Workshop for QAGOMA at the "Portrait of Spain" Exhibition
Recently I had the privilege of being asked to conduct a couple of still life painting workshops for QAGOMA Members, as one of the events organised around the "Portrait of Spain: Masterpieces from the Prado" exhibition. About ten enthusiastic people, with a range of artistic experience took part in each workshop. For our subject we used the beautiful vegetable, fruit and bread still life centrepiece in the Spanish-themed La Sala del Prado within the ‘Portrait of Spain’ exhibition at the Queensland Art Gallery.
Life Drawings 1.5 - 2hrs
Life Drawings 5 - 15 minutes
Quick Gesture Drawings 1-3 minutes
New life drawing studies
Help "Deliverance" get to Berlin!
See the earlier post about Stella Electrika's "This Trick" that I drew from in rehearsal.
Now they are taking a new piece, shown recently at the Adelaide fringe Festival to enthusiastic reviews to Berlin. Help them make it - only 6 days to go!
http://www.pozible.com/index.php/archive/index/7255/description/0/0
"Deliverance" made it to Berlin!
The project began today - view livestream and updates at:
http://deliverance-art.tumblr.com
From Penny, one of the performers last night:
It’s almost tomorrow. In my head I can plan only until the first moment. I see the three of us, naked and quivering with excitement and fear and anticipation, and we are walking through Kursthalle, past people (in my head there are only maybe ten or so) and into our space of rubble and debris and weeds and cement and dirt. Our hands are covering our breasts and genitalia, and we look out at those who have come to watch.
That’s as far as I can possibly get. Everything after that moment is unknown. Terrifying. Exhilarating. Boring. An anti-climax. All and nothing.
Tuesday evening at Absoe with Brett
Monday evening life studies
15 and 25min Life studies
Friday Morning 2.5 hr Life Session Study
Jeremy Mann - Brilliant compositions
Some wonderful compositions from Jeremy Mann, particularly his city scapes. I love the wide angle view points and the shapes that he connects through the lighting. The brush work is brilliant - it serves the light rather than interfering with it. I love the monochrome compositional sketches too (under the "compositions" heading)
http://www.redrabbit7.com/index.html
Mae Jemison on the Arts and Sciences - TED.com talk
Mae Jemison, former astronaut, doctor, art collector and nearly a professional dancer, talks about why the culture of seeing art and science as being only suited to one type of person or the other is ridiculous and counter productive. In fact, she makes the point that if you tell an intellectually talented person "well either you can have the intuitive thinking and be an artist, or the logical, focussed thinking of science" they will probably not be interested in either, and choose something else entirely that promises some of both. As educators and contributors to culture, it is necessary, she argues, to convince students that it aint so.
http://www.ted.com/talks/lang/en/mae_jemison_on_teaching_arts_and_sciences_together.html
As a professional artist who happens to have a science degree, this was obvious to me, but still it seems that many people don't get the connection. Both the arts and sciences use linear, analytical thinking as well as non linear, intuitive thinking to solve problems. The combination of types of thinking could be sumarised as "creative thinking".
Jemison makes the interesting point that the Arts and Sciences are not just two sides of the same coin, but exist along a continuum of human knowledge. But even if both fields use creative thinking, they are clearly different in purpose and outcome. She describes the real essential difference like this: Whereas the Sciences seek to understand universal facts about the external world, independent of personal experiences, the Arts seek to understand universals facts about the external world through relating personal experiences. How's that for a rebuttal of relativism?
I believe the connection is even deeper than that: the artist, in order to gain mastery over their craft, needs to be analytical to understand how the craft works, to develop the principles and understanding that universally create particular effects in their viewer. The artist progressees through experiments - and the results of the experiments are read from the response of their own eye and that of their viewers. The idea was developed further in an essay i read recently about neuroscientists investigating aesthetics, who were convinced that great artists have shown great insight about the way the brain processes visual information.
Further musings on the elements shared by art and science:
Plasticity: I mean by that the sense that the final conclusion remains plastic. Just as the scientist should not go into research with their mind already made up about a topic, and should instead approach it with the sense that everything is a matter of degrees of confidence, and something unexpected could well turn up, the artist is well advised to be open to the discovery of something different over the course of a work, as much as over the course of a series, or a career. It is the antidote to boring passivity - who knows what could come out of this? I consider this a beautiful mental state to be in - ideally involving degrees of confidence rather than dogmatic certainty. Being open to new evidence, not being afraid of it - is eminently practical. Reality will be whatever it is, regardless of wishful thinking, and the closer our ideas reflect the truth, the more we can both appreciate reality and proceed appropriately. To be inspired and fascinated by the unknown, with the range of exciting possibilities that the unknown represents is deeply liberating psychologically, and is a state that I aspire to spend more of my time in.
Wonder: Rodin described the artist as anyone who loves their work. I think the love stems from a fascination, a desire to go deeper and understand more, to be able to use the results of exploration to achieve things we could not before. The artist who learns to identify a certain bony landmark is empowered by it - what was a mysteriously and perhaps awkard patch of tone on the model, becomes a useful reference that the artist can use and notate efficiently and keep coherent with the rest - and hence be a thing of beauty. Where the artist engages with the world with experiments in pencil or brush, the scientist does so through a process of practical experiment. Both then have the chance for analysis of the results of the experiment, which leads to expanded possibilities and opportunites.
Peak Performance: We are all animals - the function of our mind is limited by the health of our bodies. There can ultimately be no real barrier between the two: we are exquisite instruments of sense and processing of sensation into useful conclusions about the world, and the instrument must be both maintained and expanded with the right tools. Knowing how to get oneself into a state of peak performance, to engage in a flow experience is necesary for both the artist and scientist, as it is for any creative pursuit.
The life obsession: As Jemison points out, it is the identification of truths that unites Science and Art into one spectrum of investigation, even if the experience of the truth might be more literal in the former and pyschological in the latter. For the serious artist or scientist, I suspect that every aspect of life feeds back into their respective creative pursuits, every action is somehow related to their particular adventure of discovery, everything is a stimulus to learn more, a chance to once again enter a state of beautiful, proudly humble pasticity - an open engagement with existence.
Thanks to Luke, for the following post on the public discussion forum of Atelier Art Classes:
http://www.atelierartclasses.com/public-discussion-forum/post/1800289
He links to two videos that can be viewed at:
http://www.npr.org/blogs/krulwich/2012/04/09/150285272/seeing-what-only-wind-gods-get-to-see
How's that for stimulus for wonder?
Link to Interview with Mary Tonkin
A terrific, well illustrated interview with a wonderful young artist, Mary Tonkin.
I particularly liked the emphasis on the sensual and also the following description about composition:
"Through undergraduate at Uni I painted a lot of portraits and still life images. I was intent on making the image look like the thing I was painting, now I am concerned with making it feel like a relationship between the thing I am seeing and my internal state. I think I have much more control of what I’m doing now, I can at least make better guesses about how controlling the tonal values, narrowing the colour range, shifting scale of some parts or combining multiple points of view might effect how the image reads. Very simply, it is possible to make poems naively, but they’re far more likely to have the desired impact if one has a greater grasp of the language. I’m still learning."
http://stevegray.com.au/blog/mary-tonkin-artist/
Pen and wash drawing - Carmen
Drawings from Stella Electrika rehearsal of "This Trick"
I have been considering working from performance artists in rehearsal for some time, and had spoken to Kat about this idea before. I was blown away by the experience - the visual material I was exposed to was more than I hoped for, and the whole vibe of the cast and crew under Kat’s direction was a simply wonderful to be around.
It was interesting to see how the sense of creative plasticity (the sense of being open to unexpected directions and ideas during the process) applied in this field, and the trust involved between the team in this intensely collaborative process.
The play is a variation on the greek myth of Orpheus and Eurydice, and I have previously sketched compositions for this myth because I found it one of the most compelling. Kat’s play is not a literal treatment but unpacks the mysteriously compelling psychology of this story in a modern setting. It has only two actors, a male and a female, with the set an elegantly abstracted bedroom. The acting oscillated from more natural scenes to more abstract, poetic ones - in both cases the result was full of visual stimulus, but in very different ways. This was ideal for me. The actors were both a pleasure to watch, with that presence you hope for in theatrical actors. The idiosyncrasies of body type and body language, and the huge variation in emotional content provide combinations that I could not have come up with, or asked a model to pose into - which convinces me further that it is better to seek inspiration from this type of subject rather than try to make it up, or be too prescriptive.
Dozens of frantic drawings later, I redrew some of the more compelling images I managed to get down in pen and wash, and discovered some very interesting compositional ideas as I worked into them.
After an intense week of rehearsal, the play ran on Friday and Saturday nights at Metro Arts, with very positive reactions from the audience both times.
Stella Electrika is now on the way to Berlin with a "performance" of Deliverance.
It's an insane and brilliant concept for a performance art piece - read about it at:
http://deliverance-art.tumblr.com/
"In its most recent execution, Deliverance was a 10-day durational performance at the 2012 Adelaide Fringe, which saw the artists enter a 6 x 5m outdoor space with nothing. They did not leave the space for 240 hours and during that time they invited their audience to enable their survival"
Pen and wash gesture drawing
Practise Heads
Some practise heads, thinking about the lessons from copying some Fechin drawings.
Main points: I am using a conte pastel pencil "Pierre Noire", with one side shaved about 3 cm down the side, and rounded off with sandpaper, so I can get a nice broad mark when I want it, or a sharp line with the point. I am enjoying the pencil because it allows you to get your hand back out of the way more than with a normal square piece that is necessarily short.
The main points that I feel I have found out about Fechin's process and the emphasis of what he did with drawings are:
1. start with the broad, soft marks to establish the large form lightly, building towards sharp lines in specific points.
2. these sharp marks can be used where there is a cast shadow or an edge (an horizon of the form)
3. the emphasis of his drawings, at least what I am getting from them, is distributed between solidity of form, gesture and character
(these studies are based on images of a pose from www.posespace.com which provides images of poses seen through 24 points of view at 15 degree intervals.)
Copy of a Fechin drawing
Nicolai Fechin on Technique
I think the quotes below from Fechin relate to the idea of excellence of execution being a meaningful element in its own right...
Quoted on:
http://underpaintings.blogspot.com.au/2009/08/color-palettes-nicolai-ivanovich-fechin.html
(it's very well illustrated too)
In his "Notes on Art, " Nicolai Fechin states:
... a high degree of expertise in technique has always had, and always will have, a predominant place in art. The subject, in itself, has value only according to the mode of the day. Tomorrow it will be superseded by a new fashion or fad. With the passing of time, the subject loses much of its meaning. But the fine execution of that subject retains its value...
The more consummate his technique, the easier the artist will find it to free himself from all dependence upon a subject. What he uses to fill his canvas with is not so vital. What is vital is how he does it. It is sad if an artist becomes a slave to the object he seeks to portray. The portrayed object must serve as nothing more than an excuse to fill a canvas. Only when the subject passes through the filter of his creative faculty does his work acquire value for an artist...
The artist must never forget that he is dealing with the entire canvas, and not with any one section of it. Regardless of what he sets out to paint , the problem remains one and the same. With his own creative originality, he must fill in his canvas and make of it an organic whole. There must not be any particularly favored spot in the painting...
My way of drawing and painting can be taught only through direct visual perception and it is almost impossible to describe it. An attitude toward painting and a few technical fundamentals can be discussed, however- but always with a warning not to take my observations in an overly literal or rigidly set manner...
To me, technique should be unlimited... (in) constant growth in ability and understanding. It must never be mere virtuosity but an endless accumulation of qualities and wisdom... First comes the initial idea for a work- what the artist desires to portray, to bring into concrete manifestation. In order to fulfill this task, he must begin to build, to organize."
Peggy Samuels, Harold Samuels, Joan Samuels, and Daniel Fabian, Techniques of the Artists of the American West (New Jersey: The Wellfleet Press, 1990), p. 94.