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!

_MG_0569

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.

 

_MG_0348

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..

tempimageforsave-1

..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.

tempimageforsave

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.

_MG_0336

Part 2 | Project 2: Exercise 1 – detail and tone

I haven’t used pencils in ages so it was quite fun to have a go at this. I used a mix of really cheapo brash coloured pencils and some really rich good quality ones which gave totally different effects – both useful in their own way. I initially didn’t give it much of a background but it looked a bit weak so spent the rest of the evening (much longer than I had imagined it would take..!) colouring the blue and it had a very good effect on the colours of the banana. I quite like the chequered style as a way to interestingly fill such a large space, it was also a solution to realising that my blue pencil wasn’t going to last long enough to create a solid colour..! It’s always interesting to see what happens accidentally in situations like that and I think this was a happy accident.

_MG_0175

Part 2: Sketchbook works

 

I don’t really have any experience with pastel so I’m putting extra effort into working with that. I did this in about 15 minutes before bed from a bunch of flowers given to me on my birthday. I wouldn’t hang it on my wall but I do like the liveliness of it – I could definitely play more with that style and it was a helpful reminder that there’s always time to do a quick picture.

_MG_0179

Objects as they naturally are on the top of my sideboard, playing with line.

_MG_0141

Trying using two different pens together for this pineapple which I really liked.

_MG_0143

More pastel work, I loved the teapot which is captured well but hated the table surface..

_MG_0144

..so I painted over a tablecloth! I really like the effect (more pattern – sorry) but it is the wrong paper so it’s gone very wobbly.

_MG_0145

I managed to find time for a life drawing session which I always really enjoy, here are a few from that..

_MG_0334_MG_0333_MG_0332

This one I was SO pleased with! I think it’s the best drawing I’ve done and definitely the use of charcoal on its side has come from the exercises in the first part of the course so it’s lovely to feel that it’s having an immediate impact on my work.

Amaryllis in watercolour and pen – pleased with how this turned out.

_MG_1445

Trying digital – self portrait on a sketch app on my phone

IMG_4027

The plants on my windowsill done in watercolour and dip pen – I really like this, it’s less fine than the other amaryllis picture but so much more lively and much more interesting to my eyes.

IMG_4186

More dip pen, this time over watered down coloured ink. I love this.

Part 2: Project 1 – Still life research

I’ve been doing a little research into still life, primarily finding out what excites me about the genre. I think that along with a large proportion of those who studied art in secondary school I was slightly put off still life by endless rather dull arrangements of apples painted badly by distracted teenagers. I remember wondering what the point was when you could be painting the human form, and even Cezanne not inspiring any enthusiasm! Nowadays often it is the still lifes that make me want to rush home from an exhibition and get out my paints and so I’ve enjoyed picking a few to keep in mind as I continue my studies.

I looked first at the dutch masters for an earlier approach. Still lifes at this date (as with so much of their paintings) seem so dramatic and rich; you can almost reach out and taste the food on the tables and it all looks so wonderful! A real feast for the eyes, but not a style I would be tempted to emulate now. I think of still life now as celebrating the mundane, though perhaps that is unfair; what’s mundane has changed and many of the examples I’ve chosen are far from that anyway. Still, for me at least that celebration of the everyday and giving life to inanimate objects holds more excitement than those fantastically grand earlier works. I do love them still though, and there are plenty of elements that can be drawn from them such as colour and composition – in Still Life with the Drinking-Horn of the St. Sebastian Archers’ Guild, Lobster and Glasses, c.1653 (oil on canvas), Kalf, Willem (1619-93) the lobster is so wonderfully garish in its contrasting colour – to todays audience I think there is something comic about it sat amongst the muted tones of the rest of the painting, an absurd shiny red symbol of wealth. It’s lovely too to see how artists recycle subjects and rearrange still lifes such as in Willem Claesz Heda’s Banquet Piece with Mince Pie and Still Life with Ham. It somehow humanises the artist to picture him stood thinking about the composition and trying different arrangements over time as we all do.

I then looked at the more modern approaches to still life and picked a few artists that I find really inspiring, including Cezanne – so famed for those wonderful still lifes that I was blind to as a teenager! Two that I’ve saved to come back to for inspiration are Still Life with Open Drawer and Still life with apples and biscuits both of which have a lovely use of straight lines running through the backdrop to contrast with the spheres of the apples. I think I’m more drawn to the composition of still life with open drawer but the block colours and the depth given to the apples in still life with apples and biscuits make that my favourite of the two and especially good to keep in mind for trying to simplify my work while still retaining what I like about other peoples work.

Mary Fedden came up and I absolutely love these three: Still Life IV; On a Red Ground, Orange and Green Still Life and The Mincing Machine her. Her almost abstract still lifes take the subjects and flatten and simplify the elements painting them in a bright but restricted colour palette and with a focus on pattern which as we know I’m rather keen on! I’ve found through my research that I’m really drawn to limited colour palettes such as these – worth remembering to not feel I have to stay too close to what’s in front of me in terms of colour.

I always find myself inspired by the work of the Bloomsbury group and so looked to see Duncan Grant’s take on still life – as ever he did not dissappoint. Here are three I’d like to come back to: Lilies in a Jug, Still Life with Fruit and Coffee Pot, and Still Life with Cyclamen, two really lovely and very different floral works but it’s Still life with fruit and coffee pot that really excites me – what fantastic colour! This is exactly the sort of work that I love; for the paintwork, colours and use of pattern.

I also looked at Roger Fry’s work and saved Still Life with a Blue Bottle and Still Life of Fish to return to for inspiration. I haven’t painted fish yet and would love to give that a go – these are really lovely, though a smoother style than I would usually go for. The blue bottle I thought might be good to give me ideas for doing much simpler work that still has that playfulness and colour that I love.

Another fishy piece I loved was George Braque’s Fish; Les Poissons – much simpler than Fry’s still life of fish and in my eyes absolutely as gorgeous, it plays too with negative space which is something we’ve been asked to bear in mind. I also wanted to bookmark The Red Tablecloth; La Nappe Rouge for it’s use of shapes and pattern and again lovely playful use of colour.

The last two I wanted to save for later are by Anne Redpath: Still Life with Orange Chair and Round Table with Chinese teapot. Both interesting for their quite different use of colour but also just lovely compositions. Again the flattened perspective really appeals to me – distorting everything and creating quite a different image because of it.

Really what I’ve come out of all of this thinking is how much I want to get painting again which isn’t so much use in the drawing module! However it has also reignited my enthusiasm for still life and given me ideas of what to focus on for my upcoming projects.

 

Feedback on Assignment one

I’ve just had my first tutorial and feedback from assignment one, it was so good to speak to Diana face to face (albeit over screens) and to hear her thoughts and get a little more direction. It was well timed too – I had had a busy day what with taking my daughter to the doctors and the nursery drop off and then a full day of working from home plus supper and bedtime and a minor mountain of chores and so speaking to someone and remembering that I’m not doing it entirely alone and that it is worth putting my evenings aside for was just what I needed. The summarised feedback was as follows:

You have ambition to work with different media and complex compositions.
Be careful with the qualities of line. You demonstrated the range of these in your initial exercises. Treat each media differently so there is more investigation in your
work.

When you work simply with varied lines then the work can be compared.
Sometimes you can be too heavy handed especially when using charcoal and working with patterns. Try and simplify and work the opposite so there is more investigation into how you can apply media.

Your work is gestural, and physical.
Work on different surfaces to enhance the way you draw and investigate media.

Your visual language is good for this level.
Keep reflecting and be in tune with your progress by reviewing what you have done.

The feedback all felt really useful, I think the work that I like most in others is very loose and busy and so that is what I tend towards but I’m aware that I can be too heavy-handed or even just inaccurate and it could be really helpful to strip back and focus on fine-tuning before coming back to that style of work with better foundations. I liked Diana’s idea of continuing to work in whatever style comes naturally while also trying lighter or more simplified drawings so that I can compare and look at what works and what doesn’t to move on from there. 

I think I need to work more in my sketchbooks to really play around with ideas and that was mentioned too in the feedback. I feel at the moment like I can feel some improvement with almost every exercise and if I gave each one more space for trial and error then it would only be a good thing. I’m going to root out my A3 sketchbook and start trying more sketches on a large scale as I think often the work I do in between the exercises is smaller and tighter and doesn’t build so much on my progress through the course.

I think it’s really useful to be reminded to be more sensitive to the media and think more about the different lines and different pressures that I could be using. I am quite looking forward to keeping that in focus through the next part of the course and also in experimenting with different paper as suggested by Diana.

Assignment one

For the first asignment we were asked to choose objects that trigger an emotional response and set up a still life which we’d then draw using a variety of drawing tools and utilising some of the experimental mark making from earlier exercises. At this point I realised I should have been more experimental in the previous exercise but I worked with what I’d got and used charcoal, conte and ink with pen and brush for the assignment. Other than the last exercise which touched vaguely on it I’d had no experience whatsoever of mixing media so I took a couple of pages of my A4 sketchbook to experiment with layering.

IMG_2339

I came away from it feeling really excited about the assignment; mixed media had connotations of naff art you might find in charity shops for me so it was a surprise to see the potential for really exciting work! For another work I’d like to play around with really simple shape based drawings taking inspiration from print and using the bottom row as a starting point, but that wouldn’t quite have worked for this assignment! I worked on A2 paper and for my subjects I chose a jar of sudocrem, a banana and a champagne saucer. I placed them on patterned fabric and included my curtains and a cushion so that the whole set up was alive with patterns – in part because previous exercises had made me really want to start working with pattern, partly because I wanted to push myself with a more ambitious composition and also because I wanted the still life to be a window on my life right now and my life and home is full of big bold patterns. I have an 8 month old baby Ottilie who is the centre of everything for me right now – all of the objects I chose relate to her; the sudocrem for obvious reasons, the banana which Ottilie loves so much at the moment that every meal includes it and the champagne saucer both for Ottilie in celebration of her life but also because it was a wedding present and another big current theme for me is my separation from Ottilie’s father which happened very suddenly in September. The champagne glass therefore is symbolic of a new life for me too but also holds a poigniancy in its relationship to my past life.

10787054400__MG_9927

I went through so many stages of loving and hating this picture as I was doing it, I found that although on the small scale tests the conte worked better in combination than the charcoal, on a larger scale it just didn’t have the lovely silkiness that charcoal has. I persevered though starting with broad shapes in watered down ink then basic hatching across the picture in conte then dip pen details and then a lot more work in charcoal and ink and brush. Before the charcoal I didn’t like where it was going at all but it seemed to grow tenfold from that point and coming back to it now I really love the effect of the combined media. I’m pleased too with print quality that the patterns have added, that’s something I always love in other peoples work and it’s exciting to make space for it in my own work.

Looking at the assessment criteria

  • Demonstration of technical and visual skills
  • Quality of outcome
  • Demonstration of creativity
  • Context reflection

I think the real strength in this piece is probably its representation of my developing a personal voice – as far as demonstration of creativity goes I feel like I’ve pushed myself further towards the sort of work I’d like to be doing while also going completely out of my comfort zone in terms of media so I’d like to think that I’d do well in this section.
I find it hard toseparate myself enough to see how much this demonstrates technical and visual skills, I think perhaps it does show my ability in terms of visual awareness – design and composition etc. but probably isn’t such a strong example of my technical skills. I certainly felt less confident working with mixed media than I would have say with charcoal alone and I think that you can see that in the muddiness of some of the darker areas. I think if I were to do the whole thing again I could give it more clarity by using conte only in specific areas that were going to involve line work with a dip pen and building up other areas more with charcoal alone. That being said I think the quality of outcome is good; I like the overall feeling of the picture even including the more frenetic quality of the layers and layers of hatching in different media.
As far as context reflection goes I think although it was certainly beneficial to experiment with mixing media before setting out on the asessment I could have done more of that and it would have only improved the result; more sketchbook work in mixed media would have been a good idea.I did however draw alot from the previous exercises and other research that I’d done and I think you can see that in the piece.

Research: Anni Albers

I stupidly didn’t make notes at the Anni Albers exhibition but have been thinking a lot about how I could translate Anni Alber’s pattern work from textile into abstract drawing and painting. In particular those works where a regular pattern was interrupted such as Dotted (1959 Museum of Fine Arts Boston, The Daphne Farago Collection) – I think something of that could carry over and work really well in another medium. Could be something to come back to later on.