Rob Adams a Painter's Blog painter's progress

October 23, 2012

Sunshine and Showers in Surrey and Berks

Filed under: Drawing,Painting,Surrey,Thames — Rob Adams @ 11:22 am

Plein air is an odd occupation. You go out loaded down with equipment and weather gear, then you try and paint whatever happens to be about. When you set off the world is, in your imagination, full of fantastic pictures just waiting to be painted. Arriving at your venue however can bring about a rather abrupt and vertiginous descent to earth. The picturesque church you had in mind is a flat grey wall bracketed by almost black ewe trees. The whole lot is roofed with a completely featureless dull grey sky. It is just after dawn and the only sounds are the drips of the rain and the squirrels sniggering at you from their nice warm drays. You circle your victim, trying not to stamp over too many of the deceased, searching for a distinctive view, or any view for that matter. The light is so flat that every side of every object is lit exactly the same. After several futile circuits, punctuated by listlessly framing possible compositions with your fingers, you slowly set up your tripod and pochade in the furthest possible corner of the churchyard and fix a blank primed board in place.

Next is drawing the salient details out. The light is not a problem here so you get the thing sketched out with everything placed more or less as it appears before you. While you do this the sky grows a little greyer and the rain fall a little faster. Your subject looks not a bit better, but after a short spell of ritual squinting you start to mix up the tones and lay them in. Thinking about whether the thing will be worth the effort can be put off a little longer as you block in the approximate tones. While you work you try not to notice that your palette is completely covered in funereal greys.

With the last of the prime covered you can step back and consider the crime. At this point I usually get a strong urge to wipe the damn thing off and go for a “full English” in the nearest greasy spoon. The day chooses this moment to give you a glimmer of watery sunshine, and your subject lifts from the suicidal to the merely depressing. Time for a deep breath and fixing the moment of illumination in your mind’s eye you  put in a few optimistic lighter tones. While you wait for the light to come back you get the next layer of greys in defining the few shapes you can discern in the gloom.

With most of the work done you retreat again and with an act of will attempt to look optimistically at the masterpiece you have wrought. This is perhaps the hardest part of the process of painting. Putting your imagination into gear you try and imagine what would make the picture work as an image away from where you painted it. Does it need a figure? A relative visiting a loved ones grave might add pathos and suit the gloomy day… a hanglider caught on the church tower would add drama. There is no getting round, it desperation is setting in. To make things worse an early morning dog walker appears and asks politely if they may look at what you have done. You hope they will see something in it that you don’t, but they look for a long silent moment plainly wracking their brains for a comment that doesn’t include the word “depressing”. “That’s nice…” they manage at last and hastily move on after a brief complaint about the prevailing meteorological conditions.

Then the light suddenly returns. Ignoring the hosannas that the circling cherubim are singing you leap into panicked action and start whacking in the effect before it goes. Madly dipping into colours that have so far been unneeded as they were not grey. After a few brief minutes the glimmer is gone, the cherubim silenced and the drama over. You couldn’t care a brass penny for that though, your turgid study in abysmal greys is transformed. With fewer brushstrokes than could be numbered on both hands and the contents of a couple of boots your picture has gained an identity, distinctive atmosphere and a sense of place. All those greys you hated so much have become a subtle foil that set off your touches of restrained colour. There is no need for solitary mourners or indeed dangling gliders. Your painting isn’t the triumph you were optimistically dreaming of as you drove through London in the dark, but neither is it a cause to chop off your ear and TNT it to a female friend.

I hope this encourages some readers to try getting out there and try painting “en plein air”. All painting is a bit of an emotional roller coaster and painting out of doors is especially fraught with the possibility of disappointment. In my opinion though the lows only serve to make the moments of achievement feel the sweeter. It is at the very least a harmless brand of masochism that leaves you mostly undamaged and cheerfully scoffing your breakfast as quickly as you can, so as to get out there again as quickly as possible!

This (I hope you realise tongue in cheek) account was prompted by a kind invitation by Steven Alexander to spend a few days painting in Surrey with a few of the Wapping Group. The weather teased us with sunny spells and showers garnished with steady drizzle, but nonetheless at the end of the day the table was filled with paintings all pulled kicking and screaming from the surrounding area. A special thank you goes to his partner Anne who had to put up with soggy plein air painters, who at a distance are hard to distinguish from itinerants,  cluttering up her house. Here’s the results, perhaps not any call for hosannahs but a few winners amongst the also rans.

 

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Bray, Surrey, Plein air, oils painting, church, graveyard

This is St Michaels Church at Bray which is in Berkshire. I had to be very careful not to overstate the lights. There are still a few that I will probably

knock back once it is dry. A few areas of sky will need a spring clean as well. 16in by 10in.

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Bray, plein air, oils, painting

These are some alms houses again in Bray. I need to sort out the traffic but this was interesting against the light. 14in by 10in oil.

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Bray, lock, barge, thames, plein air, oils, painting

This is painted from Bray lock. Nothing took my fancy at first but this old canal barge passed through the lock and I though it made a picture. I painted

the basic scene and did the barge later. 16in 10in oil.

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Windsor, castle, plein air, landscape, painting, oils

I joined Derek Daniells, Michael Richardson and Steven Alexander as the day was ending and we all stood in a row and painted Windsor castle in the

distance. I don’t often do the “telephoto” thing, but here there was no choice. Only about 35min with a big brush but great fun to do. 16in by 10in oils.

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Mapledurham, berkshire, stately home, plein air, painting, oils

This was a trial to paint. The weather had delivered a fine persistent  drizzle that the lightest breeze would blow on to your palette. I got this all blocked

with the beginnings of some detail but my paint was turning to mayonnaise and wouldn’t take on the board so I had to stop. Great subject though, it is

Mapledurham in West Berkshire, I hope to return on a better day! 16in by 10 in oils.

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Mapledurham, berkshire, rain, field, plein air

Painted crouched under a brolley near the previous scene. I could only manage about 20min before it started to rain so much the trees vanished entirely

leaving only a couple of furrows to paint! The others were getting soggy in a nearby wood. 12in by 10in.

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Yateley, Surrey, Field, plein air, oils, painting

This was a lovely scene and should have made a good sketch, but somehow I the rabbit stayed well and truly in the hat. I feel it only fair to post the misses

as well as the near hits here, as it is I hope educational in showing how to mess up a perfectly good subject. My error here was getting fixated on the field

which was a fascinating mixture of dew reflecting the sky and tracks made by animals and dog walkers. But in focussing on a detail I missed the whole.

Adding walkers was an act of desperation at the very end! It is near Pirbright in Surrey. 14in by 10in oils.

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Mike Richardson, fence, plein air, surrey

I despondently went to share my disappointment with Mike Richardson who was painting nearby, but no sympathy was forthcoming so I

painted him as a form of revenge! Only a very quick sketch but miles better than the previous effort. 10in by 14in oils.

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Here we are in a soggy field! Photo Steve Alexander.

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Yateley, Surrey, Autumn, plein air, trees, fall, oils, painting

I came across this little scene after an abortive start on another. I had been intending to try and paint some autumn colour and this fitted the bill.

It is Pirbright in Surrey again. 14in by 10in oils.

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Windsor, guildhall, town, street, plein air, oils, painting

This is Windsor guildhall Another monumentally grey day and I started this without much hope. I got all the architecture in before the rain started. I

was painting in a very exposed spot where I became entertainment for damp tourists! Once I had put in people and cars however it took on a life of its

own and in its way it is more interesting than the same view on a sunny day might be. Some of the hall itself needs softening I feel. 16in by 10in oils.

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Sketch, watercolour

Finally a few sketches done with waterpens in my wee sketchbook. This is a rather damp Mike Richardson painting in a wood!

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Another from Pirbright. I am starting to really like the waterpens as a sketch medium this took no longer than 10 minutes.

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Windsor, guildhall, sketch, watercolour, drawing

Last one, this is the Guildhall in Windsor again. Altogether a great few days painting, a big thankyou to Steven Alexander for organising it and asking

me along.

September 14, 2012

A Light in the City and a Visit to Dorset

Filed under: Dorset,London,Painting,Thames,Watercolour — Rob Adams @ 1:29 pm

I have been experimenting with set ups for painting in the City. So often the spot and time you want to paint are incompatible with setting up an easel or crouching on a stool. To this end I have rigged a photographic monopod to hold my watercolours. This has to be supported with a belt around my waist so that the thing won’t fall over if I let go for a moment. I have to say although it worked quite well I felt a bit of a nurk strapped to this gizmo in full public view. Also once started you have to finish without stepping away; which is rather uncomfortable and not much appreciated by my back. I had also considered a “match sellers” tray but the straps are too much in the way of painting. At the moment I am considering grafting some fold out legs to the monopod from a small tripod. Worth the bother I think because I was really pleased with some of the pictures that I got done with the set up. The other option I am considering is a completely hand held solution but that inevitably means compromise on the sizes of picture you can paint. I would like to be able to paint up to a 1/4 sheet but that won’t be possible without some kind of physical support. The current model is illustrated below for the plein air nerds.

plein air

 

Off on my travels again. Some good friends invited me to Dorset for a few days. I left the oils behind as they are a risk to other people’s soft furnishings. You never know when a wayward blob of Cadmium Red will transfer itself to your trousers and thence to the white sofa… Oddly I find Dorset quite a difficult painting destination. The place is just too picturesque. It can seem like a constant run of unfeasibly beautiful villages full of quaint thatched cottages, timbers bowed by the weight of burgeoning hanging baskets. Each hamlet loiters in an artless higgle-piggle by swan choked rivers and streams,  separated from each other by leagues of sun dappled horse strewn lanes. You would only have to replace the ranks of 4 by 4’s with a few tastefully placed haywains and garnish the road with some smock clad yokels and we would be back in a sanitised flower bedecked version of the 17th century. I enjoy all this to look at and wander through but I have difficulty finding paintings in amongst so much paintability. I think this maybe because they don’t give many hints as to the lives lived there, not to a passerby at least.

I’m sure if you lived there then all sorts of paintable moments would present themselves; but the chances of you driving up at the right moment are pretty slim. That said I am not much of a fan of the self-consciously  gritty either. I prefer an un-preposessing cityscape transformed into a revealed beauty by a moment of light to the same scene done in a way to accentuate the grimness. I’m not that keen on either Helen Allingham or L S Lowry, though I can see why others like them. So I have not sat down to many village pictures but fortunately there is much else on offer. A beautiful craggy coastline and arching chalk downs looking down on those verdant village infested valleys. Better still atop the downs lie remains and signs of earlier ages, ring forts and tumuli now only populated by the wind, grass and the occasional waterproof enswathed National Trust member. The famous ones such as Stonehenge and Silbury Hill are busy with tourists, but there are others where you can wander alone. I don’t know why these places engage me, it is easy to fantasise about all the lives lived there in ancient times giving them some mystical charge, but I don’t think that is really the case. For me it is more that you feel mankind’s history stretched out behind you in a great tide, of which you are for a brief moment the leading edge.

Whatever the emotional charge, they are fiendishly difficult to paint. Concentric rings of earth banks up to half a mile or more round do not conveniently present themselves into satisfactory paintable compositions. If you want to catch anything of the feeling of place, just painting what you see won’t really do. At most of them you cannot get any viewpoints that do more than just hint at the overall structure.

My own approach so far is to rearrange the scene before me into a slightly more descriptive layout. I don’t add anything that is not there, but I am trying to put into the scene some of the information I have gleaned by walking around the place. This is something I am doing more and more with all types of subject. In earlier times I was always rather literal and almost never adjusted reality for pictorial reasons, but even though I am accentuating and altering placements I don’t want it to be too obviously expressive. Van Gogh making his buildings writhe in sympathy with the cypresses would for me be a step too far. In the plein airs I have been quite tentative but I might see how far I can go with that approach with a few studio paintings on my return.

I slightly recanted on my pledge not to do any pretty villages…  the last of the morning mist unexpectedly hanging on in a Stourpaine backwater lured me in (it was hanging basket free which no doubt caused me to succumb) . This underlined my ever growing feeling that sitting down in front of a so, so subject will very, very rarely result in a decent painting. As an artist you just have to put yourself in the way of a possible good subject by getting out there when the light or atmospheric conditions bode well. After doing that all you can do is hope for good luck. First pictures from my monopod adventures…

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London, city, watercolour, royal exchange

Here we are very early looking at the Royal Exchange in the City of London. This was painted standing on a tiny strip of pavement behind the tube entrance.

Not used by pedestrians I could stand and paint but had to duck back every time a bus went by too close. 7in by 5in.

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London, plein air, cannon st, watercolour

The same day on my way home in the evening. This is Cannon St looking towards St Pauls. 7in by 5in.

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London, cannon st, watercolour, plein air

Next day, this is Cannon St again but this time looking the other way. Slightly bigger at 10in by 7in this was before the main rush in the morning. Even

with my new set up this would have been impossible an hour later.

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Acton, Bromyard Avenue, the Vale, London, plein air

This is Bromyard Avenue in Acton. Not done on the monopod as a wheelie bin was conveniently positioned! 7in by 5in

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Thames, London, river, Hungerford bridge, plein air

This is the Thames from Hungerford Bridge. 10in by 7in again. I snapped the river bus with my iPad and then drew it out referring to the screen. I might

have to weaken an get an iPhone as the iPad is a bit big and slippery and I am bound to eventually drop it.

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Winchester, watercolour, plein air

This is Winchester in a quiet corner behind the cathedral. 7in by 5in.

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Figsbury ring, Wiltshire, watercolour

This is Figsbury Ring in Wiltshire, a late bronze age to iron age site. A certain amount of imaginative rearrangement was needed to make the structure

more clear. Unusually for such constructions it had an inner ditch as well as the usual external ring. 7in by 5in.

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Worbarrow bay, dorset, sea boats, watercolour, plein air

This is Worbarrow bay on the Dorset coast. Very interesting light very hard to catch in paint, there was a sort of milky glow to everything. I will add a

bit more activity on the beach if I get a moment. 10in by 7in.

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Dorset, watercolour plein air

A misty morning near Tarrant Gunville in Dorset. 7in by 5in.

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Badbury, fort, dorset,plein air watercolour

Badbury Rings. Very neutral light again a fair bit of imagination was needed to try and make it into any sort of picture. It is an Iron Age hill fort 800BC.

I regret the dog walker, the distant figures were better by themselves. I am going to attempt a studio hill fort picture to try and get over the feeling of the

places. 10in by 7in.

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Kingston Lacy, dorset, house, mansion, watercolour, plein air

This is the grand house of Kingston Lacy. I will try and spend a whole day here painting some day in the future. I did this too small, I should have used

my larger 14in by 10 in pad as I rather lost the delicacy of the house. As my friend Richard and I were leaving in search of sustenance the light improved

and I got a photo that will make a very good studio picture I hope. 10in by 7in.

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Fontmell Down, dorset, watercolour, plein air

This is Fontmell Down in Dorset. The only 14in by 10 in painting I managed. Very blustery and showery the light was changing moment by moment

I have put a photo below to show how the scene looked about 20 min after I started.

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You can see how I have exaggerated the sweep and curves of the landscape to try and make a more cohesive composition.

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Berwick, wiltshire, watercolour, plein air

This is the church at Berwick St John, hard to get back from the subject in these small graveyards. I might do another as the camera saw it in wide angle.

We are just into Wiltshire here I believe. Rain was threatening so I went on to Salisbury where there was a better chance of painting from the dry. 7in by 5in.

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Salisbury, cathedral, stone carving, watercolour, plein air

Salisbury cathedral in the wet! I did this crouched under my umbrella, but the wind got to be too much, so I went and did the one that comes next from

from beneath a tree. Once I had done that the rain had eased so I went back. I nearly finished when the heavens opened, so the last bit of accenting of

the architecture had to be done back in the dry. With such a complex subject it is impossible to do a completely accurate drawing, or at least it would take

several days and still not capture the mood of the moment. I try to be very systematical. I work forwards from light to dark working in quite an ordered way.

So I might work across doing all the mid tones in the capitals adding each touch to each capital in turn and then doing the next touch in the same order.

If you do this you will suddenly reach a point where there is enough to indicate the structure without being too specific and then you should stop.

It is always hard to spot subjects when it is all grey and gloom, but you should try and look for simple contrasts in just part of the scene, here we just have

stone and trees really and the picture is better for it.

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Salisbury, cathedral, watercolour, plein air

This is really just a time filler as I was thinking about the other picture as I painted this, hoping for the rain to stop. 7in by 5in.

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Stourpaine, mist, watercolour, Dorset, plein air

On my way home. This is Stourpaine in .Dorset, a very typical village scene. But the last of the mist was hanging on and gave the scene a great mood.

7in by 5in. Now I have to get some studio pictures painted while the memories are still fresh!

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