvarez

Source Unknown
67. Via Tribunali, Naples

via flickr.com
68. Loblolly House | Prefabricated Architecture Integrated with Nature

69. Allied Works Architecture · Arvo Pärt Centre

via divisare
70. Jung Gil-Young Gallery Sketch
via archdaily
71. Gallery of A space: Lofts in Berlin Mitte / plajer & franz studio – 18

via archdaily
72. Chaos and Serenity by Bab Jeeron

73. Concept Sketch of a Garage

74. Lady and a Lonely Day by Met Pepergasthuis

via Pinterest
75. Quiet Sunny Noon

Source Unknown
76. McLaren Technology Centre | Projects | Foster + Partners

77. Olya Trofimenko- Art in Progress

via Olya Trofimenko
78. Of Curves and Lines

79. Abedian School of Architecture / CRAB Studio / Gavin Robotham

via archdaily
80. Gallery of Environmental Interpretation Centre in Flores Island – Azores / Ana Laura Vasconcelos

via archdaily.com
81. Save Galería de Casa Lienzo de Barro / Chaquiñán – 21

82. Lighting Fire at Christmas

via instagram
83. Tunnel Vision in Motion

via designboom.com
84. Saidna Heydjick Draws a Traffic Jam

via drawingarchitecture.tumblr.com
85. A Colorful Summer in the City

86. A Scene from Buenos Aires by Norberto Dorantes

87. A Night in the Woods by Austra Cepurniece

via Austra Cepurniece
88. The Bylanes Romanticized

89. Vladislav Yeliseyev, In Saint Remy

Source Unknown
90. From Horizon Houses (2000) by Lebbeus Woods

91. You See What You Have in Mind

via architetturaecosostenibile.it
92. A Logo to Soothe Your Soul

via instagram
93. House On The Beach / BAK Architects

via archdaily
94. Sketches from Dallas Architect Bob Borson circa 1996

95. Calle Agustinas hacia Cerro Santa Lucía

via flickr.com
96. Looks Like a Portside in Cornwall

97. Stare at the Dot Till You’re Inspired

via austinkleon.com
98. “The Dropping Well Inn” at Knaresborough in North Yorkshire

via John Edwards
99. Renzo Piano – Croquis para Pensar, para Diseñar, para Sintetizar
via arquitecturamashistoria.blogspot.com.ar
The collection above is certainly not ordinary as one can surely notice legendary particularities in the pencil lines and splashes of watercolor, how do you see these cool things to draw?
We would love to hear from you in the comment section below!


