Rob Adams a Painter's Blog painter's progress

March 13, 2013

Some studio paintings, and William Turnbull.

Filed under: Art History,Drawing,London,Painting,Uncategorized — Tags: , , , , , , , — Rob Adams @ 5:23 pm

I shall have to make efforts not to rant here. Arts documentaries nearly always get my goat. One on William Turnbull had me foaming at the mouth even more than usual. It was in the standard format lingering shots drifting over the art with evocative music setting the mood. Then series of talking heads with all the usual suspects saying how golly gosh darn good he was. It was more of a eulogy than a documentary. The man himself drivelled on about how he came from working class roots and name checked the artists he met in Paris. All of which desperately ignored the fact that his work was to a large degree boring and derivative of other artists who’s work he struggled to make arid emulations of. His early spindly Giacometti phase was especially risible. The fragments of badly made Paolozzi were a giggle too.
He did in essence do everything that was needed to fit in with his contemporaries. The art establishment loved him for it and apparently still does. All the words were wheeled out: magisterial, towering, ageless, absolute integrity etc. Other artists etc popped up and made a quick curtsey, Anthony Gormley, the supremely irritating establishment flunky Matthew Collings and finally the sainted Serota himself. Meanwhile on the screen there were dodgy knock offs of Barnett Newmans with added splodges of colour in one of the fields that looked as if he had thrown a brush at the thing in despair.
What infuriated me most was the ritual genuflection to “drawing”. There was a shot which the man himself was shown reverently sorting through his own works of genius. We were quickly reassured that drawing didn’t mean just rendering what might be in front of you, oh no that isn’t drawing. Drawing is a mystical communion with the purest creative spirits, Matthew Collings popped up and told us that drawing from anything in a representational manner was just making a cartoon of the world. He meant cartoon in the Disney meaning of the word not the classical. The genius himself popped up in the early stages and reassured us as to his love of the life room. I’ll put one of his effort below, you had best hold on lest you be blasted from your seat by his raw talent. He apparently worked as a youth for DC Thompson… what as we wonder tea boy?
Turnbull
Well that puts Michelangelo in his place doesn’t it! Would it be unkind to say that it is just as well he stuck to abstraction? We were then patronised by Matthew Collings again, who told us that abstraction was just too “hard” for most people. No Matthew we understand it fine, it’s mostly just a bit dry and boring and rather too easy to do well enough to just about pass muster. Here is one of Matthew’s efforts done with the help of his partner Emma Biggs. They can’t draw or paint, but hey lets not let that hold us back! Anyway he can talk for England which is far more important.
Biggs Collings
Matthew said, “We think about visual ideas — colour and tone, and formal arrangement as a metaphor for the material world.” Emma rules all the lines and mixes the paint while Matthew does the masking and filling in. Well done Emma and Matthew! It will make lovely table cloth.
Back to the mean and moody Turnbull. He had an apparent fondness for having himself photographed in film noir black and white lurking by one of his sculptures. He is a handsome devil no doubt and I’m sure he had all the ladies aquiver in art college. I don’t actually dislike his abstract work. Most of it is inoffensively pleasant. The sculptures are adequately Hepworthy when he does Hepworth and when he does female forms he puts twee little apple like bosoms on them like other sculptors and tribal chaps do. He does a nice line in polite redefinitions of primitive figures in the ancient Mediterranean manner that would look the part in any garden. The paintings are polite scaled down versions of the American abstract expressionists, sadly though they are all better at it than he is.
He died last year at the age of 90 odd, so it is plainly the time for beatification. I’m sure they will succeed Turnbull is supremely innocuous and presses all the right art historical buttons. Indeed he is the epitome, one might almost say a compilation of approved art establishment styles, if he didn’t exist they would have to have invented him, which for most practical purposes it seems to be more or less what they did.
I have just read the reviews in the papers, not one of them does anything much else other than paraphrase the the documentary, the Independent blames the shrubbery at Chatsworth for the out door exhibition of sculptures blending in with them, which seems unfair!

On to more pleasant matters though. I have been trying to get some studio work done. I have been trying a new approach , which is to work on a set of 4 or 5 paintings at a time and maybe reworking old stuff. This means I can work at a painting for an hour or two and then set it aside and do some on another then returning to each a few days later when some drying has taken place. After a bit I have found it is quite an effective way of working. One of the big plus points is that when working away at one you can turn and consider another. Because the cunning old brain is full of the painting to hand you suddenly see yesterday’s one in a new light and a way of improving it leaps to mind. It also seems to help with overworking as you don’t get carried away with less important factors and can keep the bigger picture, as it were, to the fore. So here is the first batch!

City of London, urban, oil painting
This is a reworking or more like a finishing off of a picture painted last year. It is in the City of London near Mansion House. I reworked the tones from left to right so that the flow of light was more unified and generally richer. Below is how it got left for a year nearly. As the picture was dry I could glaze broadly to enrich the colour without effecting the underlying brush work. 24in by 18in Oil on canvas.

Mansion House, oil painting, London, city
The old version looks very palid!

Royal Exchange, London, city, oil painting
This is the Royal Exchange, I have painted this many times. It was based on a very quick plein air done early one morning on the way to a client. The little sketch had a magic I wanted to catch. I decided to alter the mood to winter but other than that I let myself be guided by the sketch. I went up and photographed again and also I had some snaps of traffic and cyclists taken on the day of the sketch. All together quite a lot of information to glue together. 36in by 18in oil on canvas.

Mansion House, London, city, plein air
Here is the wee 5in by 7in sketch. I really tried hard to keep the feel of this.

Charing Cross, station, platform, railway, oil painting
This is Charing Cross station. All from photo ref this one no chance of setting up an easel here! I have done a few of these, there is something fascinating about railway stations both in the rush hour and in quieter moments. Not quite finished but needs to dry before glazing.

Mary Le Strand, London, Strand, oil painting
Another one from a plein air sketch. I am really pleased to be getting some work done from plein air sketches that keeps the mood. It is something that has always seemed to elude me but I seem to have found the beginnings of a way forward. This is Mary Le Strand looking up the Strand towards Charing Cross. 24in by 18in oil on canvas.

mary le strand, london, plein air
Lastly here is the original sketch that is a tiny 5in by 7in painted standing holding my wee pochade.

February 28, 2013

It never Rains but it Pours

I had the vague idea that giving up full time work would cause an increase in leisure activities. Reclining on the sofa, listening to music. Sitting in a cafe in Greenwich and sipping a coffee whilst reading a book. Meals out with friends in restaurants etc. I’m not complaining there has been an occasional bit of that, but a great deal of sitting under an umbrella trying to paint. Also all the stuff you need to do in order to paint. Finding subjects, buying materials, stretching canvasses, framing pictures, priming boards, blogging and building various ingenious plein air gizmos.
The gizmos in this case are a method of painting larger plein airs. Just a modest increase to 20in by 12in. The trouble with pochades is that this means a whole new box. So I decided to make an easel attachment for the tripos and a hook on palette, then team that up with various sized wet panel boxes. I have in mind that I am going to France with the Wapping Group again this year, which means getting the luggage for a holiday and also all the gear needed for painting and then getting the resultant wet paintings home again. In previous years I have ended up with a case entirely filled with painting clutter and only room for one pair of trousers and some underpants/paintrags!
I really have to start painting some more ambitious plein airs, 20in by 16in at least. This is of course going to require more carpentry though I won’t need a carrier that holds more than two panels at that size. I can also paint four 10in by 8ins on such a panel and chop them up after!
I have at last got down to some studio work and have several paintings on the go at the same time. I am a bit uncertain about posting work partly done but I suppose it is of interest. I like seeing work in that state by other artists myself so I suppose I should. This working on canvasses in rotation is very new to me we shall have to see how it goes, with oils though I find “a la Prima” too limiting as I wish to use glazes and such. In the next post hopefully.
Life drawing is another area in need of a revolution. I have got too cosy with the pastels on toned paper. It is too easy to get a beguiling effect without enough substance. In effect you need to do less looking which is on reflection a bad thing. So I am going back to basics, white paper and charcoal. First results are not promising… I’ve put them below for you all to laugh at! One thing I hit straight away was that dealing with the medium needs a new set of technical skills. I have to explore the mysteries of “stumping”, I will report on the hows and how nots once I have got a reasonable handle on the process.
Enough of that I have quite a backlog of pictures to post.

thames, hammersmith, london, oil painting, pleinair

A left over from Hammersmith, I got this mostly blocked in but ran out of time on the bridge when the sun came right into my face. I need to go back and do a bit more on the bridge as the photo ref I finished it off with is not too good so the structure is too fussy.

Westerham, kent, tree, plein air, oil painting

A visit to Westerham in Kent. I couldn’t find anything that took my fancy so I walked a little up the hill. This tree against the light was fun.Not sure about the tree itself, needs simplifying in some way. This is the first outing for a larger size so this is 20in by 12in. The new gizmo worked fine though.

gizmos

Here is my set up. Quite simple a palette box with lid, so that I can leave the paints out and don’t need to clean up between pictures. An easel attachment for the tripod. Out of sight is the 20in by 12in panel box. It’s no lighter than my previous smaller box, the only downside is that the panel box has to be strapped to my pack on the outside as it is too big to go within.

Hogs Trough Hill, plein air, oil painting

This is towards the end of the day on the charmingly named “Hogs Trough Hill”. The light was super, though once I stopped it was very cold! 20in by 12in.

I wos ere

I don’t usually go for those “I wos really there honest !” pictures, but this shows the pack and under the brush roll the panel box.

Westerham Church, drawing

Last Westerham, a quick sketch done while it drizzled on me of Westerham church.

Windsor, thames

I feel I ought to post the misses as well as the hits. This is Windsor from Eton it was a great subject, but I just didn’t catch it… one for the scraper!

Windsor, Thames, Plein air

Another stinker, the light was poor but that is no excuse I just couldn’t seem to see how to make it into a picture, horrid figures too!

Henley upon Thames, river, plein air

Slightly better this one, a very wet day, we were all struggling I think, except Mike Richardson who painted a great one nearer to the town. It just goes to show there are good pictures on any day, it is just spotting them that is hard.

Hartley Winton Church

The last day, these were all done on a visit to Steve Alexander who very kindly hosts “Painting Fests” and puts us all up in his house, so big thanks to both him and his partner Anne! The weather was so dire we painted in a local church, this is Hartley Winton. This was fun but very cold and I should have spent longer on it, but the nearby cozy pub needed visiting.

Henley

Very hard to do this crouched under my brolly with the rain chucking it down… the dappled effect in the sky is from the rain blowing in!

Henley

Henley again, I was about to head home but started this, again it was raining hard, I must be mad!

A few charcoal life drawings and that will have to be all, I have still not caught up, I seem to be painting faster than I can post.

nude

nude

nude

The first charcoal ones, I stuck to hatching but I need to explore stumping etc…

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