Part 3 |Project 2 | Exercise 2: Sketchbook walk

This exercise was to do four quick sketches along a walk that you regularly take. I took out different media to see what would work well for on the spot sketching but as it turned out I wasn’t all that happy with any of them apart from the charcoal.

 

I tried marker pens first using just trhee colours. Looking at it now I can see it’s an accurate enough representation that I could use it to work from which perhaps is the point but the drawing feels sloppy and a little harsh to me.

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In reaction to the pens I tried pencil to get something softer but I don’t really like this either! I like the less detailed less tonal areas such as the car but the main focus of the sculpture itself does nothing for me.

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I didn’t have time to do all four sketches (blame the baby) so had to work from photographs for the last two.

This one seemed to need colour to show it’s dullness and I worked in watercolo

ur pencil and marker which gave it a sort of school textbook feeling.. appropriate for the subject matter but pretty boring as an image.

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This last one however I really enjoyed! It was still very speedy but the charcoal was the perfect choice for the subject matter and I loved how it all melted together giving just an impression of where things begin and end but still very clearly showing the subject. It has all of the atmosphere and light that is missing from the other drawings.

 

Assignment 2

For this assignment I chose to do the interior of my bedroom as seen through the doorway. It’s such an emotive subject for me – I love my bedroom, the colours and the light and all of Ottilie’s stuff amongst mine – it always gives me pleasure as I pass the doorway. I had a fair idea of how I wanted it to be so did some experimenting with mixed media to see if I could get the effects I wanted and did a few drawings of my room in preparation trying different view points.

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I tried a bit of very simple collage in this marker drawing to see what impact that would have and really liked the effect – I considered doing something similar in the assignment piece but decided against it in the end which I think it was the right decision for the media I’d chosen. It’s great with marker though and I like the drawing both with and without colour in different ways. A3 (2 x A4 pages)

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This one were it to have a name would be called “The marital bed” and was drawn on the first page of the first draft of our separation agreement! It seemed apt. Markers again and oil pastel, A4.

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This is my final piece! It’s around A1 on very nice drawing paper I was given a little stack of – much better for mixed media than the paper I’d been using previously. I am SO pleased with how this has turned out, it has so much of the feeling of my room and is by far my most successful use of pastels – the loose style that I really love works really well here, it felt much more natural after the previous few exercises. I used mixed media – pastel with a wash and watercolour as a base, then pastel over the top with some working in with paintbrush and water and then ink and brush and marker pens to finish.

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Assessment criteria:

Demonstration of technical and visual skills – I hope I would score well on this criteria, I feel like this is a very accurate depiction of my room right now but has maintained the liveliness of my style of work. I think I chose an interesting and challenging composition and the right mix of media to draw the attention in to the room and pay homage to the colours there. I think being critical I might look at the door frame and door again – I wanted them to be be more simply done and less sharp so that they’re almost out of focus to the eye and I liked the slight wonkiness to all of the lines but I think looking at it scaled down on the computer that a little less wonkiness on the lines of the door frame and a sharper line on the door edge itself would only improve it.

Quality of outcome – I really love how this has turned out so I would hope to score well here. On this point I often try to think “would I buy this” and in this case I definitely would, which certainly isn’t always the case! 

Demonstration of creativity – I hope I would score well here – I It feels like my style is very present here and I really like the way it’s come through. I tried to experiment and to use media that before this course I had little-to-no experience of and I feel it’s worked really well.

Context reflection – I think this shows influence from the artists I’ve been researching, particularly in the still life research and also from the recent Van Gogh exhibition I went to. I’ve found that a lot of the art I’m most interested in made me really want to paint and probably as a result this has come out with the feeling of a painting! 

Looking back at Part 2 as a whole I think could have experimented a lot more in the exercises themselves. I found that I got so into pastels in the last bit and so focused on getting the exercises done in time that I just forgot to try other media and other paper a lot of the time, remembering towards the end and suddenly re-discovering ink but a little too late! I would have liked to do some proper collage work too but can take that into part 3 which I think it will suit very well anyway. My head has been all over the place for much of this section as I’m also in the middle of buying my ex out of our flat which will be ongoing throughout the summer. I’m finding the art incredibly therapeutic which is great but I think that also means that I am doing it all unthinkingly and that probably has its downsides as well as upsides.. time will tell!

EDIT: Realised the stupidity of submitting an assignment piece where I could see areas of improvement so have neatened the doorway and it’s looking much better for it – here’s the improved version. It’s all going in the post today so no more edits!

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Research point | negative space

I’ve started reading drawing with the left hand side of the brain – of only to give little exercises to do on days when I haven’t got time for a coursework exercise but still need a bit of inspiration to get my daily drawing dose! One of the first exercises was to draw the vase/faces illusion made famous by Danish psychologist Edgar Rubin – very topical for negative space! This made me immediately think of Escher and his negative space illusions – not an artist working today but certainly interesting as a different approach.

The other artist that immediately came to mind was David Hockney and particularly his oh so famous work A Bigger Splash (Below, Tate). What he does so well here is to cut up the canvas into big chunks of colour making the relationships between those spaces a focus of the work. It works especially well with the finer detail of the splash itself for contrast.

A Bigger Splash 1967 by David Hockney born 1937

I did a bit of screen-printing not so long ago and that was really useful for looking at positive and negative space because by the very nature of printing you have to give negative space equal consideration and really see the shapes it creates. A contemporary artist I looked at recently David Ainley uses broad shapes in his work in a similar way so that the lines between positive and negative space are blurred and you’re invited to view the picture as a whole rather than as objects and backgrounds or positive and negative. You can see this clearly in Two Spires, Limestone Quarry. (Below, Axisweb)

DAVID AINLEY two spires limestone quarry

An image that uses negative space in a particularly interesting way is Barbara Walker’s Exotic Detail in The Margin #2 (Below, Jerwood Arts) where there is such emphasis on the negative space left like missing jigsaw pieces to tell a story to the viewer. This could be an interesting idea particularly for me right now having had so much change in my life recently and with one piece of my previous life now very much absent!

BARBARA WALKER Exotic-Detail-In-Margin

Part 2 | Project 4: Exercises 2 & 3 – composition – an interior

For this exercise we were asked to try out variations of composition to find which view point we would work up into a finished piece. I went back to the sideboard and worked in conte mapping out the areas of light and shade and playing with slightly altered viewpoints. Here are three of my sketches – I actually liked the first a lot more than I though I would – I think it could make for quite a dramatic image of what is a very mundane view because of the blocks of tone and negative space, I’d like to try that in charcoal at some point. However because this was to be doe in colour I was more drawn this time to the objects on the sideboard and so settled on the last sketch. You can see that in reality the cup was lower but I wanted to make it a more prominent part of the composition so moved it up into the image. I also like the echoing uprights of the bin and the plant in this composition.

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For the second exercise – taking this through to resolution – I chose to work with pastels. Although it’s a material I had almost no experience of prior to this course I’ve really enjoyed getting to grips with it and particularly liked the tonal still life in the previous exercise so hoped I could bring the vivid colours of my sitting room to life in a similar way. I worked it up in A2:

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This was a real pleasure to work on. I feel like each time I use pastels I get more of the effect that I want to achieve – it’s feeling more like painting but with my drawing style coming through too. I’d found previously that I liked pastels best with a base colour so you avoided the white underneath and so with this picture I blocked out athe base colours in pastel, washed over them with a brush and water and then worked into that again with pastel. I was trying to be fairly true to life with the colours in this and I think I’ve achieved that, although in retrospect I think the colours are so bold that it might have been better to use a little artistic licence and tone them down a bit to make a more cohesive picture.

Part 2| Project 4: Exercise 1 – quick sketches around the home

I LOVED this exercise! Partly just to come to the end of it with such a stack of drawings but also because I know that it’s drawings like this rather than the more finished or carefully composed images that I will come to value in later years. It’s the sort of exercise you should do once a year just to keep a record!

The first one I did in conte but wasn’t feeling it so moved on to pen and stuck with that.

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The drawings themselves aren’t all that but they do give a real feeling for my home as it is now. My favourites are the mirror view in my bedroom and the view directly into Joss’ room with his instruments. Up until then I’d been looking into corners as suggested but it was such a lovely chaotic set up – crying out to be drawn! I cocked up with the window which should have been much taller but in some ways I think the off perspective allows the chaos to rise up on either side even more and adds something to the feeling, worth remembering that perspectives can be stretched for effect although also I need to keep a close eye to make sure it doesn’t happen unintentionally again. The mirror view I like precisely because of the mirror – it always gives so much to a composition with the added depth and repetition – and also because it’s my bedroom which feels to me like the heart of my home right now as both me and my baby Ottilie sleep there.. sleep being a loose term in this context! I will definitely work more on this room.

Looking again at these together I can’t quite see what brought me to choose the sideboard to continue with on the next exercises – it seems the least interesting choice, it’s an area of the flat that I am particularly fond of because of the clutter and it being the spot for a cup of tea so perhaps it was that, but in hindsight I think I ought to have tried something based solely on how interesting the viewpoint was.

 

Research suggestions

I’ve been looking at various artists as I work including the four that were suggested by my tutor  which I just wanted to note down here:

Alberto Giacometti – I’ve been to two of his exhibitions in the past and always find him fascinating, even now his work is so distinctive and recognisable. He’s a great one to remember for the people/portrait section particularly but his movement and block backgrounds could help with any of the sections.

Kathe Kollowitz – I’d just been looking at some of her self portraits when I looked at the list of suggested artists and found her name among them! She more so than Giacometti will be especially wonderful to come back to when looking at portraiture, her self portraits are so heavy with emotion, I’d love to be able to convey that in my work.

Tony Cragg (drawings) – I hadn’t heard of Tony Cragg so it’s been nice to be introduced to someone new. I particularly liked his more pattern based (no surprise there!) drawings in ink – some really lovely abstract stuff.

Henry Moore sheep drawings – this was an interesting one for me, I love Henry Moore’s sculptures but his drawings I’m less keen on and particularly his sheep drawings. I like the frenetic playful way he draws but I don’t like how cartoony they are. Maybe partly because I’ve grown up with sheep and think of them as so weatherworn and doleful – I’d really enjoy trying to capture that and I don’t think Henry Moore puts any of that across in his drawings.

Part 2 | Project 3: Exercise 4 – Monochrome

I wanted to try to find a subject that was already pretty much monochrome and take that as a starting point, I did that but although I captured the objects themselves quite well I really don’t like this as an image. Partly I think it’s my colour bias and especially in relation to the subject – I just don’t really like these colours alone, I would have liked to give them a yellow or green background and the blue surface in particular really jars for me. Whereas in my previous tonal pastel still life the blue surface really added something against the other bright colours here it looks naff to me against the old enamel tin and wonky hand thrown mug both of which would look at home on an old scrubbed kitchen table not an unnatural blue surface. Had I made the surface look like a tablecloth that might have worked better, I could (and may) try that – perhaps with some spots to mirror the pattern on the mug and see if I feel better about it.

I’m also not sure if it strictly counts as monochrome – it’s blue and cream rather than blue and white but perhaps that doesn’t matter so much. I’m also I’m not really keen on the amount of space around the objects; I like busy images where your eyes are drawn to lots of areas at once and in trying to be a little more minimal I think I’ve lost sight of what works and what doesn’t. I’m not sure how possible it would be to totally rework a pastel picture but I might see if it’s possible, it will be an education even if it becomes a total hash. Anyway I am at least pleased with the objects themselves, that’s quite a nice representation of how they look.. if you can look past the background!!

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..so I came back to this and tried changing the table surface to a cloth and it’s much less jarring to me now but I still don’t like it. The tablecloth wasn’t all that successful and I still don’t like the colours.

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Part 2 | Project3: Exercise 3 – experiment with mixed media

I wonder rereading this if I should have used more ‘non-art’ media but I just used whatever I had around the house – I might try it again if I come across anything else I can try but this was what I had available at the time. I used pastel, brush and water, oil pastel, craft enamel paint (really horrible stuff as it turns out – nothing like humbrol enamel which is such fun to use) dip pen and ink and fine liner. I still have no idea if I like this or not, generally I might enjoy it or not while I’m doing it but I’ll only be able to see it objectively (or as objectively as possible) when I come back to it to look again later but I just can’t see this one. I think there are bits that have worked really well – certainly as an exercise in mixed media, the old Mrs Beeton book for example was a test in how to get that effect of an old book and I think that was surprisingly effective – particularly in contrast to the new Anna Jones which is half the reason I’d included both. For the sweetcorn jug I’d envisaged beatiful gleaming droplets of the enamel paint to make the corn effect but actually the paint dried wrinkled and slightly translucent and I had to work over it a lot with pastel and oil pastel to get something of what I was going for, I think the jug did eventually work and I really like the surface of the table with the orange-red highlights but something about it definitely doesn’t work, looking at it again now I think it could just be the background which seems too messy and too busy – I might try painting over it to give it a plain opaque colour background without tonal variation and see what effect that has on the rest of the image ..To be continued!

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Part 2 | Project 3: Exercise 2 – still life in tone using colour

I tried a few arrangements of composition for this and eventually went for quite a symmetrical set up which I think worked really well with the subject and colours and my style of drawing – all together it has for me a flavour of the 1920s which I really like. This was my first real test using pastels and actually I was really pleased with the outcome, I still felt a bit like it might have been better painted but saying that I don’t think I would have automatically gone about it in the same way so perhaps it did need to be pastel to get this effect.. either way I wasn’t expecting this to be a work I was pleased with but I really love it.

 

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Part 2 | Project 3: Exercise 1 – still life using line

I had a couple of goes at this, the first work was after an afternoon of laughter with my lodger discussing our parallel recent splits and entering the world of modern dating and so I made lighthearted still life with an enormous phallic carrot and a drying rose head in a bottle!

I played around with compositions first..

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..and then did my line drawing with dip pen and ink. I tried to keep it fairly minimal and there are nice things about that, I liked trying to give the impression of reflections in the bottle purely using line and the slightly psychedelic outcome but it didn’t really work for me as a whole.

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I looked around to see what might suit the medium better and had a eureka moment when I spotted a plant of mine that has a woven plant pot – the plant pot itself took hours to draw but I LOVE the result! I think what works well is the contract between the negative space, the intensive pattern of the pot and the looser stylised leaves. This is one of my favourite pieces so far. I think it would make a really nice screenprint next time I have the opportunity to do that.

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