Rob Adams a Painter's Blog painter's progress

September 21, 2012

London Plein Airs and Some Figure Studies

Here we are again, no one is more astonished than me that I have kept up this journal. When I started I gave it 6 months before I lapsed into long gaps between posts. Other than being able to hold forth to an audience that can’t answer back, one of the reasons I have kept it up is that I found it has considerably increased my output. IE I have been doing paintings in order to have enough to post. Anything that gets my nose out of a book and settled down before my easel is to be welcomed! To my astonishment 5000 people visit a month which is more people seeing my work than I ever would have imagined; even if 2/3 of them click away immediately due it not being their sort of  thing. So a thank you to all my visitors, you are helping me keep my nose to the grindstone!

The other thing that has improved and increased my output has been meeting other like minded painters. When working in the commercial arena I only very occasionally met other artists. When I did it was a different sort of relationship to that of going out to paint for a day with friends. Life drawing sessions as well have broadened my artistic and social horizons. Another thread is interactions with other artists on the Wet Canvas site. There is much encouragement to be gained by positive feedback as well as the occasional negative comment. Though we none of us exactly love critical comment I have found that comments, however inexpert, are very rarely wrong. Where I have not made much progress is getting my work in front of people in the flesh.

I am starting to get work into the open exhibitions in London but these only add up to a very few paintings exhibited in the year. Still with only just over 2 years of setting out on the course of painting for myself full time I am pretty pleased with the progress. Next must be a trawl for galleries that might want to have a few of my pictures for sale on the wall. Also sooner or later I must attempt an exhibition of my London paintings, one of the most enjoyable aspects the pictures I have painted so far are the local pictures from around where I live.

Something I have attempted to do with this part of my output is to catch a few of those moments of beauty in everyday life that would otherwise go unnoticed. This is actually harder to do away from home as you just don’t encounter such brief moments on occasional visits. It is only by being frequently in a place those infrequent charged moments are encountered.

Returning to the online world for a moment, it is indeed a strange new world we inhabit. I have a presence on quite a few places online, from Saatchi Online to the oddly named  deviantArt as well as posting much new work to Wet Canvas. Whether any of these platforms will become dominant in a Facebook kind of way I don’t know. Saatchi produces very few views, but have nonetheless sold one picture. deviantArt requires you to base your online social life around the site in order to gain popularity and hence views. Wetcanvas is the most rewarding as you can both get a response to your work from experienced artists and also encourage others in turn. I wish more professional artists would take part as I think it would lift the standard and supply inspiration to beginners. All of these forums for showing your work suffer from the same issues. There is no selectivity, anyone can post anything no matter what the quality or stage they are at in their journey. This is not a criticism, becoming too elite can put people off, as ConceptArt found to some degree, I heard, when they tried to separate out the wannabes from the pros.

However I do think there is a place in the online world for somewhere where it is very easy to put your work forward but very hard to get your work shown. One problem would be: who would do the winnowing of the chaff from the wheat and why would they put in the time in in the first place? I don’t think that would be insuperable though. Viewing and voting would be relatively easy online. Open voting systems are of no use as they are open to abuse, so in each area of achievement (landscape, abstract, figure etc) you would need separate jurors and each set in turn would need to have the general respect of their peers in that style, that in itself would attract potential selectors, as to be one would bring a certain amount of kudos and exposure. Maybe also the selections could be broken down to three monthly displays of limited number rather like the Summer Exhibition at the Academy. A rolling constantly updated gallery format has no structure and so tends to have no sense of occasion. Specific shows at specific times as you have in a physical gallery would I think attract a more focused interest from both artists and collectors. People who have an interest are more likely I think to check out a display that appears on a particular date, rather than to check back at regular intervals, or bother with constant emails that inform of updates. The main benefit might in my opinion be the ratcheting up of the quality of the work, there is nothing like giving people a goal to work for to make them raise their game. On the subject of putting work up for consideration I feel it would be vital to make a small charge for each submission, that in itself would I suspect help prevent there being an unmanageable  flood of offerings. It would also supply revenue to run the whole thing. Prizes and so forth would be another tried and tested method of attracting interest and support from commercial sponsors.

Saatchi online are trying to drum up interest with curated selections, but the curators are seemingly woefully ignorant and are drawn from the modern art clique exclusively. There was a recent curated selection with the title of “Impressionism” that contains much that it would be hard to shoehorn into that category. The lack of intelligent focus is underlined by the woeful lack of interest in views, sales and comments that these collections receive. At the time of writing the Impressionism collection which was posted on the 13th Sept 2012 has, seven days later, garnered not one single comment despite being on their front page.

It would be easiest, I would imagine, to launch such an exhibition site on the back of an existing player. Even then such things take time, patience and money to establish and may fail to attract enough interest despite all efforts.

That’s the guff over, some scans of tactically dirtied bits of paper are next.

 

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London, st pauls, watercolour, plein air

A visit up to town to explore a particular view with an eye to doing a few studio pictures. Upon my arrival though the light refused to co-operate. I needed

the sun to light up St Pauls when seen from Cannon St, but despite the mostly blue sky the sun determinedly hid behind almost the only cloud in the sky.

Whilst waiting I sat on a wall and did this which was fun, but hard on the neck. I was interested in the tone against the sky which was very dark for an

almost white building. The challenge was to get the feeling of a Portland stone building in the shadow rather than a building just made out of something

darker. Oh and the perspective was a bit of a devil too! 5in by 7in.

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St Pauls, London, watercolour, plein air, City

Eventually the light played ball and I got this quick sketch done. I didn’t have time to reserve all the lights, so I used some body colour which I hope annoys

the purists. I have given upon my monopod for now and this was done on my tripod set up, no problem as the pavements here are miles wide. 5in by 7in.

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St Pauls, London, city, watercolour, cannon st, plein air

For this one I retreated even further down Cannon St. I had brought with me a sheet of dark blue toned paper and a few tubes of gouache. The main tone

of the RH building is about the initial colour of the ground. I have to say this is a very fast and easy way of doing one of these contra jour city scenes.

With pure watercolour so much of the work is building up the strong tones required. The downside is a loss of luminosity derived from the white of the

paper. 11inby 7in.

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child okeford, Dorset, watercolour, mist, fog

A 1/4 sheet studio painting from material gleaned on my Dorset visit. A misty morning in Child Okeford. The gentleman in red was off for his morning

shop. He was a little surprised to be photographed! This looked so dull until the figure and car were put in that I nearly abandoned the whole thing a few

times. Once the key element were in it looked much better thank heaven. All done with my magnificent new size 14 Kolinsky Sable from the excellent

Rosemary & Co who make quite the best brushes I have ever used.

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Greenwich, London, church plein air, wapping group, watercolour

I was once again invited to paint with the esteemed Wapping Group. I went along despite being somewhat under the weather. I set off early with fellow

painter Graham Davies, this view was an obvious winner so it was our pre breakfast subject. It is from the graveyard of St Alfege in Greenwich. 7in by 5in.

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A view up a road leading to Blackheath from Greenwich. Absolutely super light. Getting up early is so very worthwhile. The central part with the vans

had to be done later due to a large lorry parked smack in front of us! A bigger painting will be developed from this in due course I hope.

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The Royal Observatory, greenwich, london, watercolour, plein air

This was done around lunchtime as I was fading fast. After finishing it I sloped off home to sniff and sneeze miserably while sitting  on the sofa watching

telly. It is of course  the Royal Observatory at Greenwich. 7in by 5in.

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life drawing, nude, figure

Life drawing has got going again. I have started to rather like these Brushpens from Pentel. They are capable of a great variety of marks and soften a little with

the watercolour wash. An odd thing with my drawing, I have entirely given up measuring. Mostly because it breaks the flow of drawing, so what you loose in accuracy

you gain in fluency. Painting is so often marked by this sort of trade off. It wasn’t a conscious decision it just sort of happened.

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life drawing, nude, figure

Another couple of 5 min ones.

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Life drawing, nude, figure

A longer 30 min pose. The model Alice is a dream to draw, she is a dancer and is seemingly incapable of taking up an ungraceful pose. She also bravely

holds poses that would put me into intensive care!

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life drawing, nude, figure

Life painting is an odd thing. I love them when they are a study, but tend not to like finished works. Somehow figure studies are timeless and could

almost come from any age, but as soon as they become a finished statement they become fixed like flies in the amber of the time of their milieu.

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Rather chuffed with this one. Last of the session and I was really flying.

September 5, 2012

Sun and Rain, Watercolour and Oil

Filed under: Drawing,Life Drawing,London,Painting,Thames,Watercolour — Tags: , , , , , , , — Rob Adams @ 9:57 am

Hurrah, my ‘orrible throat problems have eased enough so that the turps (or any of the so called non smelly solvents) don’t reduce me to a coughing wreck. Such a relief to dump the Acrylics which are I find much harder to paint with. Oils produce a beautiful mark of almost of their own accord, whereas with Acrylics everything has to be worked for. You do mostly get there in the end but it is a fair bit slower.

One bonus of the ailment is that it has forced me to work hard at the watercolours which have taken I feel a step forward. On the negative side reminders of mortality get more worrying as you age. When you are twenty if you get ill you assume that in a week or so you will be better, but as you near sixty you tend to wonder if this is the one that will carry you off! I very much wish I had stopped commercial work a decade earlier, it is more and more apparent that I won’t get all that I want done before I start to decline. Being alive is the strangest of things I’m sure, I don’t understand it a bit. Painting is the thing I find most worthwhile in life after friendship and that in itself is enough reason to persevere. In an odd way painting has taught me more about our very strange existence than all the philosophy books or scientific tracts I have pored over. Though alas it has taught me not one single thing I can really put into words, nor do I think any of those insights are embedded in what I paint. They have of course influenced how I make paintings, but the world around me has given me my best subjects and they don’t really need a subtext or “deeper” meaning. It is I sometimes think the misguided attempt to imbue paintings with significance outside of their simple visual aspect that has caused the painted  works of our age to be to my eye of such poor overall aesthetic quality.

It all comes down I feel to the idea that the emotional state of the artist when creating the object will somehow imbue the thing produced with aura of metaphysical energy. I don’t see very much weight of evidence to support the idea I have to say. Does the vigour of application of paint to canvas or paper really matter to the final result? Artists often give the impression that the painting just “flew” off the brush, but if that appearance is there it is usually a contrived effect, not the result of slapdash application. If anything a painting that has the appearance of bravura application of paint takes more planning than a picture that looks to have been completed in a more sedate manner. It’s mostly Hollywood’s fault of course, the tortured artist struggling with his inner demons is such a great story. So with Michelangelo we get moments of high emotion and arguments with the Pope, but none of the hours and hours of calm quiet chiseling of stone and brushing of paint that must have filled 99.5% of his creative days.

In my own experience emotional turmoil has a deleterious effect on the work produced. Calm confident and focused is the order of the day, not frenzied passion; even if the appearance of frenzied passion is the required end result! So I think that even Van Gogh, the patron saint of the tortured artist, would have been engrossed when painting, if anything finding relief from his mental difficulty in the calming process. Looking back over art history the number of emotional wrecks appears to be quite low, only increasing in modern times due to artists having been brainwashed by overwrought and mostly fallacious descriptions of art being created out of emotional train wrecks and overwhelming nihilism. I think we confuse being inspired by the memory of emotional turmoil and the turmoil itself. During such upsets we mostly cannot paint, but in the calm after we can maybe express something of what we felt.

When I started this blog I thought to mostly write about the practical aspects of painting. I am quite surprised by the direction the written part has actually taken. To some degree it is the difficulty of passing on useful and honest information. Mostly when I come up with any technical tips I can also think of  circumstances where the advice would be wrong. Although I have many tracts on the art of painting I don’t think there is very much I have taken from them. I have flirted with restricted palettes, triadic schemes etc, but at the end of the day I don’t adhere to any of these principles. I just use as many colours as I need and no more. The best guide I have ever read is James Gurney’s “Color and Light” which is very wide ranging an unprescriptive. His excellent blog Gurney Journey is better and more wide ranging than nearly all the instructional books I have seen.

I will try and do more step by steps though they are a bit painful to do. I dislike them because they never seem to show the slips between cup and lip. I might do one where the whole thing goes horribly wrong and end it with a photo of the painting in the bin! I have not been productive enough really, though I have been doing a lot of pre-planning for upcoming paintings, also designing roller coasters for a bit of dinner money!

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hammersmith, bridge, thames, river, london, plein air, oil painting

Her we are my first outing with the oils for many a moon. This was an outing with the Wapping Group, and the weather prospects were not good. The

forecast was for a clear morning however so I dragged myself out of bed and on to the train at 6.30 AM. I only just got there in time the sky was already

clouding over and the light past its best. With no time to spare searching for a motif I settled down to paint this 16in by 10in effort. The tones were muted

and I resisted the temptation to overdramatise the light and loose the still morning mood. I might do another studio painting of this as there is a good

picture in there somewhere between this and what the camera saw. This is Hammersmith Bridge.

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chiswick,thames, london, river, barge, plein air

I walked from Hammersmith along the Thames path to Chiswick with the clouds thickening. When I stared this there was a flash of sun which looked

lovely, so I set about painting the shadow tones bearing in mind I was hoping for the light to return. It did so several times as I worked and each time

I quickly added brights where I saw them. I was not helped by the tide driving me up the foreshore and inquisitive swans trying to eat my brushes!

14in by 10in.

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Chiswick, pub, plein air, london

Here you see the approaching storm. I had to leave this as a very rough sketch as Derek Daniells and I were caught napping and had to flee to the pub

in a deluge. We dried out for a while hoping for a break but it was a long time coming. Eventually I went out and tried painting the park from beneath

the trees on my last board but it wasn’t much of a subject so I decided to head home.

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Hammersmith, bridge, London, thames, river, plein air

Once I reahed the bridge again I was faced with this. I vacillated for a bit as I was very tired from my early start but it was easily the best subject of the

day so having no more boards I ragged out my park painting and started on this. As is often the case a strong subject is relatively easy to paint and I had

this finished in under an hour. Looking at it now I think it would make a very good watercolour so I might do another version. 10in by 14in.

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deptford, st johns, london, watercolour, plein air

Sunshine at last! I am trying to do slightly bigger paintings en plein air with the watercolours. This took a little longer than I would like at nearly 2hrs.

I was pretty much guessing at the end. This is St Johns Deptford a few streets away from home. I snapped the cyclists on my iPad and then drew them out

from the screen. They were a gift and perfect for the scene. I have a feeling I am doomed to buy an iPhone as the iPad is a little heavy and I’m terrified

of dropping it. 1/4 sheet Arches not.

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St Johns, deptford, london, watercolour, plein air

Another St Johns painting done straight after in my little 7in by 5in sketchbook. I am getting addicted to cyclists!

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london, watercolour, mall

A trip up to town to buy paint. I had intended to do another study in St Martins Lane but was lured into painting this as the light was perfect. By the time

I was done the light was gone so it will have to wait for another day. This is Admiralty Arch looking down the Mall. 7in by 5in.

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Greenwich, hill, crooms, watercolour

Last one, this is Crooms Hill in Greenwich. With the path in the park closed for the Olympics there is a lot of foot traffic up and down the hill. I am

using my tripod so I can paint standing but it is feels a little over the top for a 7in by 5in sketch book so I must come up with a neater solution to be

able to sketch standing in the street. Also there are many places where a tripod is not practical so another way needs to be found.

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