Rob Adams a Painter's Blog painter's progress

June 13, 2014

Convention

Someone recently commented in a slightly disparaging tone that my work was very “conventional”. Slightly miffed, but not showing it I hope, I asked them to elucidate. After a little probing I found that in this case conventional meant old fashioned and dated. Modern cars, I pointed out, hoping for a re trial. Alas no reprieve for automotive contemporaneity. What you are doing is better done by photographs, my nemesis concluded.

So, convention, what is it? All through my art education following one was considered a negative unless you were “playing with conventions” or even better subverting them. If you adhered to any of them it was plainly a bad thing. Conventions though are, to my understanding, rules you adhere to by choice. We have social conventions, we do not spit on the floor of a friend’s kitchen, though we might on the ground if walking in the country. We shake hands, kiss each other on the cheek etc, etc. Conventions are everywhere as a sort of framework to guide us along.

Art conventions seem as thick on the ground as they ever were. We put pictures and other art objects into galleries, once the object is placed in the approved gallery situation it can then be appreciated as art. This is quite a recent convention of course, hardly more then a few centuries old. It is especially necessary now when much art could not be discerned as such without the explanatory context of a gallery space.

So rather hesitantly I am proposing that conventions are often positive things. Also that working within them rather than subverting or ironically playing with them is a perfectly valid thing to do. They give you a framework within which to work. Where would the novelist be without the conventions applied to books? A novel with the pages arranged randomly rather than sequentially would not be much of a seller. It would, somewhat oddly, be I suspect quite acceptable as a conceptual artwork, it’s that playing with convention thingy!

Georg Baselitz shocked the art world by putting his rather cack-handed portraits upside down. Why this made them more interesting is a puzzle. True they were pretty grim the right way up, but I could discern no improvement by inverting them. As a challenge to convention it was pretty weak. If they had been abstracts no one would have noticed or cared. I could argue I suppose that through following certain conventions by choice I am breaking the current convention of ignoring convention… bleeding edge or what?

What my critical friend really meant of course was that I was unfashionable. A crime to which I plead guilty M’Lud. Fashion is I suppose partly convention, but it is more a guide to tell you how to be perceived in a good light by others. If your furniture is fashionable you are not necessarily purchasing it for its utility or craftsmanship, but for how it will be perceived by others and what status they will ascribe to you in consequence. People’s choices as to what they like or dislike in art are often driven by the same wish to shape how others will see them. If you say you like Francis Bacon, people will assess your sophistication differently to how they will if you say you like Constable. Whether you actually give a fig for either is moot of course.

So I work within the conventions of observational picture making. I mostly fill a flat right angled quadrilateral. I adhere within limits to one or other of the geometric conventions for depicting an immersive three dimensional world upon a flat surface. I mostly, but not always, use materials that have a long pedigree. I use these conventions not because they are just what I was given and I can conceive of no other way, but by choice. Not only that I choose them by informed choice. If some better way that suited my purpose came to my attention I would adopt it without a second thought. I did this I suppose with computers and the amazing possibilities they bring to constructing an image.

A complete hodgepodge of work this time. I am at some kind of crossroads but won’t know what kind until a way down the road. I am still avoiding oils but am taking them on my next trip to France so I hope for a rapprochement.

Upnor castle, medway, kent, pen drawing

I’m still on my pen drawing kick. I dusted off my Rotring Art Pen to do this. What a horrible pen! How could a pen company design such a crappy instrument. Ink flow is terrible requiring you to draw at a snail’s pace and the nib is an insult to a thousand or so years of nib making. The nib has no flexibility at all so produces an unvarying line, so zero points to the Art Pen I won’t even bother keeping it. Now I have that off my chest I can tell you that this is Upnor Castle on the Medway in Kent.

 

Upnor, Medway, Kent, boat, drawing, pen

This is Lower Upnor which is distinctly boaty. This is the front of the local pub. I reverted to Fibre tips for this, nasty but better than the appalling Rotring.

 

tower bridge, thames, pen and ink, drawing

In desperation I have bought some fountain pens to draw with, not least because of cost! Decent pigment fibre tips come in at 3 quid or so. They also have a very unvarying line. This is done with a Noodlers Nib Creeper which cost a very reasonable twelve pounds and have a decent amount of flex in the nib. I must say they are amazing value for a pen that draws really well. Their ink is good too. I did the pencil outlines for this a week or so back and as I was passing by after an ink buying mission I set too with my new pen. It is such a relief to get the variety of line that I am used to with dip pens. Also the Noodler is so fast to draw with, no matter how fast you move the pen it keeps up and delivers ink to the paper. I needed it on this too as I underestimated the work and had to scribble frantically to get the thing done.

 

Florence, Italy, Arno, motorbike, watercolour

A studio watercolour from my trip to Florence. This was early in the morning before the mad tourist rush. It is done on the Girtin style paper which is very interesting to paint on. Quite different to a modern paper. It is very hard sized, I think you could scrub the whole thing back to white if you chose! Not altogether comfortable with it yet but has a lot of potential. It does give me a clue as to why 18th and early19th century watercolours look as they d0. This is the end of the Ufizzi where the Vasari passage comes out. 10in by 15in

 

Florence, Italy, tuscany,

Another studio watercolour. This is the Piazza della Signoria, the Statue is The Fountain of Neptune by Bartolomeo Ammannati. The man is cleaning off chewing gum, the hour is 5.30AM! 12in by 10in.

 

Kings Cross, st pancras, London, Brass Monkeys, pen and ink, Whidborne St

Further exploring the possibilities of fountain pens I bought a 100 year old Waterman 52 which has a wonderful flexible nib. They needed them then so people could write in copperplate. Better than the Noodler it is effortless to draw with. This is Whidborne St near St Pancras on a day out with the Brass Monkeys.

 

Grand Union Canal, Kings Cross, pen drawing, London, barge

My new old pen really flew when used on bristol board, just so much easier and faster. It would have taken at least double the time to draw this with my Sokura pens. This is the Grand Union Canal just behind Kings Cross.

 

Queenborough, Kent, Sheppey, church, holy trinity, graveyard, pen drawing

More pen… sorry I am getting addicted! This is Holy Trinity church in Queenborough on the Isle of Sheppey. A Wapping Group day.

 

Queenborough, Sheppey, watercolour, church, graveyard

The light was being a little here and there so I stayed where I was and very quickly splashed this in. On Saunders Waterford, better than the Arches pads at least the washes have some life in them.

 

Queenborough, Sheppey, estuary, boats, watercolour, Sheppey

I had met up with Mike Richardson and we went out on the long slipway at Queenborough to paint the light and the mud. The light was getting better minute by minute so as I felt this was a little too polite I did it again with more verve.

 

sheppey, queenborough, watercolour, plein air estuary

Here it is again with a bit more splash and dash!

June 1, 2014

A visit to Florence

Filed under: Drawing,Italy,Painting,Uncategorized — Tags: , , , , , , , — Rob Adams @ 4:20 pm

A very quick visit to Florence is my first trip abroad for the year. Once travel was deducted then we only had 3 days, not long for one of the world’s most famous and beautiful cities. I had been anticipating the paintings I would do, the piazzas, the magnificent buildings and the iconic views of the Arno. I knew in my heart of hearts of course that 3 days was not long enough for very much to get done.

The first thing that occurs is that the reality entirely overwhelms the previous imagination. I had been to Florence before but only for a day. You soon realise that to pick a picture out from this wealth of material is not as easy as it should be. There is also the problem that once you have spotted a likely subject then being able to position yourself so as to be able to paint it is nigh on impossible. In Florence with its narrow streets and thronging tourists all the more so.

So eventually the paints hardly came out at all. Fortunately my current love affair with pen drawing came to my rescue. With the necessities so simple and portable the medium was ideal for snatching a few glimpses of what surrounded me. With the sort of architecture on display in Florence almost nothing is simple though. Classical buildings of whatever sort need careful drawing. If you get those proportions wrong then it will always look terrible.

Also a large amount of time is needed for just wandering and looking. How artists managed before photography is a wonder… or you think it is until you look at the paintings done before. Turner’s “on site” sketches are are a marvel of brevity. He does not even attempt to do a finished work. He just notes the basics and then essentially makes it up when he gets home. Rembrandt does quick calligraphic drawings in reed pen and ink, he does no complete rendering. Even Sargent surely the master of topographical sketching keeps his work simple and fluid. Sargent mind you was well within the age of photography and his painting of Paul Helleu and the existing photo of the scene make it likely he used the medium as reference more than we might think. For an artist not to be interested and influenced by the photographic image was already unlikely.

I have a rapidly approaching visit to France so I need to establish my strategy. Last year I spent a fair amount of time painting oils, none of which I liked, so this time I wonder whether to take oils at all. The risk is they are more of a distraction than a help. I certainly did not miss them on this trip, though I do hope to get a few oil studies done from the many photos I took.

There is another strangeness that life presents one with. I took 482 photographs on the visit, assuming a 10hr rubbernecking regime that is about 16 an hour or about 1 every 4 min. Yet after going through them my “possible” paintings folder contains 9 images. So if the past is anything to go by this will translate into 3 or so pictures, which means a rate of well over a hundred snaps per final painting..!

Drawing, Florence, Italy, St Croce, Dante

First day and we were on the impressive Piazza San Croce. Avoiding the main view of the church I sat in the main doorway and sketched the view to the right. The lions are guarding an immense statue of Dante. I liked the figures passing to and fro. Every now and again a scrum of people queueing would completely block my view and I would have to work on the few bits I could see!

 

San Croce, Piazza, Florence, Italy, drawing, watercolour

San Croce again, I must have been mad to take on this at 5in by 7in… I was forced to use gouache to sort out the facade. Once again my view was very restricted with tour guides mustering their troops just in front of us. They could plainly see we were painting the church but stood directly before us blocking the view anyhow.

 

Piazza Santo Spirito, Florence, Italy, drawing, pen

In the evening I walked out of the tourist zone and found the Piazza Santo Spirito. I would have liked to return to paint but time didn’t allow.

 

Florence, drawing, dome, pen, Italy

The next day we escaped the city and went up to San Miniato al Monte which stands high above the city. Nearby is the Piazza del Michelangelo where all the tourists go. Only 300 mtrs away but very few of the tourists could be arsed to walk to the Abbey and preferred to stay in the Piazza which is essentially a coach park with gazillions of huxters. Nice for us, but makes you sad for mankind. The abbey had graves either side of the steep steps leading up and I thought they made an interesting lead in to what is an iconic view.

Florence, italy, duomo, watercolour

Ok so I couldn’t resist the view. It came out fairly well at the second attempt. The first time around I got the trees too dark so had to abandon it. 8in by 10in watercolour.

 

Piazza di Santa Trinita, florence, italy, drawing, pen

Back to my trusty pens in the evening! This is Piazza di Santa Trinita. There is a large column with the figure of Lady Justice atop it. I liked the changing perspectives of the triangular piazza and the people congregating at the column’s base.

 

Florence, italy, statue, bronze, drawing

On the final day I went walkabout to see as much of the city as I could. I only paused for a couple of times to sketch details. This is the head of a bronze saint on the Tabernacle of Santa Maria di Tromba. I did the wash first and the pen later, I needed a few touches of white to sort out that beard!

 

Italy, Florence, knocker, drawing

Later this took my eye, there were many grand lion headed knockers, but this one was especially silly. Pen and wash.

 

People sketches, florence

From my seat in a restaurant I sketched other diners and passers by.

 

Ponte Vecchio. florence, italy, drawing

Last morning and we sallied forth just after dawn to draw the famous Ponte Vecchio. Florence is a mad rush of delivery vans preparing for the next deluge of visitors first thing. You take your life in your hands if you try to cross any piazza as lorries drive at top speed from all directions.

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