Wednesday 26 May 2010

Sheri - visiting the Borde Hill Sculpture Trail

I visited the Surrey Sculpture trail at Borde Hill Gardens the other week and was really impressed with what I saw - well worth the visit and picnic on the grass. It was great to see Lynn's sculpture in person too. The girls had fun - life imitating art! Here are some photos:

Sheri - the latest horse

I think this is finished now, though I dare say I could tinker with it for another session. Let's see if I bring it back next time. (Bit of a bad flash glare on the photo, oops)

Michael: Print completed

Finished (at last)! I've printed the final and darkest colour onto both versions of the "Havana" print, and the image comes into focus.

Blue Havana
Blue Havana. Linocut 30 x 24 cm.

Havana Gold
Havana Gold. Linocut 30 x 24 cm.

I haven't checked the prints thoroughly yet, but there's about six good prints of "Blue Havana", and about eight of "Havana Gold".

On with the next print...

Monday 24 May 2010

Richard - Saturday Life Class

My picture from life class on Saturday. A similar approach to last time, again using drawn line with a mix of transparent washes and more opaque paint in places.

Michael: Print in progress 6

I've cut away more of the linoblock, and printed it in darker blue and brown on top of the lighter colour.

Print in progress

Print in progress

The image is starting to emerge. Now I have to cut away more of the block, and then print the last colour.

Thursday 20 May 2010

Michael: Tony Bevan at the De La Warr Pavilion

A few days ago, I went down to the De La Warr Pavilion in Bexhill-on-Sea to see the artist Tony Bevan talk about the installation that he has created for the gallery there. The installation comprises three paintings, so big that they each almost completely occupy one wall of the room in which they are hung.



Images © Tony Bevan, De La Warr Pavilion

Two portraits face each other. Bevan said that they are self-portraits in that they are his own head, but they're not meant to be about him; it's just that when he wants to paint a head, his own is the most convenient. The head on the left (top image) is influenced by Franz Messerschmidt, an 18th century German sculptor.

The third painting turns out also to be a head: it's the back of an enormous Buddha statue in China. The spirals are snails, the traditional hair of Buddha.

"When the Buddha was sitting under the Bodhi tree he was so deep in meditation that he was unaware that it was extremely hot. A group of snails saw him and realising the importance of his thoughts, crawled up to cover and protect his head with their bodies. The snails died from exposure to the hot sun and became honoured as martyrs who had died to protect the Buddha." (Iconography of the Buddha, V&A website.)
Tony Bevan was "in conversation" with Richard Cork, the art critic. At one point, Cork asked, "Because you've painted the back of the Buddha's head, should we read this as somehow symbolic, the idea perhaps that you are turning away from religion, or even that religion is turning away from you".

Bevan replied, "No, it's just when you visit that statue, you climb up a mountain, and the first sight you have of it is from the back."

The paintings are acrylic and charcoal on canvas. The canvas is covered with acrylic polymer that sticks the charcoal to the canvas. It's not clear from the photos, but the white background is actually white paint over the natural brown canvas. The paintings are so big that Bevan painted the canvas flat on the floor, using a ladder to check the progress. When he finished, the canvases were rolled up, taken to the gallery, and then put on stretchers. The first time that Bevan saw them in the traditional vertical position was when they were hung on the gallery wall.

The exhibition continues until 13 June, 2010.

Tuesday 18 May 2010

Michael: Print in progress 5

I made a proof of the linocut in black ink, on the white background that I printed the other day, and decided that it still wasn't working.

So I've made two new decisions: the print will be in colour, and it will be a reduction print (that is, there will be several layers printed on top of each other).

But one decision I can't make is which colour.

The dominant part of this image is the shadows. Warm sunshine on white buildings creates blue shadows... But will blue still be too cold? Would a warm yellow/orange/brown be better?

Solution: Print half the edition in blue, and half the edition in brown.

Print in progress

As this is now going to be a reduction print, there will be more colours on top of this. Back to the cutting board to cut the next stage.

Sunday 16 May 2010

Sheri - Congregation, in situ

Last night I had a thoroughly enjoyable evening at the Congregation performance. It was brilliant to see all of the paintings together, on the pews. The performance consisted of some lovely piano playing and singing and a few spoken word pieces, all composed and written especially to accompany the paintings. Words can't quite describe it!
Here are a couple of photos from the church:

Friday 14 May 2010

Michael: Croydon Art Society exhibition

The Croydon Art Society are holding an exhibition at the Clocktower Galleries. The exhibition runs from Saturday 15 May to Saturday 29 May 2010.


Pile of pictures, prints and cards waiting to go to the exhibition.

Thursday 13 May 2010

Michael: Ashdown Forest again

Another painting of Ashdown Forest.

Ashdown Forest
Acrylic on canvas, 40 x 30 cm.

I like the flat broad areas in the foreground (bottom two-thirds), and the softer colours in the background (top third), but I'm not sure that they work together.

Yes, it's Ashdown Forest again. The subject matter might not be revolutionary, but this is probably the first landscape painting that I've done that isn't square...

Sheri - Horse in progress

Here's my horse, my labour of love from Tuesday night's session. There were a few horrified faces half way through when I'd painted it out without leaving much to go on, but it was so out of proportion, it had to go. And I feel better for it. It's still work in progress, it will probably come back next time, but I feel more direction now than I did.

Tuesday 11 May 2010

Michael: Print in progress 4

I've been thinking a lot about what to do with this linocut. I like the way the block has been cut, but don't like the black-on-white...

...I've just realised that I haven't mentioned what the subject of this print is. It's based on a sketch (and some supporting photos) made from the roof terrace of the Ambos Mundos hotel in Havana, Cuba. It's the hotel where Ernest Hemingway stayed back in the the 1930s, and has a great view across the rooftops of the city.

Havana, Cuba

But the black-ink-on-white-paper of the linocut is too stark to get the feeling of Caribbean heat. So I've decided to go back a step: I'm changing the background of the print. I got another block of lino the same size, and then printed the flat block in warm white. (White plus a tiny amount of warm yellow.)

Here's a picture of some white ink printed onto white paper!

Prints drying

This will be the background on which I will print the block that has been already cut. It should make the highlights warmer, and soften the contrast with the black ink.

For more sketches from Cuba, see my website.

Sheri - Congregation

The Congregation painting has now been handed in and went on display from yesterday, Monday 10th of May, in a special event. From the weekend the exhibition joins Brighton's Artist's Open House Festival. Here's a flier for the event and link to my finished painting:



I'll be there on Saturday, with my model, for the performance night.

We must arrange that field trip to see the other houses!

Monday 10 May 2010

Richard - Saturday Life Class

This time I went with a bigger format (using primed A1 cardboard). I began by drawing with Conte, then painting with oil (after fixing the drawing) using a mix of transparent washes and more opaque colour in selected places.


Friday 7 May 2010

Michael: End of an exhibition

Today was the last day of the exhibition at the Ashdown Forest Visitor Centre. Time to take down all the paintings.

End of an exhibition
The paintings are back in their boxes.

End of an exhibition
The walls are empty again.

End of an exhibition

Small car. Good thing that most of the paintings are small too.

End of an exhibition

It's been a good exhibition: discovering and exploring the forest has been an eye-opener, and certainly inspired a new direction in my paintings.

(There's a photo of the exhibition before it was taken down on my website.)

Thursday 6 May 2010

Michael: Print in progress 3

So here's the block that I have been working on for the last week. It's all inked and ready to go through the press.

Inked linocut block

Hold your breath as it goes through the press...

First proof

It's always a bit of shock when you take the first proof off the press, and see the image the right way round, after all that time staring at the reversed image.

But I like what I see. The clutter of buildings in the top right corner is working (there's a nice play of white against black against white). The foreground right corner perhaps has too much detail, and the left side needs more definition.

But it's going in the right direction. Back to the cutting board to complete the details.

Tuesday 4 May 2010

Michael: Print in progress 2

I've spend about eight hours cutting this block. Every mark affects the next mark. In a linocut, the mark is either there or not there. To define a black shape, it must be surrounded by white (so you cut that bit out); but then to define that white shape, the next area must be black. The very first cut on the block decides the entire image.

Linocut: Work in progress

Linocut: Work in progress

I've done as much to this stage as I think I can; it's time to take the first proof.