Rob Adams a Painter's Blog painter's progress

May 11, 2011

Spring Greens and Life Drawings.

Managed to misplace my Blog password so a bigger gap in posts than I would like. I have been painting the spring which has been like no other I recall. Now I am painting regularly every few days I am noticing the changes in the seasons day to day far more than I have in recent years. Another unexpected bonus to the painting lark. My studio work alas is at a standstill. I know I must make a next step but am not sure just what the direction ought to be. The world has enough pretty views and enough gritty urban ones for that matter, indeed adding another work to any genre seem a pretty vain act. I know this is foolish of course, but nonetheless I have always needed to feel there is a new discovery to be made in each work, which is easy in a plein air but harder somehow in a studio work. It is no real use to do a painting that is merely an exhibition of skill, any more than a piece of cabinet making that is just about the joints used and serves no use would be. It must have beautiful craft and also be beautiful in purpose such as a chair. With chairs the purpose is straight forward, but with a painting less so. I might do for example a painting to please another, to adorn their walls. I know several very fine painters who do just that, they paint when there is a commission to do so but not otherwise. For me I have always painted “for myself” as well as commercial work, which when I was working a great deal was almost as a sort of relaxation I could hardly wait for the gaps in my schedule. Now I have mostly eschewed commercial work it is not so easy to create as somehow a reason is needed The answer I feel is that the value has to be in finding myself enriched by the experience of  doing a painting. So I have to take on some subjects that are more demanding, not complicated but I think more nuanced… we shall see!

For now here are a few  plein air watercolours and a slew of life drawings. I have built a nifty watercolour slash oil painting attachment for my tripod to allow me to paint standing or sitting in either medium and as many different formats as possible… which will be the subject of a very nerdy post all by itself.

Watercolours can be clicked for larger version.

 

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Watercolour, ringwood, river, avon, plein air, painting

14in by 10 in. I have decided to paint a little larger in my outdoor watercolours so it was a deep breath and out with the bigger brushes. I used a 1/2in flat a fair bit in this one which is fine as long as you don’t get square edges in places you would prefer not. This was a gorgeous spot on the River Avon in Hampshire.

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Child Okeford, Dorset, watercolour, plein air, painting

The spring is so advanced with everything extremely verdant. Usually I steer clear of brilliant greens but I could really see no alternative. I have tried to add a little red to every sunny green and a little ultramarine to all the shadowed hues. The result is still quieter in hue than reality but not I hope too eye wrenching as painted greens can often be. This path is in Child Okeford Dorset.

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Hever, castle, garden, italian, watercolour, plein air, painting

Back home and the day was so beautiful I set off to Kent. It was very windy so I did this which was sheltered under a gazebo. The light was very crisp and clear and the textures of the old and worn hedges fascinating to to try and catch. Again my brush wandered into greens I don’t often touch.

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Westerham, kent, watercolour, painting, plein air

A quiet road near Westerham Kent. This composition appeared many times along the way but not anywhere where I could paint it without being run over! Eventually I stopped on a wider bit so I could paint protected by my car! The light through the trees was fantastic and I underlaid all the shadow areas with a wash of ultramarine moving to prussian blue for the road.

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London, Thames, greenwich, watercolour, plein air, painting, river

A sad story here, I got up at dawn to paint the river and did this in beautiful morning light. But a few days later when doing another in the studio I knocked my water over and swamped this one as it lay on the table. At least I scanned it before its demise. Lastly a few life drawings to finish off.

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life drawing, nude, figure, pastel

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life drawing, nude, figure, pastel

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life drawing, nude, figure, pastel

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life drawing, nude, figure, pastel

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life drawing, nude, figure, pastel

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life drawing, nude, figure, pastel

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life drawing, nude, figure, pastel

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life drawing, nude, figure, pastel

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life drawing, nude, figure, pastel

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life drawing, nude, figure, pastel

I am enjoying life drawing at present. I have reduced the colours used to just black red and white, the traditional trois crayons though I need to use the red more.

February 15, 2011

Painting in the City

Filed under: Drawing,Life Drawing,London,Painting — Tags: , , , , , , — Rob Adams @ 12:03 pm

One of the things I wanted to do, having taken the dangerous step of mostly giving up commercial work  to paint, was to do work that reflected the city in which I have lived to the last 30 years. It is so often the case that we are blind to the beauties around us because of their familiarity. To this end I have been taking morning trips to the City of London to sketch and photograph the morning rush into work. This brings some really great subjects especially at this time of year. If there is sun it beams down the streets at a low angle high lighting some buildings and throwing others into deliciously moody shade. If it’s wet then the bustle is transformed into a symphony of greys punctuated by the lights of cars and buildings intermixed with the muted light of the sky all reflected in the slick and puddled pavements.

Doing plein airs in this environment is distinctly challenging. As an easel in these locations is impossible I have been using my small metal pochade box just hand held. I off load everything that weighs such as paints palette knives etc into my pockets. I can paint for about an hour before my wrist gives out, but it rather limits the size of painting. I intend to make myself an extra light weight setup in the next few weeks to make the whole thing easier. Rain protection is a must I have been using a taped on piece of cling film going round two satay skewers which keeps the worst off palette and painting, but I think I can make something better and lighter. Bringing this information back and doing studio pictures is another matter.

I am experimenting with different levels of  finish which has been well worthwhile as I am coming to the conclusion that the important thing is to vary the degree of looseness and tightness across the painting in a way that makes the eye read the picture around a focus. I think this works because the eye actually sees with such a small area of concentration and then scans about the first point of interest to take in the whole image. The point of initial interest can be either a tonal contrast, say light surrounded by a dark or a subject driven focus such as a figure… or indeed both at once. Enough theorising, some pictures, most of which can be clicked for a larger view.

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Richmond, thames, london, painting, plein air, oils

This was a lovely day in Richmond, almost too beautiful, resulting in slightly picture postcard image. Still there is nothing inherently wrong with that. I am getting rather fond of bad weather paintings but shouldn’t, I feel, shy away from more conventional scenes. It is easy to be always looking for the unusual as a way of marking out your uniqueness. However this to my mind rather leads to the trap of making the painting about yourself and your cleverness rather than what the subject requires to be best served.

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Richmond, thames, london, river, oil, plein air, buggy, baby, walk

I returned to this scene in the studio as the light improved as I was doing the plein air but didn’t want to “chase the light” which often ruins a painting. I had no intent here other than capturing the deliciousness of the day with people enjoying the respite from the grey and wet. I considered altering the red of of the buggy as it is perhaps too insistent, but experimenting in photoshop showed me that the red was performing the function or enriching all the blues so I’ll leave it be!.

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London, drawing, pastel, British Museum

I have been doing quick pastel sketches which only take a few minutes, but I think I will be doing more of this as the immediacy of the result makes them a great resource for later paintings. I am deliberately restricting the colours to just four or less. With the toned paper doing the bulk of the work.

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London, Charing Cross, St Martins, pastel, drawing

A little bit later on my way home… the wet road a product of my imagination!

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London, City, oil, lights, rain, commuters

A studio painting done from a mixture of sources, the first inspiration was the dark alley with the cool grey towers of the modern buildings providing contrast of both tone and age. The image of the van and walking figure is from a different day but just seem made for each other. My most successful studio picture of the city so far I feel as I got the balance of looseness and focus working properly in my favour.

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London, river, thames, plein air

This is an expedition with the Brazen Monkeys to the river at Strand on the Green near Kew. A cold day and I was unwell, but it’s amazing how painting makes you forget your woes! The tide was very low allowing views close to the water. This was painted very quickly  in less than an hour. You really have to make the effort to see the colours and then exercise restraint in not over exaggerating them.

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Thames, Kew, London, Barges

A few hundred yards upstream these barges were an interesting challenge. I painted this on a slightly larger canvas than I usually use for plein air, something I must do more of when it’s practical. 18in by 14in.

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Here is how the camera sees the same scene. Interesting that almost all the richness of the blues is missing.

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London, City, commuters, umbrella, rain, painting, oil

A larger studio painting, I felt the subject required looser handling than I usually use. Also I deliberately used a very smooth linen which allows a sensuous, juicy feel to the brush work. The wet street was huge fun to paint but I had trouble getting the right balance of accuracy and freedom in the buildings which meant I scraped out and repainted a few times before I was satisfied. There are still a few adjustments to the main figure, but they willhave to wait until it is drier.

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Camden, London, canal, plein air

Another outing with the Monkeys, a very wet day, so thanks to Michael Richardson for providing the impetus to get out there and paint. This was painted umbrella in hand as it didn’t stop raining for a moment. But the glitter of the market transformed by the tranquility of the canal make a great subject which I think may make a bigger picture in a while.

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St Pauls, London, oil, plein air, city, painting

A small 10 in by 7 in painted holding a pochade in my hand, quite tiring but really the only way in these locations. The two worlds of offices and cathedral make this a wonderful subject of which I will do a studio painting. I added the van later to nudge the focus left in the picture and allow the eye to follow the river of reflected light up and to St Pauls.

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London, City, morning, plein air, painting, oil

Another hand held job, without the added annoyance of the rain this time. I was rather in people’s way so I only got about 40 min at this. Amazingly the shadow on the right of the central building is thrown by the foreground building on the left. Something I only realised when I left and walked past it. As the days get longer these subjects will be gone alas as the dawn will happen too early.

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Life drawing

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Life drawing, nude

Two life drawings to finish off.

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