Rob Adams a Painter's Blog painter's progress

September 5, 2012

Sun and Rain, Watercolour and Oil

Filed under: Drawing,Life Drawing,London,Painting,Thames,Watercolour — Tags: , , , , , , , — Rob Adams @ 9:57 am

Hurrah, my ‘orrible throat problems have eased enough so that the turps (or any of the so called non smelly solvents) don’t reduce me to a coughing wreck. Such a relief to dump the Acrylics which are I find much harder to paint with. Oils produce a beautiful mark of almost of their own accord, whereas with Acrylics everything has to be worked for. You do mostly get there in the end but it is a fair bit slower.

One bonus of the ailment is that it has forced me to work hard at the watercolours which have taken I feel a step forward. On the negative side reminders of mortality get more worrying as you age. When you are twenty if you get ill you assume that in a week or so you will be better, but as you near sixty you tend to wonder if this is the one that will carry you off! I very much wish I had stopped commercial work a decade earlier, it is more and more apparent that I won’t get all that I want done before I start to decline. Being alive is the strangest of things I’m sure, I don’t understand it a bit. Painting is the thing I find most worthwhile in life after friendship and that in itself is enough reason to persevere. In an odd way painting has taught me more about our very strange existence than all the philosophy books or scientific tracts I have pored over. Though alas it has taught me not one single thing I can really put into words, nor do I think any of those insights are embedded in what I paint. They have of course influenced how I make paintings, but the world around me has given me my best subjects and they don’t really need a subtext or “deeper” meaning. It is I sometimes think the misguided attempt to imbue paintings with significance outside of their simple visual aspect that has caused the painted  works of our age to be to my eye of such poor overall aesthetic quality.

It all comes down I feel to the idea that the emotional state of the artist when creating the object will somehow imbue the thing produced with aura of metaphysical energy. I don’t see very much weight of evidence to support the idea I have to say. Does the vigour of application of paint to canvas or paper really matter to the final result? Artists often give the impression that the painting just “flew” off the brush, but if that appearance is there it is usually a contrived effect, not the result of slapdash application. If anything a painting that has the appearance of bravura application of paint takes more planning than a picture that looks to have been completed in a more sedate manner. It’s mostly Hollywood’s fault of course, the tortured artist struggling with his inner demons is such a great story. So with Michelangelo we get moments of high emotion and arguments with the Pope, but none of the hours and hours of calm quiet chiseling of stone and brushing of paint that must have filled 99.5% of his creative days.

In my own experience emotional turmoil has a deleterious effect on the work produced. Calm confident and focused is the order of the day, not frenzied passion; even if the appearance of frenzied passion is the required end result! So I think that even Van Gogh, the patron saint of the tortured artist, would have been engrossed when painting, if anything finding relief from his mental difficulty in the calming process. Looking back over art history the number of emotional wrecks appears to be quite low, only increasing in modern times due to artists having been brainwashed by overwrought and mostly fallacious descriptions of art being created out of emotional train wrecks and overwhelming nihilism. I think we confuse being inspired by the memory of emotional turmoil and the turmoil itself. During such upsets we mostly cannot paint, but in the calm after we can maybe express something of what we felt.

When I started this blog I thought to mostly write about the practical aspects of painting. I am quite surprised by the direction the written part has actually taken. To some degree it is the difficulty of passing on useful and honest information. Mostly when I come up with any technical tips I can also think of  circumstances where the advice would be wrong. Although I have many tracts on the art of painting I don’t think there is very much I have taken from them. I have flirted with restricted palettes, triadic schemes etc, but at the end of the day I don’t adhere to any of these principles. I just use as many colours as I need and no more. The best guide I have ever read is James Gurney’s “Color and Light” which is very wide ranging an unprescriptive. His excellent blog Gurney Journey is better and more wide ranging than nearly all the instructional books I have seen.

I will try and do more step by steps though they are a bit painful to do. I dislike them because they never seem to show the slips between cup and lip. I might do one where the whole thing goes horribly wrong and end it with a photo of the painting in the bin! I have not been productive enough really, though I have been doing a lot of pre-planning for upcoming paintings, also designing roller coasters for a bit of dinner money!

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hammersmith, bridge, thames, river, london, plein air, oil painting

Her we are my first outing with the oils for many a moon. This was an outing with the Wapping Group, and the weather prospects were not good. The

forecast was for a clear morning however so I dragged myself out of bed and on to the train at 6.30 AM. I only just got there in time the sky was already

clouding over and the light past its best. With no time to spare searching for a motif I settled down to paint this 16in by 10in effort. The tones were muted

and I resisted the temptation to overdramatise the light and loose the still morning mood. I might do another studio painting of this as there is a good

picture in there somewhere between this and what the camera saw. This is Hammersmith Bridge.

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chiswick,thames, london, river, barge, plein air

I walked from Hammersmith along the Thames path to Chiswick with the clouds thickening. When I stared this there was a flash of sun which looked

lovely, so I set about painting the shadow tones bearing in mind I was hoping for the light to return. It did so several times as I worked and each time

I quickly added brights where I saw them. I was not helped by the tide driving me up the foreshore and inquisitive swans trying to eat my brushes!

14in by 10in.

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Chiswick, pub, plein air, london

Here you see the approaching storm. I had to leave this as a very rough sketch as Derek Daniells and I were caught napping and had to flee to the pub

in a deluge. We dried out for a while hoping for a break but it was a long time coming. Eventually I went out and tried painting the park from beneath

the trees on my last board but it wasn’t much of a subject so I decided to head home.

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Hammersmith, bridge, London, thames, river, plein air

Once I reahed the bridge again I was faced with this. I vacillated for a bit as I was very tired from my early start but it was easily the best subject of the

day so having no more boards I ragged out my park painting and started on this. As is often the case a strong subject is relatively easy to paint and I had

this finished in under an hour. Looking at it now I think it would make a very good watercolour so I might do another version. 10in by 14in.

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deptford, st johns, london, watercolour, plein air

Sunshine at last! I am trying to do slightly bigger paintings en plein air with the watercolours. This took a little longer than I would like at nearly 2hrs.

I was pretty much guessing at the end. This is St Johns Deptford a few streets away from home. I snapped the cyclists on my iPad and then drew them out

from the screen. They were a gift and perfect for the scene. I have a feeling I am doomed to buy an iPhone as the iPad is a little heavy and I’m terrified

of dropping it. 1/4 sheet Arches not.

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St Johns, deptford, london, watercolour, plein air

Another St Johns painting done straight after in my little 7in by 5in sketchbook. I am getting addicted to cyclists!

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london, watercolour, mall

A trip up to town to buy paint. I had intended to do another study in St Martins Lane but was lured into painting this as the light was perfect. By the time

I was done the light was gone so it will have to wait for another day. This is Admiralty Arch looking down the Mall. 7in by 5in.

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Greenwich, hill, crooms, watercolour

Last one, this is Crooms Hill in Greenwich. With the path in the park closed for the Olympics there is a lot of foot traffic up and down the hill. I am

using my tripod so I can paint standing but it is feels a little over the top for a 7in by 5in sketch book so I must come up with a neater solution to be

able to sketch standing in the street. Also there are many places where a tripod is not practical so another way needs to be found.

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9 Comments

  1. Rob, I’m so glad that your throat is better, and I know just what you mean about there being so little time left to paint. I feel that every day.

    These paintings are fabulous. I especially like the bridge oils, and can just picture you and Derek running for the pub, getting soaked. The later one is particularly super, with the bulk of the near tower first getting my attention, the cables drawing me eye back, and the far tower with the sculpted trees and beautiful cloud formation. You’ve done it on this one for sure!

    And I always love your watercolors, especially those of buildings, you really get the glow on the old stone. You are a master of simplification. These paintings just bring me back to London, and make me wish I’d had more time there this summer.

    I see what you mean about the tripod being a bit much for your small sketchbook. I don’t see how to solve the problem, though, you’ve got to hold the sketchbook, the palette, and the brush – with only two hands (and then where does your water go?). Have you considered a pochade box with a neck strap? I’ve seen people painting with them sitting down, not sure if it would work standing up, might need additional straps to go around your back (like the baby holders people wear on their chests).

    All the best,
    Bobbi

    Comment by Bobbi Heath — September 5, 2012 @ 12:51 pm

  2. Thanks Bobbi, the last bridge one was a gift really I just had to be careful not to mess up the drawing. I shall post a picture when I’ve cracked the standing and watercolouring nut… I have a prototype almost ready to test…watch this space.
    Best
    Rob

    Comment by admin — September 5, 2012 @ 2:27 pm

  3. That second one of the bridge is my favorite, it is fantastic! I love the brushstrokes. Also it really gives a good sense of receding space.

    Comment by moss — September 6, 2012 @ 9:21 pm

  4. Your paintings are lovely. Your ideas are thought provoking. The tortured artist vs the calm of creation is worth exploring. There are times when I zone out and become oblivious to the world. Certainly not a torturous feeling.
    Keep up the painting – the world needs more beauty.

    Linda

    Comment by Linda — September 8, 2012 @ 2:56 am

  5. Have just come across your blog via WetCanvas and wanted to say how good it is to read words I agree with, principally about the lack of need to imbue paintings with inner meanings.
    After completing a uni degree which I hoped would teach me about painting (how naive could I be?) I felt like a second class artist because I didn’t want to paint ‘issues’, simply make good looking works about what is around me.
    Very refreshing, and great work. I will follow with interest.

    Comment by Janet Poole — September 8, 2012 @ 7:57 am

  6. Thanks Janet, yes the same experience with being taught art here. Rather than teaching me how to paint they seemed to wish to teach me what to paint. Which I thought then and still think now was very wrong. Mind you none of the tutors had any skills to pass on so doing the “art talking” was all they had to offer.
    Rob

    Comment by admin — September 8, 2012 @ 7:04 pm

  7. Thanks Linda, getting into the zone where you paint without really being conscious of it is one of the hardest things to learn, and even then is I find almost impossible to consistently maintain.
    Rob

    Comment by admin — September 8, 2012 @ 7:06 pm

  8. Glad you are feeling better, Rob…hope that your return to oils doesn’t mean seeing fewer of your fine watercolors in WC Gallery! Agree completely with your view that paintings don’t have to essentially solve the problem of world peace, etc…sometimes I paint a subject just because it appeals to me in some way & my sig. other goes on & on about how it ‘doesn’t say anything’…that causes me alot of trauma, but doesn’t seem to improve the quality of my painting! I do like your oils very much, esp the last one of the bridge…love the point of view on that one. 60 is not old, you know! Cheers, Maribeth

    Comment by Maribeth — September 11, 2012 @ 7:09 pm

  9. Thanks Maribeth, most paintings that move me do so in a way that I can’t really define, certainly not in a straight conceptual way. Aging is a funny thing, it is good in some ways that the time pressure makes you really focus on what it is important for you to get done. With no deadline I would likely wander aimlessly ad infinitum.
    Best
    Rob

    Comment by admin — September 11, 2012 @ 10:26 pm

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