Rob Adams a Painter's Blog painter's progress

September 26, 2011

Two Rivers

Filed under: Drawing,London,Painting,Watercolour — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , — Rob Adams @ 1:31 pm

A more cheerful post this time, a trip down the beautiful Wye, and an expedition to Henley and Cookham. I have found it hard to push myself out of the door to paint of late. I probably should have as I laboured for nigh on  2 weeks on a studio oil, only to scrape the damn thing out again. Sometimes a painting is just ill conceived and cannot be resolved. The picture was of folks dancing at a party that I had been lucky enough to be invited to. I have to say one of the best get togethers I have ever attended (My thanks to Richard, the most generous of hosts and for music meister Chris for inviting me). Set in a hut with pavilion leanings which looked out over a fantastic view over the Wye valley towards the Black Mountains. There were musicians and dancing and best of all a great mixture of people from watchmakers to flute makers and wonderful musicians by the dozen… in the early afternoon people started to dance and I just could not resist trying to sketch them. This can be a frustrating business but great fun, most of the scribbles are worthless, but astonishingly some of them do actually catch something of the dancers. I took quite a few photographs as well but the light was fading and the exposure times reduced the dancers to blurs. Still, good reference for light and ambience. Next I did a sketch sort of combining the various elements with large dollops of imagination, which turned out encouragingly. Then in a fit of over ambition transferred to a larger canvas. Then came the struggle and a fruitless one at that. It is odd how reluctant you are to admit defeat, it is not as if you can’t retreat and regroup, the war is never lost. Then again a streak of stubbornness is as useful for an artist as it is annoying for those around you. After nearly 8 days painting in and scraping out I just had to admit the painting was just not ever going to be as good as the sketch, it was just the wrong sort of painting for the subject. The snatched moment element is easy to catch in a lively drawing but becomes silted up and stuck in the creative mud when wrestling with the technicalities of painting in oils. I will try again though, quite by chance a good friend and I went to see the current Degas exhibition on his images of dancers. Although it is humbling to see what he could do with the same subject, I can also see how I should have approached the subject, so hopefully my next report should include a finished version. My lesson from Degas is to draw and redraw the figures until they are set in my mind and hand and then merely extend the drawing into paint allowing the drawing to dominate… good theory, we will see what happens. I’ll start with the ill fated dancers and move on to the river trips after. Some images can be clicked for a larger version.

 

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drawing, dancers, sketch

Here’s a compilation of the sketches, one thing with dancers is that they keep returning to the same positions so several can be done at the same adding a little more to each one as the dancers come around.

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Dancers, sketch, drawing, photoshop

Here is my preliminary sketch done in photoshop, I have as I may have mentioned a Wacom Cintiq that allows me to draw straight on the screen as if it were paper. It is fantastic for working out a composition but only if you keep it loose and don’t allow your references to limit you. No image of the disastrous painting exists… and I wouldn’t show you even if there was!

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Brookmill, Road, London, urban, street, oil, painting, Rob Adams

First a 14in by 10in oil done just outside my house, very tricky light and it needs a few figures. It’s one of those paintings that I am pleased with but will never get framed. Often the way with my local plein airs.

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Wye valley, River, Herefordshire, watercolor, Rob Adams

On my way to the party I snatched the chance to paint this, a perfect spot to paint.

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Drawing, Woolhope, church, porch

I did this little sketch in the churchyard of  Woolhope Church, I was filling in time so as not to be unfashionably early! I must do more basic pencil drawings as I enjoy the medium, but I have been rather sidetracked by the attractions of working in pastel pencils.

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Herefordshire, orchard, watercolour, painting, Rob Adams

The morning after… I was feeling a little strung out but wanted to get a sketch of the view. By the time I had finished I felt almost human and went in search of coffee.

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Fownhope, wye valley, herefordshire, village, oil painting, Rob Adams This is a side street in Fownhope, the day had clouded a bit but this had the tonal interest, I inconvenienced everybody by parking my car and perching on the bonnet to paint. This is something I quite often do if there is room. It allows a better view in this sort of “Down the Road” composition. It also prevents passing cars from killing you, but not alas cursing you. 14in by 10in.

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Wye Valley, oil painting, art, Rob Adams, Herefordshire

I did this one twice, I got my lay in wrong tonally, if this happens it is really best just to wipe back and start again… still it’s just as well the swans don’t understand cursing! 14in by 10in. This is of course the Wye Valley.

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Wye Valley, river, Herefordshire, oil painting , Rob Adams

I perched on a dodgy bit of bank to do this, in fear of tumbling into the flood. The light was tremendous and once I had the relative tones organised this was unexpectedly easy to paint. At this point the Wye is just turning to flow into the gorge at Symonds Yat. 14in by 10in.

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Mordiford, bridge, Wye, valley, sketch, pencil

This is the bridge at Mordiford on an offshoot of the Wye, every arch built in a different style!

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Henley, Thames, River, oils, plein air, painting, Rob Adams

A different river, the Thames at Henley. Despite it being such a beautiful place I struggled for subjects. I often find this is the case in official “beauty spots” I don’t know why. This was harder than it looks the relative tones of the river and bank were quite different than I would have expected. A fierce wind got up which made life interesting, whisking my palette away on one occasion. This was the second of the day, the first went awry. This was a meeting of the Plein Air Society but I only saw one other painter wandering like a lost soul… 14in by 10in.

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thames, boats, hurley, river, watercolour, plein air, Rob Adams

This is Hurley Lock. I really didn’t like Henley, too busy and tarted up. This was far nicer and more peaceful. Unfortunately it had clouded over making the light a bit flat but this had enough contrast. As with all river views getting into a place to paint is quite tricky, here there was a handy pontoon which I snuck on to, the fishermen said I would get evicted but the lock keeper let me be…

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thames, Hurley, river, watercolour, painting, plein air. Rob Adams

A bit further down stream the light was still flat but these trees on the turn were so beautiful I couldn’t resist. I hope to catch the full progression of Autumn this year.

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Cookham, churchyard, grave, watercolour, painting, Rob Adams

Last one of the day. The light had improved and I couldn’t resist looking at Cookham Church, stamping ground of Stanley Spencer. I was hoping a few of the interrees would rise from the dead as I was painting but no luck, I must return on Judgment day.

September 1, 2011

A Mixed Bag, Home and away.

Been rather inconsistent this month, with works that rather vary in style. In my work as an illustrator I often had to mimic the styles of other artists. This was very educational but detrimental to me forming my own distinctive style. I still see a subject and think, that would make a great picture in this or that manner, something I am trying to avoid now that I have only myself to please. I have just read Richard Schmid’s “Alla Prima” which is very good with much excellent advice. I don’t warm to some aspects of his painting, such as his fading off his pictures with scumbled expressionistic brushstrokes… once in a while this is nice but it soon becomes a bit of a distracting quirk. Nonetheless he is a very fine painter, with wonderful drawing skills. I do disagree with his horror of working from photo reference, I don’t that often work just from a single photograph but when I do I don’t notice any dreadful side effects, I even occasionally trace stuff which he seems to think is the work of the devil, Durer, Degas, Caravaggio, Vermeer and others who did similar would seem to have survived the taint! In truth if I have a very complicated cityscape I will usually trace over the buildings in photoshop, then hide the photo and work into it, get other reference shots of busses and people and sketch over them in turn to try out different arrangements. The end result for me is that it fixes in my mind what I want to achieve. I very rarely print a photo out and then trace it down simply because not many photos are fit for painting straight out of the camera. Some times I paint from a screen image as if it were a real scene, this can work fine but you have to not be shy of leaving the reference behind, when I do this I will often work over the painting without the reference to pull it together, then go back to the photo and often repeat. Well there’s all my street cred blown! Better get on with the paintings!

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Ashmead Rd, London, St Johns, Deptford, Watercolour, painting

This is a quarter sheet of Ashmead Rd in Deptford where I used to live a very typical street for the area. I enjoyed trying to get the balance of detail and simplified to work.

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Whitstable, watercolour, sea, rain, painting

Another quarter sheet reference here was a plein air and some photos taken on my last visit. I shall be doing more in this area plenty of great subjects. This picture entirely depended on the sky going well, once done the rest was plain sailing.

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Bank, plein air, watercolour, painting, London, Deptford

I’ve been meaning to paint this for a while as I had seen it lit like this quite a few times. I got the bank building in first as the light was moving quite fast, then the trees. Once they were there then I could finish off at my leisure. I am very pleased with my new paints from Daniel Smiths they are much nicer to paint with than Sennelier or W&N which I find too finely ground.

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Richmond, thames, watercolour, plein air, painting

This was a revenge painting, as on my last visit I had made a pigs ear of this scene. As I was passing close by I stopped and exorcised the past by doing this… still not my finest, but better than the one in the bin!

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Whitstable Harbour, kent, oil painting

Another from my visit to Whitstable, it’s not quite what I want though, I might darken the buildings to unify them and soften the trees. That is the wonderful thing with oils, you can change things so easily… so this one might turn up again revised. It is annoying though when something almost works but you can’t quite put your finger on what needs to be done to make it gel. If anyone reads this and thinks they know don’t be shy of making a comment! All opinions gratefully received.

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Box Hill, Surrey, plein air, oil painting

Out in the weather again… you get great light effects when rain and sun alternate. I had to be pretty swift to get this note down about 20 min was all it took. That’s the beauty of working at 10in by 7in a couple of sweeps and it’s blocked in! Oops almost forgot the location, this is Box Hill in Surrey.

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Box Hill, Surrey, oil painting, plein air, rain

Encouraged by the last one I set up a few yards away and did this. The rain came down though and I had to crouch under my brolly several times as squalls assaulted me.

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Box Hill, Surrey, forest, woods, tree, oil painting, plein air

I retreated into the woods to escape the worst of the rain, I don’t know why I painted this… just to pass the time hoping the rain would stop.

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Box Hill, Surrey, woods, forest, oil painting, plein air

Fuelled slightly by the drink I had imbibed at a family gathering earlier I still had another in me. The rain had eased and the flat light allowed me to take my time with this, it is always a challenge to get the greens working. many avoid the issue and just do everything khaki and olive which is guaranteed to look good but I prefer to tackle them head on.

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Cannon Street, London, city, commuters, oil painting, art

Another morning in the city painting. Re my intro the sketch for this was drawn directly over the photo in photoshop. I have a Cintiq screen that you can draw directly on which makes computer art a real pleasure, you can draw with complete freedom in as many layers as you wish, it is a wonderful tool for organising a composition. Below is my starting point.

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London, Cannon St

Over a period of several weeks I have about a hundred photos of this view in the morning on different days. Also various oil sketches. I liked the slight haze that made the distance fade, and of course the people on their way to work who I find endlessly fascinating. I culled traffic and people from various photos to assemble the sketch below.

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Sketch, cannon st, London, City

Here is my sketch. I print this out and trace down the important shapes. There is no point in putting too much in as it will get lost under the block in. If you compare with the final you can see how it evolved. The centre bus was too dominant once painted and had to be reduced and the figures got scraped out and redone a fair few times. The colour was loosely based on a plein air looking the other way in the evening! I find it invaluable to do a 3 tone sketch like this as it established the flow of light through the picture as well as the main compositional points.

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Blackheath, Rangers House, Rose Garden, plein air, oil painting

A final plein air. I have yet to get a painting I am happy with of this subject. I must get up there at a few different times of day to try and catch it at its best. This was rather rushed and I only had a horrible Daler board which is like painting on sandpaper… that’s it excuses over.

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