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Artist Spends 10 Years Drawing His Incredible Adventures Onboard a Cruise Ship

By Jessica Stewart and  Emma Taggart  

Benjamin Sack while creating monumental pen drawing

Many artists take inspiration from their travels, but Benjamin Sack found a unique way to make his way around the world. For the past decade, Sack has been an artist-in-residence on a Holland American cruise ship. This unique opportunity allows him to soak in architectural details from cities worldwide, which he then incorporates into his detailed pen drawings.

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Sack first approached Holland America—a company known for its round-the-world cruises—after he finished university. He pitched a unique idea: an “artist residency” where he’d give drawing classes and lectures to passengers on art related to the ports of call. He also offered to create a large cartographic-style drawing to commemorate the voyage.

“Long story short, they loved the idea and welcomed me aboard, saying it would only happen this one year. Ten years later, I’m now the court artist to King Neptune himself,” he jokingly tells My Modern Met.

Sack now has his own artist studio on board the ship, where he works on his drawings inspired by the journeys around Africa, South America, Antarctica, and beyond. “I’m lucky in that the room comes with a view that’s ever changing,” he says. “Perhaps it’s the best art studio in the world.” At the end of each voyage, he presents the final drawing to the passengers and crew.

The artist meets people from all over the world and from all walks of life while on the ship. “As the ship is very much a city at sea, I feel like a Court Artist of sorts,” he says. “My position onboard is unique in that I’m kind of in the gray zone between passenger and crew member. I have access to both worlds, much like how art is in the real world where all practices and divisions in society overlap.”

Cartography Drawings by Ben Sack

Sack captures the incredible scale and complexity of his journeys, as well as the intricate details that define each monochrome place. His unique situation is woven into all of his drawings. The gentle swaying of the ship inevitably influences the lines he draws with his fine liners. His large-scale drawings feature dizzying details, such as architectural renderings that encapsulate the microcosm of a city. Each piece is reminiscent of the mind-bending lithographs and etchings of M. C. Escher.

The rich details of the cities he visits are also omnipresent in his designs. Florence, in particular, is a favorite destination, and its iconic Duomo has been incorporated into many drawings. “Architecture is merely music frozen in time,” Sack poetically articulates. “It also can represent the human form in a myriad of ways, physically (as per the roman architect Vitruvius) and metaphorically: the body is a temple…So, in essence, each building is a character, portrait, or even a note assembled in a symphony of movement and form.”

Sack spends anywhere from a few months to half a year at sea and loves the adventure that awaits him. These adventures weave into his monumental drawings, which are rife with detail. From the regal architecture of Japan’s Himeji Castle to the sleek modern buildings on Singapore’s Marina Bay, his works are a magical mirror of world architecture.

“On land, the drawings are fixed to the studio. On the ship, the studio travels, and the drawing literally records the movement of a journey around the planet—as I draw lines, a little bit of the ship’s movement is recorded; this slight nuance repeated a thousand times breathes a whole different spirit into the work,” he shares. “Through my stateroom window, sunsets and sunrises depending on the ship’s trajectory from every time zone break across the drawing. Each year, I find the drawings become richer and richer. It’s magic!”

Artist Benjamin Sack has spent the last decade as an artist-in-residence on a Holland America cruise ship.

Holland American pen drawing by Ben Sack

This makes his art studio completely unique.

He then weaves his travel adventures into his monumental pen drawings.

Cartography Drawings by Ben Sack
Cartography Drawings by Ben Sack
Pen Drawing by Ben Sack
Pen Drawing by Ben Sack
Benjamin Sack Drawing

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Benjamin Sack Drawing

Reminiscent of old cartographical drawings, they give an aerial view of cities around the world.

Benjamin Sack Drawing

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Benjamin Sack Drawing
Benjamin Sack Drawing
Benjamin Sack Drawing
Pen Drawing by Ben Sack

A Summer In PTown

Episode 23 – Laura Shabott

Artist Laura Shabott is a well-known, multi-media artist and actress, but should be the Ambassador for Provincetown, Massachusetts, the New England town located at the extreme tip of Cape Cod. Laura sounds like she is reciting poetry when she describes the small coastal resort which has a year-round population of 4,000 and then grows to 60,000 or higher in the summertime. Often called “PTown, the locale is known for its beaches, harbor, artists, tourist industry, and as a popular vacation destination for the LGBT+ community.

PTown, three miles long, is regarded to be “America’s Oldest Working Art Colony in the United States since 1850. There are now 60 art galleries, a major regional art museum, and many other organizations that provide opportunities for artists including residencies and educational programs.

I met Laura at the Fine Arts Work Center, an art program and residency based in Provincetown. For over five decades, the Fine Arts Work Center has provided time and space for emerging artists, and writers at crucial, early stages of creative development through their seven-month residency program.

Laura’s paintings, collages and drawings have been exhibited at Berta Walker Gallery, the Museum of Art, Ely Center for Contemporary Arts, Four Eleven Gallery, the Provincetown Art Association and Museum, (PAAM); Provincetown Monument and Museum (PMPM); and Truro Center for the Arts. Laura has work in the permanent collection of PAAM Museum and will have a solo show. “YOU ONLY GET ONE BODY” on October of 2025 at the Cape Cod Museum of Art, Boston.

Laura will also return to the stage in “A PART OF THE NOISE” by Carl Kline and directed by Lynda Sturner on August 11, and she will act as Lee Krasner in a performance of LEE AND TENNESSEE directed by David Kaplan on September 14th as part of Forum 24 with the Provincetown Art Gallery Association.

Listen to episode 23 of the Art Lovers Forum podcast here – https://www.artloversforum.com/e/episode-23-laura-shabott/

The Art Lovers Forum Podcast is also available on popular podcast sites:

Apple Podcasts – https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/art-lovers-forum-podcast/id1725034621

Spotify – https://open.spotify.com/show/5FkkeWv83Hs4ADm13ctTZi

Amazon Music – https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/77484212-60c5-4026-a96f-bd2d4ae955c6

Audible – https://www.audible.com/pd/Art-Lovers-Forum-Podcast-Podcast/B0CRR1XYLZ

iHeartRadio – https://www.iheart.com/podcast/1323-art-lovers-forum-podcast-141592278/

The Paintings We Bid On

The big opening night for the 12×12 Exhibition and Silent Auction at the Provincetown Art Association and Museum. Prices start at $125.00.

The woman in the hat is Harriet Reisen who wrote a terrific biography of Louisa May Alcott, which was the basis for a wonderful movie. ArtSpeak’s video interview with her husband, NPR’s Tony Kahn, will be published this month. The woman with her back to the camera is artist & travel writer Necee Regis, whose stories appear regularly in the Boston Globe & elsewhere. Necee had a studio at the Bakehouse Art Complex for a longtime & a condo in South Beach, but departed Miami about 10 years ago. Here is a link to my ArtSpeak video conversation with Necee: https://artspeak.fiu.edu/interviews/necee-regis-2/