Beverley Art Gallery Open Exhibition 2022
Tuesday, October 11, 2022
Beverley Art Gallery Open Exhibition 2022
Monday, April 4, 2022
Ferens Art Gallery Open Exhibition 2022
Ferens Art Gallery, Hull, Open Exhibition 2022
Sunday, October 31, 2021
Visit to York Art Gallery - Exhibition “Pictures of the Floating World: Japanese Ukiyo-e Prints”
York Art Gallery: Exhibition “Pictures of the Floating
World: Japanese Ukiyo-e Prints”
Overview
“Ukiyo-e translates as “pictures of the floating world” and refers
to the transitory nature of life. Works by prominent Ukiyo-e artists, such as
Utagawa Hiroshige, highlight the significant impact of Japanese art on the
western world during the 18th and 19th century. Interspersed
in between the prints are selected paintings from the galleries main
collection, the curator seeking out works which have a Japanese influence. The
key topics are well explained and the
prints hung in low light to preserve their fragile colours.
Landscape
The current review concentrates on the landscape aspect of
the exhibition. The scenes depicted – tea houses, rice fields, harbours,
waterfalls, and mountains, conjure up a unique sense of place.
Hiroshige’s Asakusa Rice-Fields and Torinomachi Festival
(below) illustrates the use of strong line both to frame the composition and
within the image. It is noticeable that, unlike in western art, no attempt has
been made by the artist to replicate the texture of the cat’s fur, or even to
add shading to the animal. Mount Fugi features in the background and is treated
in a similar way. A small number of bright colours, blue, orange/peach, and
green, bring life to the image.
Utagawa Hiroshige(1797-1858) Asakusa Rice-Fields and Torinomachi Festival, from the series ”One Hundred Famous Views of Edo”, Part 4:Winter
1857 Woodblock print
Exploring how Western artists were inspired by Japanese use
of line and colour, the gallery displayed Wolmark’s Hampstead
Old Power Station (above). Wolmark became influenced by the colour
palette and style of the Post-Impressionists, who in turn, had adopted
principles from Japanese art. We can see Wolmark’s daring use of blue, green
and pink and how he transforms the power station into flattened forms, with
little shading or use of perspective.
Utagawa Hiroshige (1797-1858) Kozuke Province: Evening View of Takanawa, from the series “Famous Places in the Eastern Capital” c. 1853 Woodblock print
Horoshige was inspired by the celebrated artist Hokusai, but
Hiroshige’s style is more “poetic” and employs subtle colour gradation, as can
be seen in Kozuke Province: Evening View of Takanawa
(above). Hiroshige’s subjects were not typical of early ukiyo-e, such as kabuki
actors and courtesans, and he came to specialise in landscapes. The Eastern
Capital (Edo, modern day Tokyo) was one of his favourite sites that he returned
to time and again.
In the late 19th century, it became popular for
western artists to adopt the subject matter of Japanese art. Prints of Mount
Fugi, and other mountains in Japan, were particularly well liked, and artists
flocked to the Bay of Naples, drawn by the striking power of Mount Vesuvius.
George Frederick Watts’ painting The Bay of Naples
bears similarities to landscapes by Hiroshige which depict popular seasonal
sights. These include the view across Lake Biwa, (see Descending Geese at Katata
below) and Mount Haruna under Snow (below).
Hiroshige specialised in sensitive depictions of mist, rain, snow, and moon
light to convey nature and the changing seasons. We see nature’s elements and
drama playing out in Watt’s painting.
George Frederick Watts, Bay of Naples, c. 1885-91, oil on
canvas
Utagawa Hiroshige(1797-1858) Descending Geese at Katata,
from the series “Eight Views of Omi”
1834-35 Woodblock print
Utagawa Hiroshige (1797-1858) Kozuke Province: Mount Haruna under Snow, from the series “Famous Places in the sixty-odd Provinces”
1853 Woodblock print
Conclusions
The exhibition told the story of Japanese Ukiyo-Prints and the
history of the period through a collection of prints with diverse subject
matter. Although I have focused my review on landscape, there is much for
everyone, including Japanese lifestyle, portraits, animals, and birds. The
gallery broadened the scope of the exhibition by exploring links with western
art, some features of which I have described above. The exhibition was a good
introduction into aspects of Japanese composition, colour, tone, and line which
will be interesting to explore in my own painting practice.
NOTES
The visit was a good example of how to exhibit images in low
lighting and the effect was very dramatic. The curator made good connections
with the work of British artists, which added another dimension to the
exhibition. My reflections on the Japanese use of perspective, line, colour and
tone made me think about their use in my own practice. I can connect with the
way the prints make use of flat surfaces and line. However, I think their use
of colour and tone was less helpful. There is little use of tone, and although
the palette works for the prints, I think that they are too “stark” for my
estuary/river paintings and for my landscape work generally. I find that
Wolmark’s Hampstead Old Power Station, for instance, is too pink/blue and the
greens of Watt’s Bay of Naples too “garish”. I am aiming for a more subtle
palette of soft browns and greens to reflect the local landscape. However, the strong
feelings of place which the works engendered, and their compositional elements are
very relevant to my practice and my thinking about broadening my horizons.
I think that the most important feature I can build on is
the Japanese use of space and flat surfaces. I already leave areas of blank
canvas, and this exhibition reinforced the impact empty spaces can have. As I
build up my ideas the spaces can be used to fill voids. The viewer can rest and
gaze, and introduce their own thoughts into the gaps, or be guided by my ideas,
such as a piece of poetry or a video/sound recording which has inspired the
work.
Saturday, October 30, 2021
Exhibition at Eastgate Studios, Beverley
Exhibition at Eastgate Studios, Beverley
Exhibition at Caistor Arts and Heritage Centre
Gear and Tackle and Trim, etching with chine colleFinches’ Wings, monoprint with etchingMy two prints are currently on display at the Exhibition, “Pied Beauty”, by the Ropewalk Printmakers at Caistor Arts and Heritage Centre.I made the prints in response to the poem, “Pied Beaty” by Gerard Manley Hopkins.All the printmakers responded to the wording in their own individual way. In the first print I wanted to capture the way humans interact with natural elements such as ships and the sea. The second print reflects my interest in natural and wild things in the landscape along the Humber. I used two separate techniques. The chine colle was gold tissue paper over printing paper which the image was then printed onto.I painted the Finches’ Wings scene onto a piece of clear Perspex with water colour and made a monoprint. I then inked up my etched printing plate and overprinted the monoprint with the detail.
Wednesday, April 28, 2021
Ferens Art Gallery, 2021 Open Exhibition - Scott Street Bridge
Ferens Art Gallery, 2021 Open Exhibition - Scott Street Bridge
Wednesday, April 7, 2021
Painting: The Boatyard
Painting: The Boatyard
The Boatyard, oil on canvas, 30in x 40in (76cm x 102cm)
Background and Context
The scene I chose for "The Boatyard" is quite ambitious as there is a lot going on. However, I had previously done a small monochrome oil study of the same view which helped me scale it up.
The compositional elements explore the connectivity between
the natural environment and human activity through commercial interventions and
leisure. On one side of the river is a chalk pit from which chalk is extracted.
The chalk is then sent across the waterway by way of an overhead chute which dominates
the skyline. Beneath the chute is a boatyard and marina.
Process
My aim was to continue to use empty spaces as a tool to
bring the composition together and to let the eye rest. For example, in the top
right corner I have a large boathouse which stands starkly on the horizon with
a background of dark trees. In front, the brown/grey underpainting of the
canvas is left untouched. I use the painted canvas rather like a piece of
drawing paper, where line and solid blocks of colour are added as required, but
the surface is not fully covered. My inspiration comes from the work of Michael
Raedecker, which I have discussed previously.
Inspired by the industrial scenes of Charles Sheeler, the
chute and riverside walkway make strong diagonal lines across the painting. In the middle foreground I have created abstract
shapes in the midst of the boatyard.
In the foreground I have used the opportunity to play with
the free handling of paint to depict and represent the qualities of water - techniques
which I picked up from studying the working methods of Peter Doig and Michael Andrews.
I painted in the dark tonal areas first and then the lighter ones before letting
the paint drip and drizzle down the canvas. I oversaw the movement of the paint,
and made sure that areas of the canvas I had identified were left bare. These bare
patches represent mid tones and create the openness I am looking for. I omitted waterside plants as I felt that they would be too “fussy”.
My inspiration for the use of brighter colours within the
boatyard and grassy banks builds on the palette used by Dame Laura Knight and
John Singer Sargent. The more muted look of the water in the foreground has
more connection with the colours used by Michael Andrews in his “Thames Series”
(See previous research).
The oil study I did previously was really helpful in the way that I was able to practice the use of dribbling paint, and I honed in on the technique for the bigger painting.
I built up the painting using
layers and it involved three stages. During the first phase I concentrated on
the chute and the dramatic skyline. I added the crane and buildings and some
shapes to define objects in the boatyard. In stage two I tackled the boat in
the foreground and added some further details. A row of vertical wooden poles along
the staging provides contrast to the strong horizontal line above. I painted the dribbling water effects last.
Outcome
The painting was a challenge in that it is a bold and complex
image. I had to undertake some simplification and use my judgment as to what to
leave out. Having already made the oil study helped with this task. The
painting gave me the opportunity to experiment with dramatic compositional
elements, such as the strong diagonal line of the overhead chute. I also was
able to play with the physical qualities of the paint and the use of the canvas
surface. The large expanse of river in the foreground enabled me to develop my
loose application of paint using drips and drizzles. My experience with using a
brighter palette worked well for the sky and middle distance. At the same time,
I used strong tonal differences for the shadows and muted colours for the
water. I set out to create a realistic interpretation of the scene, offset by
areas of negative space and abstract shapes, leaving something indefinite about
the work which is difficult to pin down. The edgelands setting is at once
serene and turbulent. In summary, the painting contains a certain disjuncture
and subtle agitation of elements which I find exciting.