Rob Adams a Painter's Blog painter's progress

November 19, 2011

Life Drawing and London in Autumn

Filed under: Drawing,Life Drawing,London,Painting — Rob Adams @ 5:47 pm

Mostly drawings this post. I have been doing a stint of commercial work so not too many chances to get out and paint. This has been a bit of a bind really as the days have been beautiful and very paintable, what with the autumn colours and the low light. Still one evening a week I get to go and to some life drawing which is always a challenge and a pleasure. I get the distinct feeling that accuracy is not a fashionable thing in life drawing. My fellow drawers are very quick to say that it doesn’t matter and is unimportant. I would however respectfully disagree. It is important to learn to draw relatively accurately, not because you will always wish make drawings that are rigorously accurate, but because without learning how to get a mark in the right place you won’t stand much chance of getting it in a decided and more telling alternative position. So I would feel you need to learn the discipline, even though you may not always use it directly. The feeling that accuracy isn’t important is linked to the same old thing that “feeling” , “emotion” and intuition are all that is needed to make telling statements about the subject. It isn’t that they aren’t important aspects, but it is the learnt disciplines that allow you to express those very sentiments more effectively.

I should perhaps explain what I mean by accuracy. I don’t mean every point has a single correct position. We have two eyes, wobbly heads and swivelling eyes. The model is in a constant state of subtle movement. No model is really still and one that was would be useless, better to draw from a statue. So what we have for each mark is a locus of possibility in which a point could happily exist. In some ways this is bounded by what the eye will accept before it rebells and perceives the body as deformed. This is also why drawings with early attempts at positioning lines or points visible are perfectly acceptable, hence there is no real need for an eraser other than as a drawing tool. You can choose what aspect to be accurate in, you could leave the line loose and indefinite then be rigorous with the tonal values. You can be careful in plotting the sinuous turns of the boundaries and lay in loose tones over the top. All these and many other approaches can be rewarding… they do however all require some degree of accuracy to be effective.

So however wild and expressive your mark making, it will always be wilder and still more expressive if that creative impulse is backed up by real acquired skill. Learning accuracy allows more freedom not less. It can happen of course that accuracy becomes a prop that you can’t put down. The results of this are academic style overworked drawings or Slade school type graphings of the human form. I would still think that the rewards of gaining the technical adeptness far outweigh any risks.

Anatomy is another subject that arises as soon as we draw our fellow beings. I think you can become a perfectly good draughts person without opening an anatomy book, but for myself a working knowledge of what lies beneath the skin is often useful. I have never managed to learn all those names, or all the various insertions of the muscles, but I know to a fair degree where everything attaches and what it operates. One thing it will help you with is general proportions. Many otherwise fine drawings are ruined by the relative lengths of arms and legs or sizes of heads or hands. Once again there are no fixed and “correct” relationships, just boundaries which if you over shoot will undermine believability.

One of the simplest aids to learning accuracy is a plumb bob, just a weight that will hang vertically from a bit of cord. If you want the luxury version you can mark inches down the string. This is used to determine how the landmarks on the body align vertically. The other aid is your pencil or any straight edge to estimate angle and horizontal alignment. Generally only the larger really key relationships need to be worked out in this way. The smaller divisions within the larger shapes are progressively easier to determine by eye alone. Every now and again I find my drawing has become a little sloppy and I have to revisit these basic techniques to stop the rot!

 

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Life drawing, figure nude

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Life drawing, figure, nude

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Life drawing, nude, figure

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Life drawing, figure, nude

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Life drawing, nude, figure

These first ones are all 5min to 7min, what are sometimes called “gestures” a term I dislike. These obviously suffer form an accuracy viewpoint but teach how to grasp the essence of a pose. Your short poses will also improve hugely once you have learnt how to be accurate on the longer poses

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Life Drawing, figure, nude, pastel

A longer pose, rather overworked I would have been better to do a couple of 15min drawings.  A hard thing to learn is that if a drawing looks done then stop! Often I do twenty minutes on a pose, then do a better one in the last ten minutes, because I have learnt from the first attempt.

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Life drawing, nude, figure, pastel

The outrageous curve of her leg made this interesting. It was the other leg that was hard to draw though. Note how on the foot I indicate the volume but don’t get side tracked into all those toes.

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Life drawing, nude, figure, pastel

It is often fun to relate the figure to the surroundings more literally, as an exercise you can just draw everything that is “not” body the result is that you infer the figure, this is called using counter shapes.

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Life drawing, nude, figure, pastel

A very difficult pose. There were such subtle variations across her back with nothing really definitive to hold it all together. It doesn’t really work as a drawing but it was instructional to do and I wish I had had the time to do another.

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Life drawing. nude, figure

I am attempting to make the lines of the hatching work a little harder by spacing them. Despite messing up the head I am quite pleased with how the marks describe the body.

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Life drawing, nude, pastel

Another attempt to describe without too many boundary lines, just using the interchange of tone. I intend to reintroduce more linear work after I have got this approach working better.

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Life drawing, nude, figure, pastel

I enjoyed the flow of light in this one. I have decided recently to stop worrying about getting the whole figure in.

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Life drawing, nude, figure, pastel

I have added a white soft pastel to my armoury of pastel pencils… not sure about it yet.

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Life drawing, figure, girl, pose, pastel

For a change we recreated a Monroe pose… it gave me deja vu, took me back to my magazine illustration days! That’s it for drawings a few plein airs to finish up.

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Green Park, London, oils, plein air, Rob Adams

The new “Brass Monkey” season has started. An off shoot of the Wapping Group that paints in cold miserable conditions! I was glad to catch the last of the Autumn colour. This is Green Park London 14in by 12in Oil.

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Buckingham Palace, evening, London, Victoria, plein air, oil, Rob Adams

Before this I did one of Apsley House which went awry and got wiped, so this was very quick at about half an hour, but the light was super. 14in by 10in

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Fortnum and Mason, Green Park, London, plein air, Oil, Rob Adams

I blocked this in on the way to the pub then tried to finish it off from a photo which just didn’t work so I had to go back next day! Slightly over detailed the building but I will knock that back with a glaze once it has dried.

October 30, 2011

Life Death and Everything

Filed under: Drawing,Life Drawing,London,Painting,Philosophy — Rob Adams @ 7:32 pm

Paint as if you were a child. More received wisdom I don’t really agree with. Children’s paintings all show the same features and styles, their progress does not seem to show much variation from child to child or indeed generation. We do like to coo at the naive charm and simple directness and of course parents are always looking for their little darling to be a Michelangelo in the bud! But really, we are not children, we are adults and should paint as such. I think it was C S Lewis who said we want to get to the silliest time of our life and stay there as long as possible. Well whatever, I don’t wish to revert to my childhood, not with my dotage drawing ever closer anyway. The same goes for the yearning for a simpler past. This has been a popular fantasy, the noble savage etc. I don’t want to paint like a nomadic tribesman. I enjoy many of their artefacts and stylisations, but what I see in them is coloured and shaped by my own society, if I tried to ape them it would, in my view, be just pretence.  I can of course take from any influence that comes my way, but in the end I feel I am, for better or worse, the product of this cosy and absurdly privileged society here on the fringes of Europe. Good or bad, all my painting will spring from that.

Another thread of popular belief I find slightly tedious is the promotion of emotion over consideration, feeling over thinking, intuition over experience, we admire Mr Spock but he is always out done by touchy feely Captain Kirk. In this country especially, it feels that being intellectual is considered a little suspicious, a little showoffy. Alas learning and thinking has always been a large part of my process and development, so I shall never be cool. You can apparently be cool if you are nerdy, but not if you wonder aloud about why the hell you are here or what indeed “here” might be. These are topics that are inextricably a part of my mental landscape. Douglas Adams’ the Hitchhiker’s Guide said, Life Death and Everything sums up to 42, as good an answer as any I suppose. I have read sciencey stuff, religious guff, philosophical tracts, random facts, bent my mind around mathematical concepts, wondered at geometrical constructs,  gazed at paintings, listened and moved to music. I have understood, misunderstood and just plain failed to understand, all to little avail. There seems to be a core of unknowingness that resists illumination by human thought. There is no mirror dark enough to reflect our selves.The slippery surface remains unscratched.

I have however made some small gains in what form I would like any answers to big questions to take. The main one is that I want free will. Not much to ask you might think, but it is a knotty question indeed. Science says to me every thing is causal, one event following and triggering another, like a very long string of intricately arranged dominoes. Knock over the first one and everything just happens from there. God pushed over the first one, the religious cry, well perhaps, He seems a bit over qualified though. My problem with the science view is that all I am is an occurrence. Any decision I imagine I made is just one domino toppling into another, not free will at all. What of the multiverse? Every probability every possibility is there… but if there are choices and if I choose every one of them then that is no choice at all and once again I made no difference to existence, no mark on my paper. I did not do I just was. Be content with that “Just wassing”, cry the Buddhists. Sorry, I really want to be more than a stone, overambitious I know, but there it is. I am manfully resisting the temptation to descend into quantum mechanics and entanglement here… but best not.

Religion is no help, if God is omniscient then He has made any decisions by the very fact of that allknowingness, if I had free will I could surprise Him, but if I surprise him then he is not God. So there it is, God or no free will. I’ll hope for the free will and pass up on the possibility of an Allmighty I think. Well what is wrong with things just happening? I feel I have free will and volition, so what if it is just an illusion? Well it matters a great deal to my mind. Without free will there is no murder or blame for it, no art or artist, no friendship, no love, no thought, just occurrence one arrangement of particles followed by another. Indeed if all possible arrangements of particles or whatever the smallest thing was were laid out before you all possible existences could be had by merely arranging them in different orders… dominoes again, or maybe scrabble. If you arrange letters on a scrabble board in every possible combination you will be able to arrange a selection of the various completed boards into the works of Shakespeare. See, the bard didn’t write them plays, they just happened. If this is so I don’t paint my paintings, they just occur, indeed there is no “me” to paint them.

So that’s number one on my “things the answer to everything has to have”- volition. Because without that I do not exist. Now it seems to me, as it did to Descartes, that I am. So if some theory of existence comes along that precludes it then I must say, no thank you… but here is the the kicker: there is no sensible proposed description of existence that I have found, either religious, philosophical or scientific that appears to allow free will. Still strong enough for some art? I hope so, just don’t blame me for them, they just occurred! Some pictures can be clicked for larger versions, drawings mostly not.

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Henley on Thames, Surrey, Oil painting, rob adams, river, barge

I think this is the best attempt so far at a degree of finish that catches a little of the plein air manner whilst still being a studio painting. It really makes a difference having done several paintings of the same area both plein air and studio as you start to develop a shorthand for the subject.

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St Pauls, Thames, River ,London, city, oil painting, plein air, Rob Adams

We have been having the most beautiful light during this October Indian summer. I had to do this very briskly but spent the first 20 min making sure I had the drawing as I wanted. I am getting a bit better at my descriptive mark making in oils, which make breaking a complicated subject like this into unified painting.

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London Eye, Thames, Hungerford Bridge, Plein air oil painting, Rob Adams

A very quick sketch later the same day. The contre jour lighting made the spread of tones very simple, just a collection of flat shapes really. It was a nervous moment putting in the London Eye as I wanted it sketchy but accurate.

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River, Thames, St Pauls, ships, London, River, Plein air, Rob adams

This one took a couple of visits. Painted from Southwark Bridge. Though not the busiest of London’s bridges it still is unpleasant with the traffic behind you. I made the boats on the left too detailed, I might well simplify the area when it is dry. The second visit was just to finish the water which I was unhappy with in the first version. I need another scan as well this one is a bit ropey!

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Life drawing, nude

A few life drawings. This model was very statuesque I would have loved to sculpt this pose.

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Life drawing

I am trying to express the outline by the counterchanges in tone with the background rather than too many lines.

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Life Drawing, figure

This sort of standing straight at you pose is very difficult, didn’t quite get around to getting her feet grounded properly.

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Life drawing, figure

Another thing I am trying to do is not try and get the whole figure in… I almost fit the figure to the page by habit but often it is better to let the figure be cropped by the page.

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Life Drawing

A few quick 6min sketches, often the best things of the evening.

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Life drawing, figure

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Life Drawing, figure

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Life drawing, figure

A longer one, this model is a dancer and is just wonderful to draw. Every pose she takes up has great poise and elegance.

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Life drawing, figure, watercolour

Scary stuff doing watercolours from life. The half an hour duration of the pose means that drying is a big problem. Two colours, venetian red and ultramarine. I find that’s all you need, more would make it harder for no real gain.

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Life drawing, figure, watercolour

Same colours but letting the blues predominate.

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Life drawing, figure, watercolour

Spent about 20 minutes on this, then I had an idea of how to tackle the pose better.

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Life, drawing, figure, watercolour

I saw that I could exaggerate the lighting to good effect but only had 10 mins so I had to be very broad, but still the best of the session.

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