Rob Adams a Painter's Blog painter's progress

October 10, 2013

Choosing for Exhibitions

Filed under: London,Painting,Uncategorized,Watercolour — Tags: , , , , , , , , — Rob Adams @ 7:28 pm

There is a rash of open exhibitions to enter in the next few months and I have to decide what to put in. Oddly it is something I dread… I put the ones I think might fit the bill in a row and agonise over which is the most appropriate. This is especially hard for the open exhibitions run by the various societies. The New English will want something different from the ROI and RBA. Some are easier the RSMA want marine subjects so that narrows it down. The New English which is coming up is a difficult one. I start by looking at the members work. This gives you some idea at least. The NEAC fortunately has a decent selection on line to peruse. The work is pretty wide ranging from landscapes to figure work from some well known artists. I try and imagine what of mine would sit well amongst them. I have quite a few life paintings mostly in watercolour so I will try one of them.  Most of my work is cityscape and landscape so the other two have to be drawn from there. There are not many watercolours in the members work so it has to be oils. The trouble here is what I think is a good painting will not necessarily do well when briefly glanced at by a panel… especially at the end of a long day. I have one painting I reckon is interesting and a bit quirky but it is in sombre tones so designed for a close up look. Something that it will likely not get. Also anything in subtle close tones is unlikely to get attention, or indeed in muted colours. Once I have put the pictures that might fit in a row I usually have a crisis of confidence. Pictures get removed from the line and others substituted.

Last year I put in what by my lights were six of my best watercolours from the last year or so into the digital entry for the RI. Not one single one made it through. Yet when I went to the exhibition with the best will in the world I could not see why not. Looking at the successful entries from non members I did my very best to see why the ones chosen had been decided to have merit. Quite a few indeed most I could make a half decent case for, but quite a few others seemingly had few qualities of either skill or expression. This has made me rather suspicious of the digital entry method and I won’t go that route again. I suspect they are skimmed through in a very casual manner. We will see if getting the real thing before the jury has a better result. It is quite hard to write on this subject without sounding like sour grapes, but I have the feeling that the process of selection in some cases is not all it could be, especially on the digital entry.

I have got into the RSMA as I mentioned before, and also into the last 50 for the artist of the year for Artist and Illustrator magazine. This was a bit of a surprise as I put two pictures in a rush at the last minute as I had forgotten the cut off date.

The ROI is another tricky one. I need to put in studio pictures which are a bit thin on the ground this year. The subject matter is represented in the current membership with some good paintings. Is it a disadvantage that mine fit the same genre? I have no idea! The RBA is an odd one much more variety, probably a lower overall standard, but that is hardly surprising as it has a larger membership. Another thing I ponder is whether it is worth joining any of these institutions. Looking at the average age of members in all of them I do wonder how they will survive. It will take three or four years to join any of them at least no matter how good the work. Three years of getting pictures in the open shows is a requirement for most, which I would feel is a pretty poor guide as to a painter is good or not. So by the time I could apply I would be quite ancient myself! I do wonder why they are seemingly not proactive in seeking out talented artists to join. There are very many excellent painters who are not a member of any of these institutions which would perhaps not have been the case a 100 years ago.

They are sadly the very last remnants of organisations for skill based painting and even they are under attack from the Serota tendency. Year by year the level of excellence falls, no more is this true in watercolour where the RWS is quite happy to exhibit random splashes and the once very grand Royal Institute that had its own huge building in Piccadilly, is missing many of the really good practitioners from its ranks. Not that both organisations don’t have some very fine painters, but you would think they would be a bit more keen on getting an overall higher standard of membership. The days are gone when painters were desperate to get membership and those letters after your name really meant something. They do not even seem to do much of a job in promoting their craft. I hope I am wrong but I fear it is inevitable that they will fade away as their relevance decreases. It is such a pity as observational skill based painting has never needed organisations to bat on their side more.

Well hot off the press all my paintings for the New English Art Club were rejected, which means I got it wrong yet again. I will try the ROI and the RI, but if no luck I may give up on the Mall shows as they are not, I am starting to feel, really worth the bother. I was told by others that they were somewhat of a lottery, but didn’t altogether believe it. I suspect they were right and I have been wasting time and effort better spent else where. It is such a pity that it is almost impossible to find venues to show your work other than online. With all paintings the online image is quite poor compared to the real thing so only a part of what you strive for is ever seen. My own fault of course for being wedded to a moribund area of an almost dead art!

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Green Park, Brass Monkeys, plein air, oil painting, Buckingham Palace

Brass Monkey season is with us again. Our first outing to Green Park. The forecast was poor but as so often happens the actual day was very paintable.

I loved the wet paths and the soft light. There was a constant stream of people crossing the park to work, too early for the tourists. 10in by 16in. Oils.

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Green Park, Plein air, London, Brass Monkeys, oil painting

A very quick sketch I love this corner of Green Park but not quite found the composition I want. This is nearer but in the evening the light should be better

lighting up the famous Ritz Hotel. 8in by 10in Oils.

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Shepherd Market, London, Plein air, Brass Monkeys

Last one, this is Shepherd Market. Quite a quick sketch so rather crude but I think there is a studio picture here somewhere.

14in by 10in Oils.

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Deptford, London, Watercolour, Painting, Brookmill Rd

I’ve painted this view in Deptford quite a few times as it is right outside my door which makes it easier to catch in good light. It is a very ordinary road

but has a way of looking totally different depending on the day. I love the changing human activity as well. This is very early in the morning. It’s great to

do a few studio watercolours as the studio process of thinking things through makes effects possible that would be very hard en plein air.

1/2 Sheet Arches Rough.

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Carlton House terrace, London, watercolour

Here is a plein air for comparison. What you loose in control you often gain in freshness. The other price is that plein air

produces a much higher proportion of waste paper! This one was a bit of a struggle as the paper would not dry then the sun

unexpectedly came full out and changed the scene so much I had to stop. I was mostly done so only 5min tinkering got it

finished. It is Carlton House Terrace near the back of the Mall Galleries.

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Mall, watercolour, London, motorbike, st james Park

Another studio painting, I risked my life to get the photo as the traffic accelerates like the beginning of a motor race when the lights change! Quite wide

as I am using paper off a roll at present. Sooner or later I must try some seriously big paintings… This is the Mall of course, so all the paintings have a

Mayfair feeling in this post. 8in by 19in Watercolour on Arches rough.

October 1, 2013

Imagination and Some Reflections on Reflections

Imagination is something I use differently nowadays. In the past much of my work was derived from my imagination. For work I had to paint things that either didn’t yet exit, had never existed or didn’t exist anymore. Painting from life however doesn’t require the subject matter to be conjured up from the imagination. There it is in front of you every detail in place. So much so indeed that I spend most of my mental effort winnowing out the important bits from the mass of information that the world presents me. Imagining stuff away is one way to think of it I suppose.

I do wonder though if I have rather gone too far down the road of the literal. I don’t want anymore to paint things that are implausible but that does not necessarily mean I need to paint the world just as it presents itself to me. I feel I need to perhaps adjust the way I evaluate scenes. I need a bit more “That scene would be great if…” and if an idea presents itself there is no real reason why I shouldn’t act on it. I was in Jermyn St a few week ago and it rained making the scene very beautiful with the wet street bringing the sky tones down into the road and pavement surfaces. Alas I had no camera with me. A few days later I had to visit it again and the light was very much the same but it was dry. The rain made all the difference though and Jermyn on a grey day with no rain didn’t inspire me. I took photos nonetheless and am considering making the street wet using imagination rather than observation. Part of me though says this would be untrue to the scene.

There is I suppose a question of degree here. I quite often see people paint a scene on a grey day as if it is sunny. Indeed some painters seem to always paint the same day whatever the real meteorological conditions are. This doesn’t mean to say the paintings aren’t nice enough it just causes me to be a little puzzled. However I think in Jermyn St case there is a decent reason to re-imagine the scene, after all I did see a possible painting on the wet day. I cannot however claim to have enough of a photographic memory to recall exactly how it was. So I am left with either waiting for a wet day and returning or just imagining the rain.

As I am keen to get on with this one I will have to go about this somewhat as I would do for an entirely imagined illustration. I will get reference of other wet days on different streets and work out what the reflections would do. It is actually quite easy to work out where reflections will fall. Below is Jermyn St sans reflections.

This is typical of how I plan a studio picture. I have arranged the figures etc and blocked out all the salient information without getting into any real detail. I have also shifted stuff around a bit to reinforce the diagonals as the composition is almost square. I now need to rough out my reflections. As a general rule anything reflected is mirrored about a line where it touches the ground plane. There’s a sentence to make you think! Below is that simple rule carried out.

Take a moment to see what is going on here. The red indicates the lines about which things are mirrored. So Our nearby couple are flipped vertically about their feet. As are the next two figures. You can also see the line I have flipped the post box about. The car is parked level with the tree so I have flipped both the tree and the car about the same line. This tells me where the dark reflection of the tree will fall in the road. Obviously because all the surfaces are rough not like glass none of these reflections will be perfect which gives me quite a bit of leeway. I will also stretch the reflections a little further down as it is a rule that the rougher the surface the further the reflections will stretch down. This is especially true with water so I will do another little sketch to show why this is so.

Here we have a simple scene with a maritime flavour. A fishing boat on a day where the sea has gentle swell and our painter on the shore. If you follow the blue line you can see that close to the boat a fair bit of the wave will reflect the boat and only a small part of the sky. So that near to the boat the reflection will be pretty solid with only thin slithers of sky. If you follow the red line however you should be able to see that less of the wave will reflect the boat making the reflection a slither of dark in mostly bright reflected sky and also that you can still catch glimpses of reflected boat quite close to the shore. This is what stretches the reflection down, it is also what causes the reflection to fade out as the chances of a bit of ship appearing in the reflection diminish. Above I have scribbled a rough idea of the result.

As an aside you often see a bright streak cut through the reflection, this is where the wind has ruffled the water so that small ripples cross the larger waves at an angle. These ripples reflect mostly sky with only a very small line of boat so they appear bright in comparison. If the sun is say of to the right they might catch the direct rays of the sun and appear considerably brighter than the surrounding sea.

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Jermyn St, Mayfair, London, Oil painting, rain

Here is the Jermyn St painting mostly done. I shall leave it to consider for a week or two before glazing here or there to either knock back or strengthen. I

always seem to need that time to give emotional distance with studio paintings. 20in by 20in oils.

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Bugsbys Reach, London, Thames, O2 Dome, Plein air

This is the wonderfully named Bugsbys Reach near Greenwich. A blustery and changeable day with the Wapping Group. When the light is changing rapidly

oils is far easier than watercolour, you can dash in the the sudden shafts of light on the water when they occur. Any plein air is really an impression of a

period of time not just the snapshot of one single moment. 10in by 16in oils.

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Thames Barrier, London, plein air, oil painting

Next I went further East and panted the Thames Barrier, a very hard bit of drawing I wish I had had a wider board. Not one to frame but good practice.

It was very windy for the last half hour forcing me to paint with one hand steadying the pochade. 10in by 12in oils.

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St Martins Lane, London, watercolour, plein airAn experiment using white acrylic and watercolour. I deliberately laid in the washes too strongly as I intended to add lights after. The acrylic is better

I find than gouache as it gives cleaner whites. Also you can overlay washes to tint it. I was careful to use a cheap sable for that bit of the work as acrylic

is death to brushes! Most of it is plein air but I reworked the figures a fair bit. All in all a good way of painting city subjects as they can be too much for pure

watercolour making it slow and so you can miss the passing light. A small pot of premixed acrylic adds nothing to the weight of my kit. I pre mix it to the

consistency I like and put it in a screw top jar, I also put a ball bearing in so it will mix when shaken. It is of course St Martins Lane, 1/4 sheet.

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newport, pembrokeshire, wales, boats, sea, watercolour

This is Newport in Pembrokeshire. An exercise in keeping those washes clean! I had to be very careful to keep the tones close and subtle.

1/4 sheet watercolour.

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Isleworth, thames, watercolour, plein air, river

The last meeting of the season for the Wapping Group. This is a hazy morning on the Thames at Isleworth. The haze stayed most of the day which made

the light really interesting and allowed for quite leisurely working. 1/4 sheet watercolour.

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Isleworth, Karl Terry, Derek Daniells, Rowan Crew

Here’s a picture of them hard at work. Near to far Karl Terry, Rowan Crew and thinking about starting Derek Daniells.

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Isleworth, the london apprentice, thames, watercolour, plein air, wapping group

The tide was far down allowing us to sally forth onto the fore shore. This allows some great perspectives on the buildings on the bank. The pub is

The London Apprentice at Isleworth. 1/4 sheet watercolour.

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Isleworth, thames, watercolour, plein air

Last one. Done in my Moleskin as the light faded. To finish the day we went into the pub for the traditional Wapping Group end of season meal of whitebait.

Not for some but I rather like it. Very pleasant to end the day with food, beer and banter!

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