Showing posts with label composition. Show all posts
Showing posts with label composition. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 11, 2026

Katherine Tyrrell: Ten Artistic Tips Learnt From The Big Painting Challenge (11 years later!)

Some of those contemplating entering one of the Artist of the Year competitions might find the tips below to be useful.

This is a reproduction of an article I wrote for the WH Smith Blog eleven years ago following (a) the Final of the The Big Painting Challenge and (b) the publication of my book Sketching 365

I found it by accident while searching for something else and realised I had completely forgotten about it! It also seemed very timely for a repost!

So here is Katherine Tyrrell: Ten Artistic Tips Learnt From The Big Painting Challenge

________________________________


Last Sunday was the final episode of The Big Painting Challenge. The series has offered a lot to opportunities to learn over the last 6 weeks – from the amateur painters as well as from the Judges Daphne Todd and Lachlan Goudie.

I’ve been following the series on my blog Making A Mark and have been writing a series of posts – one for each episode. These comment on the challenges and highlight tips as the series has progressed.

Below I’ve summarised some important tips which I’ve derived from the programme content and the comments of both judges and the amateur artists.

TOP TEN TIPS


Check out these tips if you’re thinking of entering an art competition on television – or just improving how you paint.

TIP 1: Observation is key.


It’s really important to look carefully whether you are painting a person, a still life, a landscape – or things which move and dance about and change while you watch! You will reap the benefits if you spend as much time looking as you do drawing and painting. Find the big shapes, the verticals, horizontals and angles and don’t forget to measure and check the size and relative proportions of what you can see.

TIP 2: Good drawing underpins sound construction.


When a drawing or painting does not look quite right it’s often down to a problem with the drawing. Problems with drawing often lie either in:
  • A failure to observe carefully (see Tip 1)
  • A tendency to simplify so as to ignore the difficult bits
  • Unfamiliarity with a range of normal drawing media and the scope for making different marks (see Tip 3)
  • Difficulties in placing an object on a page – leading to bits missing which you intended to include (see Tip 6)
  • Difficulties in handling and mixing colour when using dry media rather than paint (Tip 8)
Identifying the nature of the problem with your drawing is your first step to learning how to correct it. Example: My major problem is my verticals often lean if I draw without thinking. My solution is to check how a major vertical lines up with the edge of the page as I draw it.

My book "Sketching 365" published internationally in 2015

TIP 3: Practice drawing quickly using different types of dry media.


Dry media was usually used for the quick draw exercises in The Big Painting Challenge but was not limited to pencils or charcoal. There was also little time for slow careful drawings! Moving on from graphite to use different types of dry media – and colour – challenged a few of the artists! Dry media are great for drawing and sketching. Try becoming more familiar with the properties of different types of dry media and also how they can be used intelligently to produce quick drawings. Not everything is drawn using a tip – you can also use the side and cover more paper faster! Drawing quickly is something that can be learned – but it takes practice

TIP 4: Become comfortable in working from life – as part of your daily life.

Thursday, February 05, 2026

Review: Episode 4 of Landscape Artist of the Year Series 11 (2026) - Skiddaw

This week, for the fourth episode of Landscape Artist of the Year the artists are back in the Lake District to paint Skiddaw which lies just north of Keswick. 

This is my review, which covers the location, artists, wildcards, heat paintings, who got shortlisted and who won the heat. Plus the themes I found cropped up throughout the programme. 

WARNING: Go and get a cup of tea or coffee and sit down. This is a very long one!
I got half way through this post and decided to call it THE MEGA WHINEY post. I really, really, really want to stop whining and complaining. Please!

There will be yet more screaming - for various reasons....

If you anticipate wanting to enter for next year
  • At the bottom of this post you will also find links to my REVIEWS of all previous episodes in Series 11.
  • Plus you can find all my REVIEWS of previous LAOTY Series from Series 4 (2018) TO Series 10 (2025) - which ALL have lots of tips - on my Art on Television page.

Episode 4: Skiddaw


LAOTY 2026: Episode 4 - Skiddaw Fell
The wildcards arriving - with Skiddaw in the background
aka "Look no houses!"

    Location and Weather

    The 931-metre (3,054 ft) summit of Skiddaw is traditionally considered to be the fourth-highest peak and the sixth highest in the UK. Its slopes are grassy towards the bottom and the ridges are covered in ice-shattered scree and stones towards the top. It's located in what are called the Northern Fells

    Up until the middle ages, its slopes were covered with a temperate rain forest. The Cumbria Wildlife Trust has an appeal for a 100 year project to help restore the Skiddaw Forest to its slopes 

    I think they relocated the LAOTY Pods from the edge of Derwent Water to the other side of Crow Park and then turned them around so they were facing the view of Skiddaw above the town of Keswick.

    Interestingly Skiddaw actually looks very like Croagh Patrick (to be painted for the Commission) - so this was "the ideal audition". Except it wasn't.....

    I'm guessing the pods were located where it was flattest. That's because I was somewhat surprised at the angle of the location. I was expecting them to be more turned towards Skiddaw - on the extreme left in the pic below - instead of being lined up in front of the town of Keswick. 

    Wildcards and Pods
    trees in the foreground, Keswick in the middle ground
    and then Skiddaw in the background

    This was another very hot day - as happened for the first episode at Derwent Water. I'm not going to repeat all the hot weather recommendations from previous episodes of this series.

    Episode 4: The Artists in the Pods


    Episode 4: The Heat 4 Artists - out of their Pods and waiting to be shortlisted

    Episode 4 pod artists are listed BELOW in the alphabetical order of their surnames.
    • Including a synopsis of their background
    • Links to their websites (if they have one) are embedded in their names.
    • Social media platforms are also referenced - but typically only one
    The artists are:
    • Ian Dowding - a former chef / restaurateur from East Sussex who is a self taught artist, painting in acrylics.  (no social media relating to art that I can find)
    • Stephanie Euphemia (Instagram) - a professional artist from Shropshire. She's a  landscape artist who specialises in oil painting en plein air - and has exhibited in various art galleries in England. She's also a former tennis player who gave up a corporate career to become an artist. She brought her daughter to the heat.
    Stephanie and her mini-me
    I had such an incredible experience meeting the judges, painting alongside the other artists (and my miniature artist who decided she wanted to get in on the action) and loved seeing all of the different artistic interpretations of the Skiddaw Mountains.
    • Alison Paterson Mars - a local farmer, Alison lives and works in the rural, rolling, windswept and little known farming country of the Solway, between the high hills of the northern Lake District and the enclosing Cumbrian coast. She produces expressionistic paintings using dramatic colours. She exhibits in and around the Lake District/Cumbria. She comments on her website as follows...
    It was the hottest day of the year. There were 8 of us artists who were given a pod to work in, there were also 50 others -‘ the wildcards’ who had to fend for themselves, and sit out in the sun, We’d to be there for 7am and it was after 7pm when I left, so it was a long day. Everyone had a brilliant time and we were well looked after. 
    • Cathy Pearce (Instagram) -a professional landscape painter from Wiltshire. She has been working in pastels for the last 13 years. As she says, there can be more pure pigment in a pastel than in oil paint. She had an article about Achieving Vibrancy in Pastels in The Artist magazine last year. I was very pleasued to have it confirmed that she was using Unison Pastels - which are made in Northumberland and are my pastel of choice too! I bought my first sets in the Lake District! Plus Clairefontaine Pastelmat. I've had my eye on her very striking submission (in the introduction image) from the beginning of this series. I'd wondered if it was pastels and if they were Unison! She has artwork currently exhibited in The Pastel Society Annual Exhibition at the Mall Galleries (link is to the photo in the FB Album of her artwork!) Plus this is her explanation as to how.
    Yay - I found a pic of the Unison Pastels!!
    I've got all those boxes too!
    • Scott Simpson (Instagram) He was born in Aberdeen and has Scots Singaporean heritage. He graduated from Grays School of Art at Robert Gordon University. He is an award-winning painter now based in Alloa, Scotland. His drawings and paintings are, at the fundamental level, based on nature and seeing the world at a walking pace. He has exhibited at the Royal Scottish Academy, Society of Scottish Artists and Aberdeen Artist Society on several occasions. This is an interview with him
    • Dan West (Instagram) - Dan, age 24, is an emerging artist from Teddington who currently works full time in the marketing, branding and graphic design of events. He attended Esher College before studying marketing at the University of Portsmouth. He first appeared on LAOTY as a wildcard when he was 22. He works in graphite and coloured pencils. His artwork is a leisure time activity but goes way beyond the normal standard of leisure artists - particularly in relation to composition which is very good. He also does album cover designs for musicians.
    His main body of work focuses on the relationship between people and their environment, finding stories in every day life. Dan's work varies in size and material, with a consistent eye for narrative. (his website)
    This was one of the most surreal experiences of my life and it is quite the memory to look back on. I’ve watched the show with my family for years and to have the opportunity to compete on it alongside a group of passionate and inspiring artists was amazing.

    Episode 4: Submissions

    Tuesday, November 11, 2025

    The 10 Most popular posts in the first million visits (Part 1)

    One of the assets of this blog - which started 20 years ago - is there is a very considerable archive of past posts - some of which have been very popular indeed. 

    I've just come across a post which highlights what were the 10 most popular posts in 2011 - after the first five years of Making A Mark. 

    During this period I did regular "big projects" on specific topics - and these are reflected in the most popular posts

    Below are the top five posts - with the links to each blog post embedded in its title.
    Tomorrow I'll list the next 5 posts in the top 10

    I've extracted a short piece of text and an image from each one - so you can get an insight as to what the post is about.

    CAUTION: Given the age of the posts some of the links embedded in the post will no longer work as websites have died and been wound up.

    1. 10 Tips for How to Sketch People

    Drawing and sketching people is an invaluable way of developing a wide range of artistic skills.

    I've been drawing people for very many years - family, friends, people in cafes and restaurants, life class models - and other artists. People often tell me how much they like the sketches I make of people I come across on my travels with a sketchbook - which I find a bit odd as most rarely have faces!
    Cheers Boston!
    (sketching fellow travellers at Logan Airport, Boston, USA September 2006)
    8" x 10", pen and sepia ink and coloured pencils
    copyright Katherine Tyrrell

    2. Van Gogh: Drawing media and techniques

    Drawing Media:

    • Pencil: He employed pencil for preliminary drawings and then combined it with ink. He often worked with a carpenter's pencil. He liked to press hard and often worked on wet paper.
    • Pen and ink: Van Gogh had a remarkable gift for pen drawing and graphic technique.
      • Most of Van Gogh's pen and ink and brush drawings (such as the one above) are executed first in pencil first. He then inks/bruhes over the pencil marks once he is happy with them.
      • some of his pen and ink drawings are drawn without any preliminary use of pencil
      • During his visit to Arles in 1888, Van Gogh discovered the reed pen (made from local hollow-barreled grass, sharpened with a penknife). It changed his drawing style. He created some extraordinary drawings of the Provençal landscape, including a series of drawings of and from Montmajour (east of Arles) , in reed pen and aniline ink on laid paper. The ink has now faded to a dull brown.
      • The Van Gogh Museum is conducting research into pigments and drawing inks in use in the period 1888-1890 and comparing this to the inks Van Gogh used [UPDATE: See the Research Results REVIGO: Paintings - which also comments on inks]
    Trees with ivy in the asylum garden, 1889
    Vincent van Gogh (1853-1890) Saint-Rémy-de-Provence, May-June 1889
    pencil, reed pen and brush and ink, on paper, 61.8 cm x 47.1 cm
    Credits: Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam (Vincent van Gogh Foundation)


    3. Composition - Principles of Design

    This post forms part of an introduction to the elements and principles of composition and design and follows on from yesterday's post about the elements of design. 
    It's an overview. More can be written about each and every principle - and has been!
    • Good composition doesn't happen by accident. A quick reminder. The analogy which I find helpful for remembering which is which is to compare the elements and principles of art and design to the ingredients and method of a recipe. Cookery and composition have quite a lot in common!
    • All the elements are ingredients - they are separate and need to be combined effectively to produce a successful outcome. Each ingredient gets to play a major or a minor role in the eventual outcome. This, in part, is dependent on the quantities employed and, in part, on the nature and intrinsic power of each ingredient (think garlic and chilis!).
    • It's the particular way that they they are combined - using the principles of design - which enables a successful outcome. The same ingredients can for example be combined in a number of different ways (think of recipes for eggs!)

    Monday, January 13, 2025

    My Composition and Design project

    This year I'm going to remind people about what I've got in the archives of Making a Mark. I'm going to start with my Composition and Design Project which I started in January 2008

    The future may be at the end......

    Composition and Design Project - Blog Posts 

    Below is a list of the various posts and a short explanation of what they're about.

    Some of the hyperlinks these blog posts contain may be out of date and/or moved on to pastures new.

    Fibonacci Spiral
    Wikimedia Commons

    Design and Composition - I'm revisiting this topic to try and understand more about what different people have had to say about composition, what are the 'rules' and why breaking the rules also works. I intend to relate design and composition to specific subject matter (eg landscapes and flowers) and artists that I like and/or will feature this year - such as Degas. I'm starting the year with this topic as it underpins so much of what comes next. It will continue to run as theme throughout the year and I'll be referencing it in other areas of work during the rest of the year.
    Katherine Tyrrell - "Making A Mark in 2008 - the Plan"
    Singing the Blues
    10" x 8", coloured pencil on Arches HP
    copyright Katherine Tyrrell

    It's amazing how many of us who don't have the benefit of a fine art degree seem to have managed to learn something about the different aspects of what's involved with composition and design without actually ever coming across the idea of the 'elements' and 'principles' of art/composition/design! Or at least that's my experience. I'd certainly never heard about these particular groups before starting this project. Maybe this is what they teach you if you do an Fine Art degree? ;)

    Tuesday, August 29, 2023

    How to talk to kids about their art - by The Art of Education University

    This is about a really wonderful guide about how to talk to kids about their art. 

    It's produced by The Art of Education University which aims to inspire art educators

    Art educators deserve support at every stage of their careers. Discover a rich K-12 visual arts curriculum, professional development, relevant resources, online graduate courses, and rigorous master’s degree programs.
    Plus two more "Golden Oldies" by me about the principles and elements of design.

    How to talk to kids about art


    How to Talk to Kids About Their Art  is an article written by Sarah Krajewski and published for all those struggling with teaching their kids at home on April 20, 2020. 

    In it she includes lots of tips about what to focus on when talking to kids about their art
    1. Let them use their own words.
    2. Be specific with your comments.
    3. Ask interesting questions.
    4. Let them choose the display.
    5. Give them time to identify their feelings first.
    6. Use the Elements and Principles as a catalyst.
    For all those struggling with "Elements and Principles" I did a project on this blog back in 2008 about the Elements and Principles of Composition. You can read more in these two "Golden Oldie" posts
    Sarah's article is still very relevant now kids are going back to school and all those still home schooling their children.

    It's a really great read and at the end of it you are invited to DOWNLOAD the memory jogger poster which will keep you on track.

    It's also not a bad prompt for all amateur artists lacking an art education and trying to find ways to talk about their art too!

    How to download from The Art of Education University website

    Thursday, January 07, 2021

    LOCKDOWN ART #2: 12 good reasons for artists to work in a series

    This is an introduction to various reasons why artists work in series
    • Do you work in a series when you produce art?
    • Do you want know more about working in a series?
    A series (in terms of art) usually means 
    • the artwork produced is related and coherent 
    • on the same theme or topic or about the same subject 
    • after the artist has explored the subject of the series in depth.

    Paintings of Rouen Cathedral by Claude Monet
    - photographed in the Musee d'Orsay in 2009

    12 good reasons for artists to work in a series


    Below I summarise 12 good reasons for working in a series.
     

    In future posts I'll explore each of these reasons in more detail and provide 
    • links to examples 
    • further information, images and resources about famous artists who produce work in a series related to the reason
    The twelve reasons are:
    1. Learn more about your subject / object of your attention
    2. The series is about the subject you like the best - which is easy to understand why but for how long?
    3. Develop an artistic identity - become known for being a painter of......
    4. Work in a series to tell a story - in stages - over a series of images
    5. Achieve artistic credentials - via an award or membership of an art organisation
    6. Explore one motif and what happens when you repeat it - differently
    7. Explore colour and colour variations
    8. Explore design and composition - and the options available to artists
    9. Explore an idea / a concept / an agenda - which may be political, cultural, gender oriented etc
    10. Explore and feed your own personal obsession
    11. Create an exhibition which displays unity of purpose and displays well in the gallery
    12. Create a collectible - which also makes earning income that much easier

    ART CHALLENGE

    Your challenge is as follows:

    Part ONE

    For each reasonsee if you can identify artists who have worked in a series in this way
    • in the past - in art history
    • as a contemporary artist and/or in more recent times.

    Part TWO

    Work out which reasons 
    • appeal to you the most
    • challenge you the most

    Part THREE

    • Start A Series during lockdown! - it's entirely up to you if you go for an iea which appeals or an idea which challenges you a lot.

    Note: This post follows on from LOCKDOWN ART #1: Working in a Series #1

    Thursday, June 20, 2019

    RIP Charles Reid (1937 - 2019)

    The extraordinary and incomparable watercolour painter and art instructor Charles Reid died on 1st June 2019.


    I'm sure all of us who were fans of him all have our own memories of "our connections" with Charles Reid - even if we never ever met him.

    These are mine.....

    When I first got interested in art again - as a much-needed creative diversion from number-crunching (after the long slog through my first degree at Cambridge and then the exams for my accountancy qualification) -  one of the very first painting instructors who appealed to me was Charles Reid.

    I'd spend hours in the art shops salivating over the watercolour paints and then spent what seemed like forever sat in the book section pouring over the latest brilliant art instruction book from Watson Guptill in the USA - trying to decide what I could afford to buy - paints or books or paint and books - and it was invariably the latter.

    One of the artist/authors I loved best of all was Charles Reid. He just connected like no other art instructor at that time.

    I never became a good watercolour painter, preferring dry media to wet, but my eyes were opened to art-making while reading his books.

    I absolutely loved his washy way of watercolour painting which had sensational colours and glazes and blurs and mixes on the page. I bemoan endlessly the fact I so very rarely see paintings by a master painter who celebrated the attributes of watercolour in exhibitions of watercolour painting today.

    I was awe-struck by the fact he left his watercolours drip down the page and was totally unphased by it. He left his graphite sketch included in the final work - for all to see. Surely this was breaking the laws of "proper painting"?

    In time I came to see him very much as the contemporary successor to John Singer Sargent.

    Somebody who always painted from what he could see and was always concerned with the effect he was trying to achieve.

    recent images on his Instagram account - with that very memorable self-portrait in the middle
    Who remembers the:
    • continuous line drawing?
    • the "big blur"?
    • the emphasis on seeing shapes and values as they presented themselves - and not as your brain tried to tell you they were?
    • highlighting the value of the backlit subject?
    • even more emphasis on the importance of edges - and "the lost and found"?
    • the focus on mixing interesting darks - on the palette and on the page - and the avoidance of black
    • and always always always - looking for connections and relationships within your subject - in line, mass, colour and tone... ?
    What I liked about him was this teaching (in his books) was always very informal - and at the same time very thoughtful and considered - a bit like his paintings.

    However, for me the most important thing was that his instruction wasn't about watercolour painting and 'how to paint' at all.

    When I went to pull some of my Charles Reid books off my bookshelves I was amazed to find that absolutely none of them were in the watercolour section!  In fact I'd say I was panicking at that point!!!

    They were of course elsewhere - on my composition and design shelves - and sitting with the other books in related subject matter.

    That's because he was about so much more than about how to paint in watercolours or oil.

    Below you can see the covers of just three of my books. I guess the most recent editions now have different covers.

    I can't find my copy of Painting what you want to see (right) - but that's also a great book

    I'd like to pay tribute to what he taught me by encouraging you to seek out these books if you've not read them previously - and have a good read - and then start applying his tips in your practice.

    I rarely see them in bookshops anymore - more's the pity - but you can still find them all online.

    Monday, February 13, 2017

    Review: The Big Painting Challenge - Episode 1

    I'm going to be doing a review of each episode of BBC's second series of The Big Painting Challenge.  I did this last time with the first series and tried to focus on learning points from what I observed. The aim of my blog posts will be to try and draw out the themes of the episode and identify the things I noticed.
    The aim of the series is to help the artists - and by implication the watching audience at home -
    • Learn
    • Improve and
    • Grow as an artist.
    I'll also be introducing comments from social media - although frankly I think maybe this programme appeals to an audience that doesn't tweet!  They were certainly very quiet last night.

    First episode, first explanation of what happens next!

    First Impressions


    My first impressions were favourable. They've certainly addressed a number of niggles associated with the last series
    • the artists are allowed to use whatever media they choose - and can bring their own media and kit from home. That gets round some of the nonsense of the last series which was to do with people having to get to grips with an entirely new medium in pretty short order
    • there's more instruction and guidance. This series is going to very obviously have a much higher educational component delivered by the two mentors. There seems to be some sort of conscious effort to replicate the atelier system with a view to 
      • encouraging contestants
      • coaching the artists in fundamental skills - which also provides a more direct benefit to any amateur artists watching
      • pushing them out of their comfort zones in order to realise their inner artist and true potential. (I think it actually takes quite a lot longer than this - but the idea is on the right lines!)
    • the programme is being much more explicit about the criteria that would be used to judge each challenge - this can only be a good thing as that also provides a basis for the audience to develop their ability to make judgements according to those criteria. However judging by last night they could have done with a big card with the criteria stated on it somewhere prominent within each room where the artists were painting!
    • They've changed the format for the challenges. Using the classic three different challenges format as used for the other challenge programmes meant that the last challenge always got squeezed for time. This time the format seems to be:
      • signature challenge
      • mentor tips and techniques session 
      • the painting equivalent of the "showstopper" which now seems to have much more time
    Plus
    • The artists seem a good mix.  This is their profiles page on the BBC website. There are variable levels of experience and formal art education and tend towards the serious amateur who'd like to do better and the 'just out of art school'. 
      • There appears to be no scope for the series to be won by somebody who had been a professional artist who had become a stay at home Dad as happened rather predictably last time. 
      • I'm not quite sure why television needs to have such an overwhelming obsession with "interesting back stories". It always leaves me thinking that people get chosen for their back story rather than their enthusiasm for art and skill and competence. 
      • One of the contestants, Ruaridh Lever-Hogg is deaf - he has a "voice" who reads his signing and who we never see (which I rather like). He made the very interesting point that losing one of your faculties means the others become more enhanced.  
      • Others have a different perspective about the mix of artists - wanting to see the best of those who applied.
    • I like the introduction of "The Public Gallery" which enables one artist to get a 'pass' to the next round. 
    • They've borrowed the warehouse overlooking the Thames at Wapping - as used by The Great British Sewing Bee.  That should help keep costs under control in contrast to the last programme where every episode was located at a different site around the country

      The First Still Life Challenge


      Quite why this programme insists on having such an odd assortment of totally unrelated objects as a still life is beyond me. It would have been good to see a more considered approach to the objects which could have still offered a challenge in relation to size, shape, colour, texture etc.

      Monday, March 09, 2015

      Review: The Big Painting Challenge - Episode 3

      More commentary on The Big Painting Challenge - which this week was in Oxfordshire. Episode 3 was all about Still Life - which I personally think might have been more accurately described as being about perspective and proportion. It went from an arrangement of still life objects to painting the facade of Blenheim Palace!

      You've got 29 days left to watch it on iPlayer.

      The Big Painting Challenge - Episode 3 on iPlayer on my iPad Mini.

      Episode 3: The Still Life Challenges


      A still life is a group of several inanimate objects grouped together, often with an over-arching theme
      The challenges were again very challenging!
      • a four hour painting in acrylics of a still life arrangement of objects personal to the artist
      • a 30 minute Quick Draw of giant chess pieces on an outside chess board in black and white chalks. The aim was to capture perspective, proportion and tone. It was a challenge which I think would have got many artists running for the hills within that time scale!
      • a 3 hour artwork in the medium of their choice of the facade of Blenheim Palace! This one would have many a professional painter feeling pretty challenged. Those who felt swamped by it had by sympathies! I'm not quite sure how this one qualified as a still life. Most buildings don't move too much - although the light does!

      What was interesting was that the extent of experience that the participants bring to bear on the subject matter is reflected very clearly in the choices they make in terms of set-up, scale and composition - before they even start painting!

      In relation to the set-up of the still life, Lachlan emphasised four factors that the painters all needed to address the fundamentals of creating a strong picture
      1. create strong composition
      2. balance out their colours
      3. suggest  illusion of natural light
      4. convince us that objects have three dimensions
      Working out the placement - and, by definition, the four lines that go round their subject matter - seemed to be something that some people lacked skills and confidence in. (see my blog post on this topic - Composition - the four most important lines)

      I was actually very surprised to hear that some of them had never done a still life or done very little and/or never really painted using the media they chose. I simply can't imagine being filmed for BBC1 doing something I've never done before!
      I haven't been practicing with watercolours, although I did get a book out from the Library..... I'm enjoying finding out how to do it but learning on the job is perhaps not ideal in this situation!
      Claire Parker
      The fact that it was clear that people could have practiced their still life - but didn't - made me wonder why they made life difficult for themselves. If you take a look at Paul Bells's website you can see "one he made earlier". I'm saying that in the sense that the positions of objects and the colours in the shadows are different. This is his blog post about Episode 3
      I was very comfortable with my painting, the hours of practise paying dividendsPaul Bell
      I was also really surprised to learn that Paul Bell had previously worked as an architectural illustrator. I guess that accounts for why he's way out in front in the skills department!

      Judges comments


      The Judges also considered that some of the artists had made life very difficult for themselves in terms of:
      • the objects they had chosen
        • objects which were very shiny and difficult to paint, 
        • objects which were very dissimilar in size and shape - and therefore difficult to meld together into an interesting composition
      • their ability to draw their objects and achieve the right size and shape
      They also observed that artists varied in their skills in putting objects together to create a strong composition.

      They liked the artists who controlled tone and managed to describe the 3D aspects of their objects - particularly in relation to perspective and depth - and those who had clearly thought about what they were doing.

      The conclusion


      Richard Salter really impressed in this episode. With every challenge he seemed to do better than I was expecting based on previous performance. It was great to see him introduce colour in the last challenge.

      It struck me that both Paul and Anthea made a really smart move in demonstrating their abilities in a new media.  I had Anthea identified as possibly being at risk this week. However she applied herself in a  much more focused way this week and also worked in pen and ink and watercolour and was rewarded by taking herself out of the frame.

      The judges also seemed to like those who went on a journey and tried new things (Richard and Claire) - and made a good attempt at using their new approach (colour and watercolour respectively)

      I think this episode provided some very clear tips for those selected for subsequent series of this painting.

      Here's what I noted down as being some of the lessons learned in this episode:
      • make sure you've tried painting all the different types of subject matter
      • master the basics in different media
      • become skilled in observation 
      • learn how to draw accurately
      • give yourself challenges in terms of shape, proportion and tone
      • develop your abilities in the use of colour and composition 
      • think hard about what you want the end product to look like before you start
      • practice your still life before you start on site
      • think about how you can demonstrate your versatility with different media
      • don't focus on what you don't like - focus on what you can do
      One could tell that Alison, Heather and Anne were in the frame just from the amount of time devoted to their experience of the challenges this week. Heather in particular seemed to be very fed up by the end of the day. However I must confess I thought Amy was going to be one of the two going home based on some of the comments made in the challenges.

      My prediction for the next episode

      Episode four is all about Human Form and Movement so I'd expect those who dislike drawing and painting people to have a problem


      Paul continues to be way out in front. Richard and Claire have demonstrated their ability to have a go and pull it off - plus they were all on the better side of average in Episode 2 (Portraits). I think they're all safe.

      I don't know if I've misjudged Amy in terms of expecting her to go this week. I certainly haven't seen everything the judges saw.  I think it's very definitely the case that I'm struggling as Amy's style of painting is not one which I'm a fan of - and that's purely a question of taste.

      Anthea seems to become a lot more focused and seems to be intent on pleasing the judges rather than being flamboyant. On that basis I think she might well be OK.  There again there's a rather ominous segment within the film at the start of each episode where Daphne Todd makes a remark about some flamenco dancers (next week's third challenge) - and I think it relates to Anthea - so maybe not OK?

      I'm not convinced that Daphne thinks Anne can draw or likes her style which tends towards the flat and graphic - although it's very clear that Lachlan likes her use of colour. It's entirely possible she will be a candidate for departure next week. However she clearly demonstrates an ability to listen and to address issues that are raised - and that's something judges always like!

      James Hobbs, Anne Blankman-Hemans and Katherine Tyrrell
      at the Mall Galleries "Meet the Author" event this week
      I met Anne during the week - when she came to my booksigning at the Mall Galleries - and bought my book Sketching 365.

      You can see her on the right with me and fellow author James Hobbs and his book.

      I was very pleased to hear that she has been carrying a sketchbook and doing a lot more drawing since the programme.

      The good news is that, once the series has finished, she has agreed to give me an interview for this blog. I shall endeavour to find out what it was really like to be an amateur artist painting while being filmed by the BBC!

      My drawings from the weekend

      Again - in the spirit of participation - I'm going to share my own drawings from last week.

      On Saturday, I spent the afternoon drawing with London Urban Sketchers at the Victoria and Albert Museum.

      It was so very nice and sunny that I sat in the courtyard in the sun drawing all the other people sitting in the sun!

      I should add that I avoided trying to draw the architecture of the building because I've tried that before at the V&A and it's very, very challenging! So I decided I'd use my time to better effect and focused in on something I felt more comfortable doing - drawing people. They were my "still life"!

      For those who've got my book you might want to take a look at pages 86-87 in which I provide some tips about drawing large groups of people.

      Any time you're in a situation like this you have, in effect, got free models for practising your life drawing - except they are apt to move around a bit and do have a tendency to just get up and walk away.  The fact I don't know them and don't have their permission to draw them means I don't ever draw faces in detail.

      The trick is to find one or two people who become your measuring sticks for everybody else. I started with the chap who was sat against the outside corner of the building and noted how he related in size to the cornicing.

      I then moved to a single woman sat on her own on the steps just to the right and below him and drew her in relation to him....

      ...and then continued across the page drawing people in and relating each to the other. That way I get less worried that I've lost their relative proportion. In fact I have got some wrong - but they're not so wrong that it jumps out at you - I think!

      Sunny afternoon in March - Courtyard of the Victoria and Albert Museum
      pen and sepia ink in A4 Moleskine (11" x 16")
      I then sketched three London Urban Sketchers who were sketching the architecture. That's Jean Edwards on the left and Pavel Miller on the right.

      London Urban Sketchers sketching in the V&A Courtyard 7 March 2015
      London Urban Sketchers sketching in the V&A Courtyard 7 March 2015
      pen and sepia ink in large Moleskine

      Thursday, August 14, 2014

      Sophie Ploeg and The Lace Trail - BP Travel Award exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery

      Sophie Ploeg's BP Travel Award exhibition 'The Lace Trail" can currently be seen at the National Portrait Gallery in London - until 21 September 2014.  It then tours to Sunderland and Edinburgh in 2014-15.

      Sophie Ploeg with part of The Lace Trail
      the exhibition for the BP Travel Award 2013
      at the National Portrait Gallery - 26 June - 21 September 2014

      The exhibition follows on from Sophie winning the BP Travel Award in 2013.  Her exhibition is about Fabric and Lace in Early 17th Century Portraiture - An Interpretation in Paint. To my mind it's a bit of a masterclass in how to portray complex fabrics in portraits - in the past and the present - as well as an academic exercise in understanding something about the art history of the portrayal of lace and how paintings from the past can inspire those of today.

      What follows is:
      • a video interview with Sophie Ploeg
      • photographs of Sophie and her models - with their portraits
      • photographs of the exhibition
      • a review of her book - produced as a result of her project.
      I'm afraid this post got bumped by the proofing and final stages of my book and then my unexpected admission to hospital. However the book is on its way to the printers and I'm now getting back to blogging more normally, so.......

      Sophie Ploeg in front of
      She Becomes Her (2013)
      oil on linen, 1010 x 660mm

      The Lace Trail


      As my video interview with Sophie makes clear, winning the BP Travel Award does not actually give you a year to deliver a project.

      The paintings all need to be completed and ready to hand in well before the opening of the exhibition.

      So a good deal of preparation and planning and being very organised helps enormously when it comes to producing a quality exhibition - in just 8 months!  It's very evident that Sophie was very organised and got all the trips, work and the paintings finished on time - at the same time as being a wife and mother of two young sons!  This was a woman on a mission!

      The exhibition


      The Lace Trail exhibition forms part of the BP Portrait Award exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery - if you go to one you will see the other. Sophie's exhibition is near the door and is the section hung on grey walls.

      Background to the "The Lace Trail" - some facts


      Sophie Ploeg was born and bred in the Netherlands. She came to the UK in 2000 and now lives in the West Country with her husband and two sons. She's a practising professional portrait artist working in oils and pastels (who also paints still life - very often of fabrics) and undertakes portrait and garment commissions.  Her work has been exhibited in the annual exhibitions of a number of national and major regional art societies - including the Royal Society of Portrait Painters and the Pastel Society.

      Note: Having seen a lot of Sophie's work in prestigious exhibitions in recent years I'd highly recommend her for anybody who wants a permanent painted record of a particular fabric or clothing. She's definitely one of the best I know at portraying material and fabrics - which can be so important to the completion of a portrait or sometimes even be a record of a person or event in their own right.

      She studied art and architectural history (MA, Ph.D) at Dutch universities. Consequently she came to her project very well versed in the art of research related to her interests!

      Her winning proposal outlined a project to explore how fashion and lace was represented in 17th century art, as well as in modern applications.

      The project has involved a lot of work besides painting! In pursuing her project she has:
      • visited famous lace-making centres such as Bruges in Belgium and Honiton in Devon
      • met modern lace makers and artists, 
      • viewed antique lace collections in Bruges, Honiton, Bath and Gloucestershire
      • visited 17th century art collections including, amongst others:
        • the National Portrait Gallery, The National Gallery, the Tate Gallery in England, and
        • the Rijksmuseum and the Frans Hals Museum in The Netherlands
      • spent 8 months reading around the subject and undertaking a significant amount of research about art history and the history of lace.
      • produced 10 paintings in total as a result of her project - of which seven are on display in the exhibition.
      • written a book - The Lace Trail

      A lot of information about the project is also available on a sub-domain of her website - http://www.lacetrail.sophieploeg.com. For example you can:
      • read about her adventure in lace on her blog and her website (see research 1 and research 2)
      • see A Year in Pictures - a slideshow of photos taken during the course of her travels and work



      Video interview with Sophie Ploeg

      I interviewed Sophie prior to the opening of the exhibition to the public and she provided a splendid account of what it's like winning the award and the work involved to deliver the exhibition - and a book to accompany it.



      The Four Ages of Women


      What I found very pleasing is that all of her portraits were of women. Sophie's portraits also provide a contemporary twist on the early 17th century portraiture she studied in museums across the UK and the Netherlands.  I found myself guessing which portrait paintings had inspired her!

      Sophie and her models


      Another layer to the portraits completed are the portraits which inspired Sophie's portraits.
      I wanted to honour these women (in the 17th century paintings) and the lace in my portraits. Although the sitters were often rich and famous they were still just women, like me and perhaps you, with their own feelings and taste. Their beautiful portraits inspired me to create portraits of women today: 21st century women. I have created four portraits that each represents a phase in our life, four generations of women. he women are not related in any way, except they share many things with us and the women of 400 years ago.
      Below you can see Sophie's portrait painting and her models for her series The Four Ages of Women.

      The Four Ages of Woman - a series of four paintings
      oil on linen, 50 x 60cm
      This series portrays modern 21st century women at various stages of their lives
      Their portraits portray them wearing an authentic piece of early 17th century lace, as often seen in 17th century portraits.
      (top left) The Lacemaker
      (Top right) A Fine Thread
      (Bottom left) Repeating Patterns
      (bottom right) The Pearl Necklace

      The models were told to wear what they liked and then Sophie added an original piece of antique lace - acting as a remnant and echo of the past.  She took as inspiration one or more of the paintings she had identified during her research.

      The four paintings are:

      Other paintings


      Three more paintings are in the exhibition. These are:
      • Pleating Time - I think this is one of my favourites, Sophie had to learn how to produce a ruff to paint this self-portrait
      • She Becomes Her - Another favourite - partly because of the face but also because of the spectacularly good painting of the fabric
      • The Handkerchief Girl - this is a play on the recurring motif of a handkerchief in 17th century portraits
      Pleating Time by Sophie Ploeg (2013)
      oil on linen, 400 x 600mm

      The Tour


      After the exhibition finishes in London it will then tour to
      • Sunderland Museum and Winter Gardens - 4 October – 16 November 2014 - twmuseums.org.uk
      • The Scottish National Portrait Gallery - 28 November – 12 April 2015 - nationalgalleries.org

      Prints and Book


      Cover of 'The Lace Trail' book
      The Book 'The Lace Trail contains details of Sophie's findings about
      • early 17th century portraiture in England and The Netherlands, 
      • the history of early lace, 
      • styles of painting lace
      • the background story to her paintings and 
      • a catalogue section with all 10 paintings.
      It includes lots of interesting detail - including details of Sophie's assessment of how past artists such as Rembrandt, Franz Hals and William Larkin painted lace.

      You can buy a signed copy of the book direct from Sophie

      Alternatively you can order her book and/or prints of the portraits from the National Portrait Gallery online shop or buy them in the shops within the Gallery.

      Follow Sophie Ploeg


      If you'd like to follow Sophie here are the links to her website and various social media sites:

      More about the BP Travel Award


      The BP Travel Award 2013 was judged by:
      • Sarah Howgate, Contemporary Curator, National Portrait Gallery, 
      • Liz Rideal, Art Resource Developer, National Portrait Gallery, and 
      • Des Violaris, Director, UK Arts and Culture, BP.
      My blog post year about Sophie winning the award contained Tips for Travel Award Applicants

      See also my previous BP Travel Award posts on this blog