Rob Adams a Painter's Blog painter's progress

August 1, 2012

Watercolours Choosing the Subject

Filed under: France,How to do,Kent,London,Painting,Thames,Watercolour — Rob Adams @ 4:35 pm

Here we are again. I am trying to increase the frequency of painting to 5 paintings in a week. It doesn’t seem much to ask but somehow I seem to miss 10 days have gone by but only 6 watercolours seem to have got done. There has been a conflict of interests though as I also decided I had to attempt to raise my game quality wise too. This is altogether a harder thing than just knocking out paintings. I have been painting long enough that with most scenes I can pretty much always get a decent painting done, say 1 in 10 has to be binned as an epic fail. However some paintings fall into the worthy but a little dull bracket. That said I don’t much like pictures that reach out and grab you as they often pall with longer acquaintance. Inevitably much I see in exhibitions falls into the grab you category for obvious and entirely sensible reasons. What I am attempting of late is to inject a little more storytelling into a picture, what is termed “narrative”. I had thought I could move no further from fashionable tastes, but this allows a step deeper into the critical void I suspect!

Initially works of art were all narrative really, like comic strips. The discovery that such things were decorative came next and potentially moving last of all. Todays painter grapples with the problem that primarily a work must engage with the emotions and thoughts of the viewer. You must not tell them so much that there is no room for interpretation, indeed the spaces left for interpretation must be carefully considered as it is these that trigger the emotional response. A figure in a painting always provides a “hook” as we automatically start to make up stories about any human figure if we are allowed room. Allowing room is something groups in the 19th century for example especially failed to do, with paintings designed to carry a definite moral lesson and propel the viewer into righteous thought. As a result we don’t really respond to these works as a Victorian would have. Unfortunately vapid sentimentality seems popular in any age, but I’d rather take up professional scrabble that go down that route.

So I have decided to be somewhat more focussed on what is going on in certain of my studio paintings. That in turn means more work in the initial drawing stage. For me that has been what I was taking a holiday from in some respects. As an illustrator fulfilling a brief the drawing stage plus amendments could turn out to be a very long drawn out and tedious affair. It could go on so long that much of the pleasure of doing the final was dulled. There is a real danger that in over doing the planning stage you deaden the final result. So I want to try and find a balance between decisions that need to be made first and planned and one that need to happen as the final picture progresses. There are actually quite a few decisions that need to be made as the picture progresses since you need to have the progress so far to see clearly what needs to be done or not as the case may be.

When painting from reference this is how I see the process (I am just thinking this out as I type!):

1. Seeing a potential picture. This happens at the photographing or sketching moment. There is something however slight that makes you stop and draw or press the shutter. I look for pictures all the time by reflex. It is easier in some places than others which is why they are called picturesque! I like this sort of picture less and less though. What I hope to find is a moment when the atmosphere is memorable in an unexpected but still beautiful way. A lovely scene on a lovely day will always look much the same, there is an example of one of these later in the post. A different day might transform the same scene entirely giving it a completely different emotional resonance.

2. Reviewing the candidate. Most fall at this fence. When you look at the image away from the place itself you see if it will stand up as an independent picture. Some are  just not going to cut the mustard, others need adjusting and editing. It is here where sketching out helps. I just bring the image up on screen and scribble over the top in Photoshop. I also do a few small tone scribbles on paper if I need to.

3. Deciding what the feeling of the picture should be and how to compose it to maximise the desired atmosphere. You don’t always want a composition to be balanced. Sometimes tension can be introduced by conflicting draws to the eye. An elysian scene might want perfect equilibrium in it but a picture of a dirty backstreet might need an uncomfortable edge. Or these relationships can even be inverted with a perfect scene given a disturbing air either by a visually jarring inclusion, or an uncomfortable arrangement of otherwise cosy elements. Or a gritty urban scene transfigured for a moment into an unexpected beauty.

4. Assembling the elements. If I am working on a street scene this is obviously more important than in a topographical picture and so takes longer. With a scene where the people are going to be an important element a great deal of thought has to be put in. Firstly figures have to be found that are right for the scene and also not clumsy. Most photographed images of passers by are caught in inelegant poses. What I look for is a good silhouette, if the figure is understandable from just the outline then it will probably work fine in a painting. Then the key elements need arranging within the scene and adjusted so that they have an interesting arrangement. Once that is done any supporting figures and props such as cars, street furniture can be placed.

5. Editing. I now look for anything that is not needed. This is one of the hardest parts but generally if an item can be removed without harming the story it should be taken out. Similarly if a supporting figure is too prominent then it can be weakened by adding others to make a group. I look at this moment to introduce some “quiet” areas where nothing much is going on. Conversely I might also look to “busy” up an area to add rhythm and texture.

 

3 . 4 & 5 sort of all happen at the same time, I have just attempted to split them up for clarity. When I am writing these spiels I am usually attempting to put over something I have never needed to translate into words before. I often find that in the process of trying to express what I mean I need to reevaluate what I had thought in the first place, which is really quite useful and an unexpected bonus from blogging. First a new crop of paintings then a step by step… which are quite the most off putting things to do as you can’t lose yourself in the painting, which in turn means the chances of them going pear shaped are all the more!!

 

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Faversham, Thames, Kent, Watercolour

Here we are in beautiful Faversham. From a snap taken on my last visit. As you might imagine it rained in buckets shortly after! Here I wanted three conflicting points of interest. A tonal interest, the contrasting edge of the white building. A colour interest , the red van. Lastly a human interest, the girls. If you do this the eye can’t really settle, which in turn hopefully means a better appreciation of the threatening sky which is the defining ingredient of the painting. This painting got slightly changed after this scan as I connected the dark tree down to the blue car because I didn’t like the break which isolated the tree.

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Faversham, Kent, Plein air, watercolour

Faversham Creek, a rain stopped play watercolour that I just got round to finishing. 10in by 6in.

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Thames, Richmond River Watercolour

Here is one of those famous “picturesque” views I mentioned earlier. I sat with a pint of Guinness from the nearby pub and painted this in about an hour. A passer by bought me another pint which made the closing stages a little wobbly! Although it is a lovely scene, I would like to paint it in more unusual light or do something more with the composition, not anything you can do plein air however. The view is of course the Thames from Richmond Hill as painted by Turner and a host of others. The foreground needs sorting to allow a better flow. I did add the break and reposition the path but it needs more.

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Richmond, Thames, flood, plein air

This is the White Cross pub in Richmond. The Thames regularly comes up and maroons the clientele, not that they seem to mind. I stood shin deep in water to paint which was novel. I didn’t get finished though, I just got the drawing and the first broad washes in to establish the mood then took photos of the people until I thought I had enough likely suspects to populate the painting. I know I’m a wimp but despite it being July that water was cold!

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Cancale France Dog Restaurant

This is a complicated one, I had great fun arranging all the different elements. It is a restaurant in Cancale France. I ate my lunch there and sneakily took pictures of diners and passers by as I ate. The lady with the dog was so wonderful I had to make her the star. Unfortunately there was no sun when she passed by so I had to invent the lighting. Arches Rough 18in by 10in

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France watercolur

This is also from my Brittany trip, I am slowly working through the studio paintings I have planned. I loved the contrast between the very grand St Malo, destination of the very wealthy and their yachts, with the very unglamorous day and small car. Keeping control of the first wash was all important here.

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Now a step by step… I don’t often do these as I mentioned above, they are very annoying to do.

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watercolour tutorial

Here is my starting point. It is a stage with out actors at the moment. What took my eye was the light streaming across from the top left and the lovely shadows. As I carried on I kept turning and snapping cars and cyclists as they came past on their way home. Once I got all this on screen I made a very rough montage and then a simple line drawing from that. I keep the line drawing as basic as possible the tonal information will be based on the photo so is not needed in the drawing.

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watercolour tutorial

Here it is, I only want to transfer key lines to the paper. You can see the various changes I have made. I have tried to arrange the components to enhance the feeling of going home on a fine evening. The cyclist is the focus and is fixed to bottom of the picture by his shadow. The man and the other traffic act as blocks preventing the eye escaping down the road. The drive cutting the pavement on the right does the same job by cutting off escape via the right hand corner.

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watercolour tutorial

Here it is laid down on the paper. In this case I have traced it using tracedown as it is a very clean way of  transferring the image. Sometimes I use a grid sometimes I just draw by eye, sometimes I just jump in with the paint… who the hell cares! You should however develop the skill to do a painting by any of those means.

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watercolour tutorial

Here is my first wash. Many purists go on about wet into wet as if it is the holy grail, but once again you should master that and any other technique they are all just tools in the box ready to be got out when needed. The worst reason for painting a painting in a particular way is to fit in with some style or other. Judging this first wash is very important and I tested it against my possible tree tones on a spare bit of paper. I was careful not to leave any hard edges.

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Watercolour Tutorial

Next up is the road which is the biggest area. This is done with wet into wet, lifting out and then dry brushing. These are the lightest tones But I don’t want more than two more washes on top of any area and ideally only one. I protected the highlights on the cyclist and the road markings with masking fluid.

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watercolour tutorial

I have carried on here getting the variety of tone in while the wash is still drying. I drop darks into the tree shadow in stages building up the density but trying to hang on to the transparency and not allow it to go “dead”. I don’t worry too much about the boundaries as these areas are quite dark. I add the first of the shadows to cheer myself up as paintings look pretty grim at this stage!

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watercolour tutorial

Here come our darks. again wet into wet on the left, becoming crisper and dryer  as we go to the right. I am keeping in mind the light burning out the top left by washing back with a dilute blue.

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watercolour tutorial

Time to get rid of those pesky last bits of white paper! At last we can see what we have. In some ways this sort of painting is much harder than a wet into wet process. With that method you can see the whole painting from the start, the St Malo painting above was done that way, but once you start breaking the work into areas that have to go in cleanly without too much alteration then your tonal decisions have to be very accurate. To much change to an area will kill the surface quality and make the painting go dull and lifeless especially on the Not Arches that this is painted on. I try my best to keep the painting accurate but not tight so the cyclist and his shadow are painted mostly with single strokes guiding the wet paint with as little “filling in” as possible.

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London watercolour tutorial

Here we are, all done. I am careful to stop as soon as an area feels described enough. I could have added more detail in the cobbles for example and would have really enjoyed doing it. But over painted cobbles would have detracted from the whole so restraint is needed! There is a touch of red Gouache on the lines and some scratching out to add sparkle to the road. Beware of overdoing scratching out it can easily ruin a painting but it is a very useful method if used with discretion.

July 21, 2012

Hinting at the Whole

Filed under: Drawing,How to do,Life Drawing — Rob Adams @ 1:01 pm

A bit of a technical post this time. I see many drawings, life drawings in particular, that carry too much overly defined information. In doing so the drawing says less than another that might include far less information. At first glance this seems impossible, how can having reduced information to go on tell you less? Let me show you what I mean with an example.

On the left we have Pierre-Paul Prud’hon and on the right Gian Lorenzo Bernini. I have tried to pick two drawings that have a similar means of rendering of a similar subject. You may well disagree but I feel the Bernini has more “life” to it. Why should this be so? The internal rendering is pretty similar both artists are relishing the subtle terrain of the human back. A major difference I think is to the edges. If you look at the Prud’hon though they may vary a little in softness for the most part the outer edge can be traced with complete certainty. On the Bernini however the edge is lost and found becoming certain only to signpost  a change of direction or the passing of one edge behind another. Beyond that we are left to join up the dots in our heads.

Oddly, though Prud’hon works very hard to define “roundness” with his toning,  his edges don’t seem to go round the corner. Bernini however is constantly giving hints about bits that are just out of sight. If you look at the right hand contour of the back he is telling you which parts flow around the corner by running one edge behind another. In between such points of change he is quite happy to let the line be almost lost until we find it again at the next intersection.

The other difference between the two is intent. Prud’hon is trying to impress us, Bernini on the other hand is just trying to record information for future practical use. Many relatively unsophisticated artists and more casual viewers will be taken with the Prud’hons continuous tone and laborious shading. However looking past this the drawing has a mass of inaccuracies. The feet are poorly set she doesn’t “stand” convincingly. The right back of the knee is pointing impossibly off to the right. The right elbow is poorly understood and the arm  does not run convincingly out of view. I could go on.

In comparison look at the left arm on the Bernini. Here you can really understand the structure, the foreshortening on the upper arm is masterfully portrayed and that elbow really comes out at us. Also the limb is in a state of tension and immanent action. This is true of the whole figure, Bernini’s man is about to get up and go.

Prud’hon’s lovely lady has been nowhere and is apparently going nowhere anytime soon either.  She is still, which is something human beings never are unless dead. There is much talk of the rebirth of academic drawing with “ateliers” being reestablished, but in my opinion this period was very much a retrograde step and indeed a misunderstanding off the Renaissance masters they so admired.

Next is another back, this time by Degas.

Here far less clues are available to the viewer. But note on the lefthand edge how carefully he has the line running up from her waist cuts into the breast and higher up how the line of the breast is in turn cut off by the line of the upper arm. Although so much is left to our imagination nothing important to the posture or activity is left undecided. We even know she is washing her neck, though the clues to that are very sparse. The whole of the forearm is in effect brought into existence in our minds by the flannel roughly described at her neck. It is these moments of sudden comprehension that make a drawing spring to life in the mind of a viewer.

I’ll now attempt a breakdown to give a rough idea of the sort of factors that need to be considered when drawing a figure or anything else. Also some idea of how the various layers of information you give the viewer might interact. Most importantly however some idea of what might be left out if you so choose! All the images including those above can be clicked for a larger view.

 

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Here we have our starting point a lovely photo by Pascal Renoux. On the right I have using straight lines marked the main changes of direction around the silhouette of the figure. Where the contour is more or less straight I have left out the line. The first thing to note is that even if you didn’t have the photo on the left I bet you could still work out the posture, sex and even youth of the girl posing. Even the floor plane is hinted at by the outline of the feet. Think for a moment about what an astonishing job your brain is doing to glean such a lot of information from so few simple lines.

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Here on the left I have indicated the internal lines. Even with just these a figure is inferred. Then on the right the two together, you can see how each layer adds to our knowledge of the pose.

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If, as on the left, I add a simple tone then we immediately have a form in space. Just by the simple act of separating “inside” from “outside. On the right I have added another layer of information, the highlights. With these few shapes we have a lit figure in space and have the beginnings of describing volume.

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One more layer on the left I have indicated the darks which further fill out the volume of the body. Lastly on the right a very schematic background which places the figure in space and defines the flow of light and mood. Note how the mid tone of the figure goes from dark relative to the background to lighter as we travel downwards. I have deliberately removed all “style” from these examples so the marks have no artistic quality.

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Here I am doing the same process but adding a simple tactile drawn quality to the tonal information. Note how this conveys energy and movement just by changing the flat tone to a very basic and loosely hatched fill.

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Finally once again I add an indication of place with a few very broad lines. On the right I have taken away the initial lines. It is fascinating how this simple alteration changes the mood. I have removed information you would have thought vital to the appreciation and understanding of the figure. The result is to my mind the opposite, by removing unneeded marks and allowing the viewer to imagine the emotional truth of the image has been heightened.

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I have quickly added this to show how Bernini leads the line defining the arm’s edge in a dance of fading in and out and running behind or in front so as to combine with the toning to explain the form.

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I hope this gives a bit of an idea as to how information and feeling might be conveyed by a drawing. I am not arguing for more or less detail. Only that the choices as to what information we deliver to our viewer are important and need to be considered. I think that the policy of slavishly noting down all that our eyes can glean from the subject can easily detract from the eventual image. They say there is no better way of hiding something than putting it amongst many other similar things. The same can be often true with drawing, too much information can obscure rather than reveal. In struggling to see the trees clearly we can easily miss the woods, alas all to often in attempting to clearly grasp the twigs and leaves we also can lose track of the trees!

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