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    Tuesday
    Feb212012

    A 'First Sunday' reminder...

    Hello,

     

    I thought you might be interested in the images below. A year or so ago I was taking students out landscape painting on a Thursday, and I mentioned that it was my practice to use the (usually) 9 x 5 paintings as the basis for a larger studio painting. Well, here’s the latest. It‘s bound for Artspace in Mackay for a group exhibition in which I’m taking part during July. I’ll let you know more about that closer to the date.

     

    I think it’s quite interesting to see the development of a quick colour sketch into a more considered painting (the final piece is 910 x 505mm, oil on board). The obvious differences are the greater sense of distance in the larger piece, and a need to present the illusion of a more detailed foreground. The other thing to note is the use of a yellow ochre/viridian combination to achieve the shadows in the Gum Tree canopy. Not something I‘ve used before, but very effective.

     

    Finally, a reminder about my next ‘First Sunday’ workshop (Sunday 4th March). We’ll meet at the studio this time, and will be working on the industrial landscape close by. It might not sound too thrilling, but it can produce some very interesting compositions. Have a look at the Plein air section of my Gallery to see some of my previous work using the same subject.

     

    So, until the next time,

     

    Nick L

     

    Sunday
    Feb192012

    Friday life drawing. New from 17 02 2012.

    Hello,

    A couple of things for you this week, Friday last saw the first of our new lifedrawing sessions. At the moment, it operates as a sketch club with no tuition, but if enough interest is shown we will reconsider that, and offer tuition as a regular feature. Let us know if you are interested, we need at least four regular students to make things work.

    In the meantime, have a look at the photographs above. I’m responsible for the little clay maquette. A bit long in the torso, but not bad for a first attempt. I will be setting up four sculpture stations for next Friday, and you are welcome to come and join in, just provide your own materials.

     

    The drawings come from Stephen, Wayne, and Ryan. As you can see, the two hour pose lends itself to a more considered piece of work than the usual gestural drawing session, in two dimensions and three.

     

    The other thing is a painting by John W. He has been coming along to my Thursday evening classes for a year or so now, and painted the still life at home during a brief break from classes. I’ve put it into the Student Gallery, which you can get to by following this link. So, goodbye for now,

     

    Nick L

    Tuesday
    Feb142012

    ABSTRACTION IN ART

    By Brian E Deagon (Studio friend)

     

    “There are no rules. No guidelines. No boundaries .” my friend complained. “How do you do abstract  art ?” he wondered.

     

    Thinking about it, I could see he had a genuine concern.  I had no answer other than to mutter “ Mysticism. Its about esoteric mystical concepts of purification. Its shamanic identification with the creative process.”

    He  frowned. Clearly that was not helpful.

     

    Perhaps we could consider its parentage in Cubism and Surrealism?

    Cubism itself had its lineage, including ( in no particular order)

    1.     Cezanne’s difficulties understanding binocular vision, resulting in multiple viewpoints.

    2.     New style shop windows which allowed the artist to see not only the window contents but also the reflected artist and the street behind him.

    3.     Double exposures and X-ray photography

    4.     Einsteins Theories on space and time

    5.     Bargue’s guidelines for figure drawing

    6.     The “discovery” of indigenous art, which was ( no..still is )viewed romantically as somehow more “pure” or “elemental”. It was used as a kind of purgative to remove layers of sclerotic culture and offered a new beginning. The new beginning became a nightmare in WW1

    The outcomes of this torrent we are all familiar with. The upshot was a structure of mostly straight lines creating interpenetrating planes and a kind of elliptical composition. These planes do not exist behind the picture plane, but on it, or even project illusionistically into the viewers space, while still remaing parallel to the picture plane.

     

      Understanding this structure is important, for it provides the underpinning of abstraction, the dominant “look” of the style. The Bauhaus reinforced this, taking over architecture, typeface, furniture. Its everywhere.

    .

    Surrealism had two arms, both belonging to Madame Blavatsky.

     One was dependent on traditional illusionistic painting. Only the subject matter was bizarre. Burning giraffes come to mind.This flourishes in film still.

     Of more importance was a more extreme outpouring of Freud and Jung’s unconscious that utilised chance or surrender of control as a creative principle.  Hence the throwing and splashing, the random ravages of weather or processes such as burning or collaged images from every fifth page.

    When American artists in the aftermath of WW2 and the Korean war discovered calligraphy it blended seamlessly with this style of Surrealism.

    The preparation of the artist before gesturing meaningfully upon a canvas was central to the creative process . Very Zen. Lots of positive and negative space.This is the shamanic side of abstraction. This led to extremes which in turn literally killed artists. Drug addiction is a poor preparation it seems.Better to meditate upon Earth Air Fire and Water, or play the Sex Pistols VERY loud.

     

    So there is the Yin and Yang of it. On the one hand the artist manipulates mediums to create a structure that is an expression of the artists will, and the cubist ghost is never far away:  and on the other the artist becomes part of the medium which creates by itself a structure that is revealed in the making, and is independent of the artist's will. Surreal really.

     

    In actual practice, most artists waver between these extremes. Kandinsky encompassed both. Most of the abstract "isms" live or die here.

     

    Wolesy will bury his drawings for six months, Klien will cover his models in paint and roll them across a canvas, Gleeson will let paint run and blend , then use the result as a trigger for his quite beautiful brush. Mondrian and other purists were messionic  about minimal means. Kline ,Motherwell and the Europeans Matthieu, Sonderborg took gestural calligraphy to extremes, but never matched the Chinese. Pollock poured out his soul, but who knows where it went?

     Vestigial colours of landscape, a horizon here or there, a hint of a figure and some will cry “ Its not abstraction!”    But does it really matter?

     

    In the zeal some posess to “restore the old ways of the masters” we had better be careful. It’s a coaches nightmare to have his team obsessing about what the opposition is doing. Rather than pointless spleen levelled at Modern Art and its advocates, it makes more sense to remember that the work that was produced belonged to a particular historical period. Even if we don’t like the art, we should have the sense to view it with the eye of the anthropological archaeologist. “ What does this thing mean?” is a question never fully answered. And we might learn something after all.

     

    Brian Deagon

    6/02/2012

    Friday
    Feb102012

    Alex's nose...

    I thought that this photograph would be worthwhile bringing to your attention. Alex has been attending classes at the Atelier now for the past year or so, in fact, he is responsible for the fine tonal drawing of the dog, which you will find in the student gallery.

     

    His interests are wide, and when he asked about doing some sculpture, I set him alongside the adults, where he worked on a copy of the nose from Michelangelo’s ‘David’ with every bit of the care and attention I could expect of any of my students.

     

    When the plasticine copy of the original was completed, we then turned our attention to making a one-off waste mould. A mould made in this manner is destroyed in the process of casting, but has the virtue of being cheap!

     

    So, at the beginning of the last session, I left Alex with a hammer and chisel carefully chipping away at the soft outer mould, with a warning as to what could go wrong if he was a little bit careless.

     

    As you can see, nothing went awry, and he is now the proud owner and maker of a unique piece of artwork. I wonder what he will be capable of in a few years time?

     

    Nick L

    Wednesday
    Feb082012

    The difference a year makes...

    In an unexpected follow-up to last Sundays plein air workshop, Fiona –one of our first students- brought a painting to the studio this morning of Lota creek (top) which she did a year ago, when I first took a group of students painting ‘en plein air’.

     

    It is remarkable to see the improvement in her painting over that time. Fiona had painted some very pleasing pieces before coming to us, but as you can see in the second painting, a years guidance has seen the handling of the paint improve markedly, and her observation of the subtleties of tone, colour and form has made a very real difference to the overall quality of her work. I was impressed, I hope you are too.

     

    Nick L

     

    These appear to be painted by two different people.  One timid, unsure, unsteady with the brush; the other confident, assured, making bold, sweeping brushstrokes.  They are of course by the same person – me – but the difference in style reflects the progress I have made under the tutelage of Nick and his colleagues.  I love my new style and it just keeps getting better!

     

    Fiona Short