THE ASV BLOG
— by JANICE NINAN
The Art of the ‘Throw-Down’
Studio Saturdays | Building community one sketch at a time.
There’s a certain kind of magic in sketching on location — the kind you can’t replicate in the studio, no matter how sharp your pencil or how big your desk.
I first felt it during my study abroad program in Europe. Our professor, John DeSalvo, would take us to a piazza, a cathedral square, or a tucked-away alley framed by centuries-old stone. The instructions were simple:
“Here’s the architectural subject.
Pick your spot.
You have 30 minutes.
Go.”
We’d scatter — some gravitating toward the front steps of a church, others to the cool shadow of a colonnade or a cafe bench beneath a tree. We had half an hour to capture the subject given, to draw whatever caught our eye: the physical or ephemeral; the macro or micro.
When time was up, the real magic happened.
We’d gather in a circle, standing right there on site, and open our sketchbooks for what we called a sketchbook throw-down.
The Throw Down Ritual
The throw down was never a competition — it was a celebration. We’d lay our sketchbooks open so everyone could see: watercolors still damp, pastels and ink lines still smudging if you weren’t careful.
The beauty was in the variety. Twelve people could stand in the same space and come away with twelve completely different interpretations of the same architectural subject. Some sketches were all about precision; others captured atmosphere. A few honed in on details you hadn’t even noticed. It was a reminder that architecture isn’t just about what’s there, it’s about what each person sees.
Why Travel Sketching Matters
Looking back, those 30-minute sessions shaped me as a designer in ways I’m still grateful for. Here’s why I believe travel sketching is a practice worth keeping — whether you’re an architect, artist, or just a curious traveler:
1. It Sharpens Observation
When you’re sketching, you’re not just glancing — you’re studying. You notice lines, edges, proportions, materials and patterns you’d otherwise walk past.
2. It Trains Speed and Confidence
Thirty minutes is just enough time to make decisions but not enough to second-guess every line. You learn to commit and move forward.
3. It Captures Memory Differently
A photograph records what’s in front of you. A sketch records how you experienced it — what you chose to include, what you left out, how the colors felt.
4. It Builds Community
The throw down itself is a shared act. It’s about seeing through each other’s eyes, and realizing how diverse creative vision can be.
From Piazza to Present: Thursday Throw-Downs
Those circles of sketchbooks, held open to the sun, have stayed with me. They’re a tradition I want to bring into my work today — not just for nostalgia, but because I believe the throw down is a powerful way to connect people through creativity.
That’s why I’m building a new ASV community initiative called Thursday Throw-Downs.
The idea is simple:
• Once a week, people across the world will take 30 minutes to sketch — a building, a space, a corner of their own street.
• We’ll share our work together, online or in person, just like we did in the piazzas.
• It’s open to anyone, from seasoned architects to first-time sketchers.
Some weeks, I’ll host online sketch prompts so we can all work on the same theme. Other weeks, I’ll gather a local group for an on-site throw-down, where we can stand in that familiar circle, pages open, seeing what each other saw.
Why Thursday?
Because Thursdays are the perfect almost-weekend energy. Enough time to pause, make something, and connect — and still carry that creative spark into the weekend.
Travel sketching taught me that design is not just about buildings — it’s about perception, patience, and sharing your way of seeing the world. Thursday Throw-Downs will be a space for exactly that: fast lines, fresh perspectives, and a circle of people who understand that the best sketches are never perfect — they’re alive.
Stay tuned or the first Thursday Throw-Down announcement here on Architecture Speaks Volumes. I hope you’ll join me, with your choice of medium in hand.