Rob Adams a Painter's Blog painter's progress

October 16, 2011

The Cotswolds Watercolours and catching up on a few studio pictures.

Filed under: France,London,Painting,Watercolour — Tags: , , , , , , , , — Rob Adams @ 7:20 pm

I have been trying to catch up on some studio paintings, but a trip to a family bash in the Midlands allowed me to do a bit of painting in the Cotswolds. I was lucky with the light it was diffused through quite thin cloud which gave a lovely quality but still gave some quite strong light and shade. I also was taking my large squirrel mop on its first outdoor painting trip. I have owned one of these beasts for twenty years but only used it for dusting off slides for scanning! I have no idea why I didn’t experiment with it. On my first trip to Henley though I saw one of the Wappers using one and realised I had been missing out. The wonderful thing with them I have found is the versatility. It holds a ton of paint but still falls to a needle point, though you have to hold it as if it were a chinese brush, at the very end and hanging down. A bit of experimentation allows some great mark making with plenty of variety. Because they hold so much paint they are great for washes. So as to be a bit nerdy here’s a picture of my watercolour brush roll…

brushes, sable, squirrel mop, watercolour

The flat sable in the middle is one inch wide so you can judge scale from that. The mops are the brushes with the wire bound quills.The largest on the right is 2cm wide, but even this monster is capable of the finest of lines. I have probably bought too many of them, but I had a moment of B.A.D (brush acquisition disorder) Good watercolour brushes cost a fortune but it is no good buying the cheap ones they will last half the time and be nowhere near as pleasant to work with. I wash them with shampoo which keeps them clean and supple, some of the sables on the left are more than 10 years old. Snuggling in next to the large mop is a cheap synthetic which I try to use for most of the heavy mixing as there is no point in wearing out an expensive brush. The next area of experimentation is paper. I have recently been using 3oo Lb Arches Rough but now I think I should give the less strongly textured papers a go the cold pressed and hot pressed. I think they may well suit certain subjects better. Another idea I am toying with after the Cotswold trip is some sort of method of drying washes more swiftly when outside. In the studio you can use a hairdryer and time of course is not so constrained, so a retreat to the sofa with a book makes a pleasant interlude. So far I have considered cordless hairdryers which seem only to exist in China and as you might expect have quite a brief battery life. I will first try a small battery fan as the movement of air is more important than heat as any one who watercolours on a windy day will tell you. If that fails I am considering using a blow torch… at the risk of passers by thing that I am mad and dangerous! It is humid days that can be a nightmare, I have known washes to be hardly dry at all after an hour, which makes painting very difficult.

Still enough technical musing on with a few paintings. Some images can be clicked to show a larger version.

 

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Dumbleton, cotswolds, watercolour, plein air, painting, rob adams

Houses near Dumbleton. Very beautiful but tricky light. As well as using different brushes I am attempting to paint a wee bit larger so this is a 1/4 sheet. I realised by the time I finished that the whole thing needed a graded wash of blue from right to left… not something to attempt in the field, it’s a risky enough operation in the studio. To do it I mixed three strengths of wash and did it in quarters strongest first then doing the last quarter on the left with clean water. It is very important not to disturb the underlying work so you only get one chance.

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Dumbleton, Cotswolds, trees, watercolour, painting, rob adams

Another view in Dumbleton, a 1/2 sheet this time. After doing the drawing and the first wash I had to give up as the wash was taking ages to dry. So I took a few snaps for reference refined some of the drawing and finished off at home… if only I had packed my blowtorch! Still I am quite enjoying this increase in painting size, but I shudder to think of the increased framing costs.

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Dumbleton church, cotswolds, watercolour, painting, rob adams

A 1/4 sheet studio painting. I know people say that you can always tell a studio picture from a plein air, but I am damned if I can, the difference is mostly in the minds of the viewer I suspect. I have been tempted to test this but I had better not as it might offend. For this one I laid all the shadow areas in cool tones then laid the warmer washes over. I find this gives a better quality to the shadows.

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Henley, boats, dawn, Thames, river, watercolour, painting, Rob adams Now this one you really can tell is a studio painting. I loved the mood on the river at dawn on my recent visits to Henley on Thames. The camera alas just doesn’t catch the magic so this is my attempt to do that. I used a very limited palette, just Ultramarine, Cadmium Red and Quinacridone gold. The varied colours on the midground trees are painted in one wash with the tree colours mixed, if water is dropped on the wet wash then they separate due to the ultramarine granulating and the cadmium red staining.

Saumur, bridge, france, loire, river, watercolour, dawn, painting, rob adams

Another limited palette. This was a plein air done at dawn of last years trip to Saumur. I am right out on the river bed of the drought shrunken Loire. Unfortunately at the time I forgot my ruler so the painting has been waiting for its bridge for nearly 3 months! This was very easy to paint just a mood note rather than a proper painting.

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Herefordshire, Poplars, watercolour, wye valley, painting, rob adams

A studio picture done from my recent visit to the Wye Valley. As soon as I saw this scene I knew it would make a good painting. I roughly sketched it and added a few tone notes, which I combined with photos to paint this. A 1/2 sheet it was great fun to do. I’m not sure I’m ready to tackle such big paintings en plein air, but I suppose I should try even so.

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Henley on Thames, Thames, river, dawn, oil painting, rob adams

Using a watercolour from my sketch book and some photos taken at the time I painted this. I was trying to catch the stillness and peace. The first dog walkers arrived as I was painting the sketch. I might add one in the mid distance, but care will be needed as figures can be so dominant.

October 5, 2011

More from Henley upon Thames and a few Life Paintings

Some varied painting from the last week or so. The Autumn is getting going now, but the last few days have been a traditional “Indian Summer” with me baking in the sun whilst I painted the river. Yes rivers again. After last week in Henley I got asked by a fellow painter to join them by the Thames… at Henley. With the light so fantastic this time of year who could demur. My success rate with oils is still concerning me, with one in 3 being wiped off. I think I must develop a better shorthand style that is a little more sketchy which will allow me to leave more areas unresolved. It maybe just the order I do things, in the final oil I am posting in this update I almost completed my centre of interest (the lock gates) before setting out to complete the surroundings which has, I feel, made a more focused painting. Both the others alas show too much of an overall spread of attention which doesn’t help the compositions. Oddly I don’t have the same problem with watercolour. Another thing that I have to face is that I am just not very keen on paintings painted on lovely sunny days. Give me a stormy day day that mixes moments of sun with downpours and I am more at ease. I think it is the unpredictability of changeable conditions, you have a choice of lighting as the weather passes over your subject, some parts thrown into gloom while others are momentarily brilliantly lit. With a consistent clear day you just have what is before you, so subject choice becomes key. Probably that just means I have to take my oils out on more sunny days so I that I can resolve the issue. Life drawing has got going again which I have really missed, as I was feeling bold I took my watercolours which was tempting fate, but as is usual when your confidence is up, things are easier and I enjoyed my session immensely. Some images can be clicked for a larger view as always.

 

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Watercolour, Henley, Thames, Surrey, watercolour, Rob Adams, painting, plein air

This one almost ended up in the bin as I rather fluffed the background trees on site, But a few unifying washes and a slightly different crop improved things enough to save it from destruction. It’s odd but a week away from a painting makes it far easier to spot what a picture needs to rescue it. In the in the event it was a few overall washes to subdue the tone range in the trees, in reality they were quite brightly lit on the right hand side, but this just drew too much attention from the boats making the composition unsatisfying. 1/4 sheet Arches. One thing I must do for painting these larger pictures plein air is get a bigger squirrel mop to cover the acreage!

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Henley on Thames, Thames, watercolour, dawn, river, rob adams, watercolour, plein air, painting

Dawn… It’s hard dragging yourself out of bed in time to drive to where there might be a good picture to paint. Note the “might” I have got out of bed for plenty of dawns that were rather underwhelming once they manifested themselves, making you wonder why you are sitting there with your brush poised. This one wasn’t in that league it was in the “How the heck do I get any of this down in 20 min” league. By the time I had finished the sun was straight into my eyes and I needed coffee and breakfast as an urgent priority.

Henley upon Thames, Thames, river, boats, sun, oil painting, art, Rob Adams. plein air

Almost the same spot for the next one but a change in media. A pleasant scene, almost too pleasant, not made up my mind about this one yet.

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Henley, Thames, river, sun, barge, oil painting, plein air, Rob Adams

It’s only fair to post a few misses as well as hits, this one should have been fine but the light was too high for my tastes and the scene just too damn pretty. I might add a rower to make a focus beneath the church, and possibly a hang glider crashing to break up that block of tree on the left … ho hum desperate measures.

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Boat house, Thames, Henley, watercolour, plein air, Rob Adams, painting

Last one of the day, a quick sketch of the boathouses at Henley, the light was moving very fast now so I had to get this done in 40 min. It’s often the way when you are constrained by time the picture will turn out better than it would have done if the time allowed had been longer. The figures are key for this, stitching the two halves of the painting together.

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Deepcut, canal, derelict, locks, gates, oil painting, plein air, Rob Adams

Next day in Deepcut, this is derelict canal near Bagshot Surrey. The channel was mostly dry so I was able to get close to the remaining water. The best painting of the trip I think. A few watercolours from life to finish off.

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Life drawing, watercolour, painting, Rob Adams

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Life painting, Rob Adams

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Nude, life drawing, watercolour, Rob Adams

The last three were about 10 min each, it’s fun to do several drawings of the same pose.

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