Rob Adams a Painter's Blog painter's progress

September 10, 2013

A Watercolour Month in London and Wales

Back to watercolours this month. The oils have made a step forward but I don’t want to loose my edge with the wishy washy stuff. I need to do some experimenting to broaden my range a bit if I don’t watch it I become too literal and don’t do enough exaggeration to lift the painting from the mundane. This is a hard thing to judge as overcooking it can be worse than understating!

Watercolour is hard to beat for a quick sketch, you can get so much down in so little time. Some of this posts paintings are only tiny but they still carry invaluable information that will help in the studio. As usual I have been going out painting plein air rather too much and not doing enough studio painting. It is especially important to keep up the studio work in watercolour as many of the techniques require deftness and quickness of touch. If not practiced regularly these skills rapidly become unlearnt. Oddly I don’t find this with oils as the process is not as dynamic. With watercolours things have to be done at the right moment and with confidence, if you are tentative the moment to get a particular effect is lost. Watercolours also require a greater degree of planning. I like to have the sequence of washes worked out in my head before starting. Also their timings as at what stage of dryness one wash goes over another can make a huge difference. For instance lay a wash over another before it is ready and the two will merge into mud. Wait until it is too bone dry and the top wash will layover the other without interaction. Get it just right and the top wash will dissolve the lower one just here and there adding interest and granularity.

I have been off to beautiful Pembrokeshire again, lucky with the weather once more. As it was a family visit I didn’t do much painting but did plenty of looking. I also saw an exhibition of Keith Noble’s lovely watercolours. There is not much of his work on the web which is a pity as he has a wonderful touch with complete mastery of the technical elements. I think some of his work will be at the RSMA as he is a member so I will be looking out for them. Seeing someone else do fantastic work always inspires me, I want to go straight home and try to catch something of it myself. On the subject of the RSMA I have managed to get a picture in myself again which is the second year running. Details here: RSMA 2013

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Plein air Thames, London, watercolour

After a bad day when I seemed to get nothing done I went up to town to catch the last of the light. The light was going so fast I went at this like a madman.

No drawing and I kept the palette deliberately narrow to speed things along It is just ultramarine and transparent red ochre, a tiny bit of cad red for the life

rings as I recall. The best thing was it lifted my mood and made the day feel worthwhile. 1/4 sheet of truly horrible Two Rivers paper, like blotting paper and

very irregularly sized, there was another two inches to the right which I had to crop off as it had two completely unsized areas. It is of course the Thames.

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Hampton Court, Thames, watercolour

A Wapping Group day at Hampton Court. Lovely weather but I was rather slow to start. I did this wee 7in by 5in to get me going. Then I did a truly execrable

oil which made me grind to a halt again. The only solution being to slope off and eat a full English and read the paper!

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Molesey, Hampton Court, Bridge St, watercolour

This is Bridge St. No more oils as the threaded bit on top of my tripod fell out and into the reeds. This is Bridge St in Molesey, over the river from Hampton

Court itself. About 8in by 11in. Hard work as it is a very complex subject. The sun was beating down and I was quite baked by the time I was done!

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Thames, Molesey, watercolour

Another 5in by 7in. Molesey lock in the distance. Quite an easy subject and it was pub time once I was finished. Very pleasant to finish the day with a beer and a chat!

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Newport, Pembrokeshire, Wales, sea, watercolour

Here we are in Newport Pembrokeshire. I have painted this scene many times but it always seems different. About 8in by 10in. It was quite breezy and

I struggled to keep the paper still. The key here was the the tone relation of the distant bay to the foreground. I actually painted the headland in the same

colours and tones as the foreground. Then at the very end I laid a wash of pure ultramarine over the nearby field to darken and mute it.

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Newport bay, watercolor, Dinas head

I did this while waiting for areas of the previous painting to dry. It is Dinas head. Only 3in by 5in but enough there to tell the story.

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Manorbier Castle, watercolour

This is Manorbier Castle. The light was super it was a real pleasure to do this little 5in by 7in sketch.

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Porthgain, pembrokeshire, Wales, Watercolour

This is Porthgain. Painted in an absolute gale I had to finish the boats after as the paper was flapping about too much. I often mute colours but this scene

was so full of delicious hues I didn’t hold back… a little bit technicolor but never mind! 9in by 11in. Another difficulty was that the wind was blowing the paint!

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Porthgain, wales

Another from Porthgain. I found a sheltered spot to do this tiny 3in by 5in.

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Whitesands, pembrokeshire, wales, watercolour

This is from a photo of an earlier visit but with the light of the recent one! It is Whitesands near St Davids. I liked the composition but the light wasn’t great.

However on this visit I took some pictures on a different beach where the light was super. Not too hard to graft the two together. 1/4 sheet Arches.

October 30, 2010

Autumn in Pembrokeshire

Filed under: Painting,Wales,Watercolour — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , — Rob Adams @ 12:19 am

Well a productive week, I escaped down to Wales for a few days in Newport Pembrokeshire. Painting requires more kit than I like, with watercolours, sketchbooks, easels, pochades, stools, paints, pencils, cameras, canvasses and tripods. I have however now got it organised so I can make expeditions on foot comfortably by assembling the appropriate bits and bobs in various ways depending on what I have planned. Watercolours are the lightest by far with only a small satchel needed and the paintings once dry are no problem to carry. Oils however are a different proposition so I carry one lightweight pochade that allows a 10in by 7in painting and a more substantial one that can accommodate a more generous 10in by 14 in. I had  decided on this trip to do some larger pictures so the wee pochade didn’t get an outing.

The time of year is perfect for painting right now, with low light most of the day and all the glorious autumn colours on show. To add to this the weather was dramatically changeable with clouds and showers being chased across the hills by blustery winds. So here’s what I got up to I’ll try to put them in order.

Bridge, plein air, painting, oils, wales, pembrokeshire, nevern, river

After my drive down I was straight out. I had spotted this scene on my last visit but the light had been wrong but when I arrived this time the view was perfectly lit with dark shadows lit by dramatic splashes of sunlight. This is all very well but on blustery days like this the scene looks different from moment to moment so you have to decide as you go along which of the lighting changes you like. I repainted the landscape behind the house two or three times until I liked how it sat with the brilliantly lit foreground.

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Newport, pembrokeshire, wales, oil, plein air, painting

Morning saw a dramatic storm come in from the sea. I set out intending to paint it but when I got down to the Parrog at Newport the rain was horizontal so being a wimp I sat and waited in the car. I didn’t have long to wait the wind soon harried the clouds off to the North leaving only a few tattered and defeated remnants in a ragged array across the bay. Looking to my left however a new army of ominous clouds was gathering for an assault so I knew I had better be quick. It was quite frustrating painting the sky as everything was moving so fast. Several arrangements got painted in then scraped out but I settled for a simpler sky in the end as the first dramatic version rather overwhelmed the scene.

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Newport, painting, oils, wales, pembrokeshire, plein air, sea

That evening I returned to try another strategy with the clouds. This time I mixed all the hues first and started with the clouds rather than the sky. On the whole I think this worked better and I had this quite complicated cloudscape done quite quickly and it was easier to keep the colour fresh as well. Mind you by the time I came to paint the foreground I was needing my head torch to see my palette and my painting.

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Carningli, Wales, Preseli, painting, oli, plein air, autumn

Next day I  went round the side of Carningli intending to paint the nearby prehistoric grave, but got side tracked by this simple view. The trees were a lovely mixture of dusty greens part turned to autumn reds that just had to be painted. this is a smaller one only 7in by 10 in.

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Pentre Ifan, tomb, stones, dolmen, cromlech, Newport, wales, painting, watercolour

I arrived at Pentre Ifan later than I wanted but the light was still good so I settled to do a watercolour. It was very blustery with the paint getting moved across the paper by the wind. This is the third time I have painted this cromlech and none of them is really what I want so I shall have to return. I will try dawn I think as the light should be on the back of  Carningli, the peak seen here to the right.

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Newport, sunset, wales, watercolour, painting

One more at the end of the day. I was a bit too late here and only had 15 minutes to splash something down, but the photo I took on arriving is good and with this quick note to help it will make a studio picture I hope.

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Cardigan, Teifi, river, watercolour

A quick sketch in passing of the mouth of the Teifi near Cardigan, just a very quick note that might make a painting.

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Nevern, church, wales, painting, plein air,

Most of this day was spent walking the coast path after a very wet start. Sometimes it’s important just to look and not to see everything as a subject in waiting or through the lens. As well as the watercolour I did find the time though to do this tiny 7in by 5 in of Nevern church.

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Bosherton, Lily, Ponds, Wales Pembrokeshire, painting, oils

Monday was advertised as the best day of the week so I set out south to Bosherton to paint the famous lily ponds. The ponds are quite hard to paint with no place to set up an easel on the very paintable low bridges that cross the ponds so I set up on this very exposed rocky outcrop that gave a wider view. Quite a difficult subject with no obvious composition I just tried to catch the beautiful colours of the ponds and trees. It was astonishingly windy and I had to tie a large rock to my easel and nearly had my palette whipped out of my hands a few times.

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Bosherton, trees, wales, plien air, painting, oils

I was on my way to try and get a view of the ponds from a different angle when I spotted this, which unlike my previous subject had a composition as plain as could be. Nice quiet spot in the sun after being blown to kingdom come on the previous painting I felt I deserved a rest and this was a real pleasure to paint. The only really tricky bit being to get the various levels of detail working together. It would have been easy to simplify into masses and still have made a nice painting but not I felt really true to the charm of the scene.

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Pembroke, castle, painting, watercolour

I just had time to do this quick sketch of Pembroke Castle. I must return at some stage to paint this again as there are some lovely subjects with the castle standing dramatically over the water. It was very cold and the paint wouldn’t dry so a sketch only.

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Newport, pembrokeshire, wales, watercolour

A very grey day, I did have plans to do this scene once every day… but I only managed twice being seduced away by other scenes… never was good at plans. This was a real challenge, completely flat light with a constant drizzle, but I enjoyed painting it. It was a relief to go off and read a book for the rest of the day though as the rain set in and didn’t let up at all.

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St Davids, pembrokeshire, wales, drawing

My last day and off to St Davids It was another grey day. My sister in law Judy and I wandered around the town and cathedral and I sat for a while and drew this. A little girl was fascinated and kept coming back to see my progress at one point telling me I was very slow!

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Newport, wales, oil, plien air, painting

The day cleared up at the very end and my final painting was a subject I have painted many times. It didn’t disappoint with the last light of the day becoming quite magical until it faded leaving me on a cold dark hillside packing away my paints and setting off down hill for a well earned beer.

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This is an addendum with “tiddles” which is what I call Plein Airs that I’ve fiddled with after the event. I sagely advise beginners not to do this then ignore the advice myself entirely…

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Wales, pembrokeshire, plein air, oils, painting

This one the weather got me, I was painting away and a storm crept up behind me. The first I knew of it was when a mighty blast of rain and wind took my easel over! I sat despondently in the car for a while but it didn’t let up. I was cross because it had been going well but only the tree shadows on the road needed finishing, so not too bad. Click for larger version.

.Sea, wales, cardigan, painting, oils

This is Aberaeron in Ceredigion the houses are all painted in fetching (and some not so fetching) colours. It has a beautiful harbour with fine Georgian houses. I would have loved to do more here so I will return to do some more paintings I hope. Click for larger version.

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Painting, oils, wales, pembrokeshire, plein air

I was on my way to Haverford West to buy some more boards as I had used up my supply. So I only had a 9in by 5in scrap to paint this on. It was a gorgeous scene and I will be doing a larger one from this and the photos I took. Still it is amazing how you can get a fairly complete impression down in 15 minutes or so if you just go for the big elements.

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