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You are here: Home / Botanical Art / New Graphite Drawings: The Fragility Project

New Graphite Drawings: The Fragility Project

February 16, 2026 by Iskra Leave a Comment

The Nest ( Fragility No.1)
The Nest (Fragility No.1)

 

During Pandemic and during the crash of 2008 I turned to drawing as a form of psychic survival. Our current times echo the sense of upheaval I experienced then, and I have once again gathered my pencils and opened my Moleskine journals. In 2008 I drew tulips and convicted bankers, in Pandemic I drew locks, doors, and a tiny lightbulb made large, as though to clear a way through the darkness. The constant barrage of headlines from the Epstein files has created a sense of a world with too much malevolence to bear. And so I am drawing fragile things, the most fragile I can find: the shells of eggs, and nests. These subjects are phenomenally challenging, and symbolically healing. While I draw I must forget everything except the shape of light and how a line becomes a real thing, woven into a place of safety.

If you visited me now without warning you might think I had gone feral, as there are egg shells everywhere, placed so I can study how light moves across them throughout the day. Each time I draw I think I have never drawn before, and am convinced I have no idea how to do it. Each time I draw I am stunned that the pencil itself knows something, and it’s a matter, more than anything else, of pure, sensory observation: What is the sound of lead when it hovers above reflected light? What is the sound when it is pressed too hard and violates the grain of the paper? What happens when I step away and come back a day later? These drawings are made in very slow time. Each one evolves over several days, and as much happens when I am walking in the forest studying the shapes of trees as when I am appear to be “working.”

Nest on Divided Page
Divided Nest, pencil on Moleskine
Portal, pencil drawing
Portal, pencil drawing
Sleeping Nest, graphite and pencil
Sleeping Nest, graphite and pencil

I have never drawn eggs before. There is no way to draw an egg without being perfectly calm.

Cracked One egg pencil drawing
Balancing Act
Three ways Light moves realistic drawing of eggshells
Three ways light moves

It turns out that drawing three egg shells in a row has a difficulty I had not anticipated. By the third one I learned so much that this egg seemed almost to come from another hand. I have never thought about the details of how fragile things break as much I am now. Is the edge torn like paper? Shattered along the fault lines of fractals? Does an egg break differently hit on a frying pan or tapped with a spoon? It turns out one of the very hardest things to depict is how the near-invisible membrane within an egg holds the edge together, even as it teeters on the brink of dissolution.

I have spent many hours testing papers and grades of graphite, and every paper in my collection—only to end up, nearly always, drawing on Moleskine. This paper, although unnervingly thin, is miraculous. It erases perfectly, it takes a full range of values, and it seems at times to be alive and breathing, just waiting with its faint texture and elegant hint of cream to be touched by the gentle shadings of graphite. I wrote a longer piece about the political and psychological threads of this work on my blog, The Iskra Journal, if you would like to read more: When the Personal Becomes Political . . . and the Political Becomes Personal. 

In other writing news, I will be a featured reader at Hugo House for the curated performance of Collections, at Hugo House March 4th. I don’t know yet if I will be telling the story of finding a Third Place at Fred Meyer, or sharing poems about Virginia Woolf and Jeffrey Epstein (not in the same poem, by the way.) Doors open at 6. You can find out more here.

Don’t forget that it is Spring, always worth celebrating, although here in the Pacific Northwest I’m not sure we ever had winter. My rhododendrons have bloomed continuously since November. The spring tulips series was drawn in 2008, and is available for your letter-writing pleasure in my shop. Plant early!

Pink Tulip Arabesque colored pencil drawing
Spring Tulips Series, from The Gardener’s Almanac of Irreproducible Phenomena

All images and words © Iskra Johnson 2026

 

 

Filed Under: Botanical Art, Drawing Tagged With: Iskra Johnson graphite drawings, realistic pencil drawing, the fragility project

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Yesterday, Memorial Day, I took on the dreaded tas Yesterday, Memorial Day, I took on the dreaded task of shopping for hiking boots for walking the border of Wales and England and roaming around Ireland. I have the kind of feet that were born to complain. I was once on an 8 mile hike in heavy leather boots I had not truly broken in and they did that thing with a crease right on the main joint of your big toe. This was approximately 1 million years ago, with 7 miles to go before I could take them off and I can still feel the throbbing. So I tried to live in slippers for the rest of my life, but this will not work on 7 to 10 mile treks through bogs and scree. There were approximately six suitors in the shoe arena, each of them screaming Ouch! Ugly! Why me and my feet! And then I found these boots and it was a heart throb of love at first sight. Please direct your hearts and prayers that are not being spent on more important things —of which there are many— towards my feet and making it through the first flush of love to actually being able to wear these shoes 10 miles a day. If things don’t go well, I may just sit in my room in Killarney or Hay-and-Wye and paint watercolors of my boots. I will take romance in whatever form it arrives.
New project in the works: Nucor Steel Plant. . . New project in the works: Nucor Steel Plant. 
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#newmediaartists #techspressionism #photographicart #nucorsteel #industrialphitography
WAKING UP WAKING UP
Thank you everyone who came out to Spotlight North Thank you everyone who came out to Spotlight North! It was wonderful to host people in my home and share the garden. Saturday morning a Golden Kinglet appeared. This is a truly magical yellow bird — so fast and so shy that I have never been able to take a good photograph. This bird only comes two days a year, first stopping in the branches of the tree above the pond and then briefly examining the moss. Before I can grab my camera, it has flown. However brief the visit, it always feels like a blessing. 

I was happy to see a range of work go to new new homes, much of it inspired by the garden and the visiting birds. This morning I am sharing images going back 20 years, of my life with birds and the garden. When I bought my home, it sat on a long mangy lawn contained by chain-link and concrete and a picket fence. It is now a wildlife sanctuary: Protect what you love.✨

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