Rob Adams a Painter's Blog painter's progress

August 21, 2010

In the studio and out

Filed under: Drawing,London,Painting,Uncategorized,Wales — Tags: , , , , , , — Rob Adams @ 3:25 pm

Due an update I guess. I have been struggling all week with a painting based on a sketch done in Tenby. It is larger than I usually paint and after a week and many changes is still not right. But at a certain point you have to back away and leave it to return to with a fresh eye. It is a time of day I always find difficult, full sunlight with a beautiful clear sky is I find the hardest of times to portray. Give me a nasty wet and stormy day and I am far happier!

To clear my head I went out to sketch and paint up in the City of London. I have been meaning to paint a morning in the city subject for some time, so this was by way of an information gathering exercise. When I got to Cannon Street I was in luck the light was streaming down the road and transfiguring the scene. I snapped as many photos as I dared being in fear of being arrested as a terrorist… man with bulky green rucksack taking photos of commuters! I did a few very quick sketches of the road, traffic and some of the people before the light went over. I passed a pleasant hour by the Tower sketching the tourists and invigorated by this I went on down to the river which was looking beautiful, all dramatic clouds and sparkling water. I had to wait a little while for the light to move round but at about four it was perfect and the painting didn’t take longer than 20 min.

In a fit of enthusiasm I hiked back along the south bank of the Thames stopping to sketch on the Deptford Strand. It was as they say a “Grand Day Out”. But first Tenby.

Tenby wales pembrokeshire painting

Here’s the sketch of the scene only about 15 min, I tried to catch the feeling of the scene without too much detail. I had just sat and painted the boats from the other side so I didn’t feel like sitting again to paint.

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Wales, Tenby, Painting, Boats

Here is the studio painting which after much changing around is still not what I want. I will leave it for a while to consider. then I will either scrub it out or make some dramatic (and risky) changes. Before doing this I will take this image into Photoshop to explore the options, this is one area where I find the computer very useful as I can explore various possibilities.

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Tenby, sea, sketch, painting, wales

Here it is after being mistreated in the computer. Better I feel, but more still to do!

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tenby, wales, painting, oils, sea, art

Here’s where I’m leaving it the foreground is still unresolved alas. I’m tempted to add some figures as a focus in the mid ground as the whole picture looks rather like an attractive but empty stage set waiting for the star of the show to arrive! It is always very hard to judge whether a picture that doesn’t work to your satisfaction is actually irredeemably flawed, or if some addition, exclusion or other alteration  will take it over the divide from poor to good. It can sometimes just be that the actual picture just doesn’t fit your initial ambitions. Like a cuckoo in the nest it has fledged into a bird of a different feather than you hoped. I will leave it for now so that time can set me at a distance from it allowing more sensible judgement than I can muster at the present. Hopefully it will return in a later post reborn!

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London, sketch, drawing, study, Cannon St

Here’s the scene outside Cannon St station. I wished I had some darker toned paper but on the upside the bus had conveniently broken down! It is hard catching people in quick sketches the best way I have found is to try and get an interesting silhouette and just suggest the rest. The Street was dry alas but I pretended it wasn’t.

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Sketch, people

I walked down to the Tower but didn’t fancy drawing castles so I sat and sketched the tourists. I don’t do this often enough, but the little sketches of figures are very useful to add to paintings. When people are on the move the drawings have to be more imagination than observation but it’s surprising how often they catch a certain something that imagination alone wouldn’t give.

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people, tourists, drawing

I’ve tried to get these ones actual size, they literally only take a minute each.

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Thames, London, river, painting

After a bit more wandering I got to the river and the wobbly bridge. The light was just fantastic, sometimes the scene looks so dramatic that you just know that the sketch will be good. It is just nerve racking trying to catch it all before the light changes too much. I have to force myself to be systematic and not panic. I took several photos but when I looked at them they just didn’t catch the mood which shows how important plein air sketches are.

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Thames, London, river, painting, drawing

On my trek back I stopped to sketch on the foreshore at Deptford Strand, most of which alas is uglified by horrible flats built too close to the river. Architects, planning authorities, and developers should all be lined up and shot (metaphorically of course!).

August 12, 2010

Large scale painting

Filed under: Painting,Scenic,Uncategorized — Tags: , , , , , , — Rob Adams @ 11:16 am

I have over the years designed and painted many theatre backdrops, 10 or more ballets for the National Youth Ballet, which gives ballet-mad kids a chance to perform on a big London stage. Alas I have few records of this work and almost none of the final results. I have done murals here and abroad some of which I have included pictures of. Large canvasses are either painted on the floor or upon a paint frame. There are alas fewer and fewer paint frames in operation, I used to work at the beautiful Elms Lesters Painting Rooms in Flitcroft St Covent Garden, but now it is the home of contemporary artists as an exhibition space. Large format digital printing is eating away at the scenic artist’s business, in  the end I fear the skills will be lost. I have put some images below of paintings I have done over the years, where possible I have added an image of the process itself. The other method is to paint on the floor, which is not so hard as you might imagine, we tape our brushes to sticks and put the paints in trays that sit on the canvas… kicking over the paint is, as you might imagine, a disaster. I’ll start with one done recently by this method.  I made a special effort to take a few pictures.

scenic painting bear ice arctic polar

Here is the small scale design for a recent ballet cloth. The production is The Rainbow Bear based on the book by Michael Morpurgo, and will be danced by the National Youth Ballet. I painted the model (the reference drawing is called the model) on the computer in photoshop. I wished to get the wide open top of the world feel so I wrapped the image into an arc. This was definitely one to paint on the floor, painting on a frame would have meant a cricked neck with the weird angles!

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Bear scenic polar arctic ballet

Here you can see my friend Anna painting an iceberg at about a half way stage, everything is blocked in ready to be refined. It is important a theatre cloth remains soft, so the work is done using the paint as thinly as possible rather like a watercolour. This cloth is 40ft by 24 ft in old money.

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Bear polar arctic snow ice

Here is a photo of the final cloth, fortunately the space we were painting in had a gantry in the roof so I could get this shot. The light wasn’t great so it’s a bit grainy. Often you can’t get back from your painting which means you have to rely on experience to know if the whole thing is working.

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bear polar arctic

Here is a close up, as you can see it is painted quite freely, there is no need for your small sable on a painting this size! The big challenge painting wise was to get the glassy feeling to the ice. Everything had to be kept very high key.

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VE painting frame

Here is an even bigger painting, my friend and fellow artist Sue is in the picture to give the idea of scale. This was only one cloth of 10 or so and you can only see the top half… Projects of this size are very much a team effort, there were four of us on this epic. It was for The VE celebration in Hyde Park London in 1995 as I recall.

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Tussauds New York

Here is a clearer view of the paint frame on a different job. The canvas is attached to a large frame that sinks into the floor. This is an 18C frame the modern ones have moving gantries and are not as good. The added factor for this painting was that I had to make a rotating stretcher so I didn’t have to paint historical portraits upside down! It was for a ceiling mural in Madame Tussauds in New York and is still there as far as I know.

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Madame Tussauds New York mural painting

Here is the finished thing, I was sick of painting balusters by the end! It took 2 weeks to complete.

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Ceiling Mural Hard Rock Mural Rome

Here is a mural that had to be painted on site on a domed ceiling in the Hard Rock Cafe in Rome. This was a wonderful job that required me to be in Rome for 4 weeks. I did the initial design in acrylics which I have now lost, and then did many studies of putti actual size to be traced on by pricking and pouncing with chalk in the traditional manner. I had to paint the whole thing lying on my back on a scaffold tower, which was quite a challenge… the paint drips on your face and runs down your arm. But the painting was so engrossing I soon stopped noticing the discomfort.

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Hard Rock Cafe Ceiling Mural

Lastly a couple of close ups, in my imagination all the putti were all different rock stars which was which I’ll keep a secret!

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Hard Rock Cafe Ceiling Mural

On the drum I’ve paid tribute to another ceiling painter in Rome! If his Holiness reads this I’m available, that chapel ceiling needs bringing up to date.

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