Rob Adams a Painter's Blog painter's progress

August 29, 2010

London painting in the city

Filed under: Drawing,London,Painting — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , — Rob Adams @ 5:28 pm

Well a busy week or so. I have been concentrating on the beginnings of a few urban paintings, one of which I much to my surprise completed. When I was working out in the west of London a few years ago one of the quickest ways to travel meant cutting through the City of London in order to change from overground to underground. At a certain time of year in the winter the commuters are arriving as the dawn breaks, which makes for some wonderfully dramatic moments with the low light glancing down the streets and picking out the grand buildings and glinting on the busy traffic. I have snatched a fair few photos over time which I want to combine to catch the early morning mood.

Earlier in the week I had the honour of being a guest to paint with the Wapping Group of painters, who since the 1940’s have painted the Thames and surrounds. Many very fine artists have painted with the group over the years the present members being no exception. (I have added their web page to my links section on the right) As luck would have it the weather was merciless raining steadily from a mostly flat grey sky for most of the day. But the members sallied forth none the less to paint whatever the day had to offer. I did a quick oil before the weather totally closed in, and a couple of sketches. After painting we all took refuge in the pub to recover, it was a great pleasure to go out with them, painting is often a solitary business and it was a great pleasure to go out and paint the river in like minded company.

Firstly though my street scene painted in my nice dry studio!

city, london, oil, painting, urban

I had great fun painting this, it is made up of quite a few references shot at different times combined with a few figures I had sketched or snapped. You can see from the image it is still very wet, but I was pleased to have got the most out of the range of tones to suggest the morning light on the buildings. The hardest bit was finding traffic that fit the bill and I ended up going up to town to take more pictures. I don’t often use black but here I have on the nearest figures to bring them forward. I put a fair amount of time into arranging the composition to bring the eye eventually to the main figure. It is the the people that give the city it’s vibrancy, but also I wished to catch the almost contemplative feeling that is often present as people make their way to work.

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tower, bridge, london, thames, city, drawing

On my day out with the Wapping group I arrived a little early to see what was on offer as far as the scenery went. The group was meeting in Wapping itself which I hadn’t visited for quite a while. There are still a fair few interesting bits left not swallowed up in ghastly riverside flats. While waiting I did this quick sketch of Tower Bridge, though I won’t paint it, there are probably enough paintings of this iconic scene in the world already. The light was very flat and dull, but I was to find this was to be the best of the day!

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Thames, London, river, oils, plein, air

After meeting up with the group we sallied forth into the wet. I set up looking into the light at the mooring that lies in the river just east of Tower Bridge. Painting was distinctly tricky with the need to hold my umbrella over all to keep out the rain, unfortunately with the wind I could either protect the job in hand or myself so I was left with the water trickling down my neck. Even so it was an engrossing subject and I was soon lost in the process The wind had got up so the quick flowing water was ruffled by the wind which I felt made a great partner for the grey ragged clouds being chased across the sky. One brush was lost to the river, knocked in as I juggled palette, brushes, paints and umbrella, it was with a certain amount of relief I returned to the pub to imbibe whisky fortified coffee.

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Wapping, London, Thames, drawing

Various members of differing degrees of dampness trickled in and sketched each other whilst bemoaning the rain. I did venture forth again, but the the painting this time was not a success alas, a fine day out despite it all though and I hope to join the group again for an expedition later in the year.

August 1, 2010

Portraits

Filed under: Drawing,Painting,Portraits,Uncategorized — Tags: , , , , — Rob Adams @ 3:15 pm

Well here we go, portraits. One of my favourite subjects for paintings in the work of others. I love the humorous and often wry series of self portraits by Rembrandt, the touching family paintings by Rubens. Others I enjoy are the wonderful bravura brushwork of Hals, Sargent or Zorn. The portrait is still with us the BP award happens every year, but most paintings have some stylish quirk that serves the painter rather than the subject, others are plainly from photos taken on a wide angle and too close, but the judges are too poorly educated in the nature of seeing to spot them, (I don’t give a damn about using a photo but use a good one for heavens sake.) in amongst all however there are some lovely things on show. Just one fine sincere painting in a show makes the whole thing worthwhile.

What is it this thing a portrait? There is a difference you see between a study and portrait, in a study you seek the form, but in the portrait you seek the person. Of all sorts of painting I think portraiture is the hardest, the most freighted with the possibility of failure. Skill and dexterity are all for naught if the feeling of a thinking being is absent. Indeed the more perfect your rendering the more lifeless it is likely to become. The paint must allow room for the moment to moment interpretation of the marks on offer, in a similar way as the perception of a real person is made up of quicksilver reinterpretations of the person before us. We may see perfection as say in a Vermeer portrait but look closely and you see softening of edges diminution of detail in the shadows etc that gives the space for mystery to breath.

No wonder the prospect of attempting such alchemy is an unsettling idea. Once started however I find them exhilarating and frustrating in equal degree. The tiniest alteration around the eyes can transform the result entirely, but perfect accurate copying of the same feature will lack life. The only way I ever get the result I seek is to paint and if failure results, scrape out or obliterate and start again, for freshness is of great importance it has to look as if it “just happened” as indeed people do. I’ll post a few below I’ve done over the years, some better than others my hit rate of even partial success is very low in this area I fear. Not that I need be shamed by that, a quick image Google for oil portrait brings up very few arresting images. Even if you discount the badly drawn the success rate is very low. Even Sir Peter Lely a hugely successful portraitist in his day painted very few mugshots worth a second glance. Frans Hals though the author of some of the most masterly examples of the genre is hugely variable in quality.

I am much attracted by the wizardry of Sargent, who has an almost pre-natural mastery of his medium, but such bravura work required him to paint every part in one wet into wet pass, so although it looks as if he dashed a portrait off in a moment of casual brilliance he actually often scraped out and repainted a head many times before being satisfied, with his work requiring many sittings. Though I love his sheer brilliance, it rarely digs deeper than the surface gloss and glow of a living thing. His wonderful landscapes and “holiday” paintings which, though many people don’t realise it, make up the bulk of his work are sadly barely known.

Rembrandt is another matter, he works over and over, building up the image with all the searching and seeking on display, he displays (especially in later life) little certainty, but a huge degree of sympathy which I feel elevates his portraits above any others I have seen.

Rubens too, his paintings and drawings of his wife and children are an incredible display of pride and tenderness.

Photographic portraits are now the norm but ones that catch a revealing moment are very few and far between and never I feel reach quite the heights that a painted work can do… but then I am biased.

You note I don’t put any illustrative images from the artists mentioned above. Well how could I? My poor offerings would be swamped and have no room to show whatever small charms they might possess in such company.

painting monk oil

This is a painting from the late 80’s. It was done as a prop in a photograph and was my first attempt at a portrait other than drawings, it was later used as a book jacket. I remember struggling mightily to get it to work almost giving up in frustration a few times.

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self portrait painting

A self portrait painted not long after in the early 90’s I would guess from the long locks. I painted three or four of these as I recall painting them one after the other spending about an hour on each, this is the best of the two survivors. It was an improvement I feel with lighter handling, but really only a sketch.

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portrait painting

This is the first portrait from life where I did drawings and photos in preparation. I had been struck by how beautiful my friend Jane looked with the light streaming through her window. Her flat was on the third floor and a large tree grew outside through which the light was filtered. Being very shy it took me some while to pluck up courage to ask her to pose.

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Self portrait painting oil

There is always one person willing to pose and that’s yourself. I only had a small shaving mirror which I perched on my easel next to my painting. I did several in a row with different expressions, this is one of the only ones that does not look like an entry into a gurning competition.

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Sofa portrait papers

Jane again, quite a few years on from the previous one, I fed her so much dinner she had to retire to the sofa. I was struck by the black of her clothes and the richness of the cushions against the blandness of the rest of the room. I don’t think it took more than an hour.

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Portrait painting

My good friend Richard had just bought a new camera, and I took this snap while we were testing it. Afterwards I was struck by the composition and felt it would make a painting. I tried to focus the whole thing by controlling the handling of the paint from broad strokes to finer but retaining as free a quality of mark as I could manage.

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Portrait self painting

A final one I thought I should do another self portrait. It’s an odd thing but doing a self portrait is more like painting a stranger than a friend, also there is no pressure to flatter!

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