Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Nat Trust's William Morris Arts and Crafts Red House Bexleyheath

After spending all day yesterday sorting papers - art cards, bills, travel stuff that i had collected on my trips over last 6 months, i woke this morning, looked at the piles that now needed boxing and thought - hmm where can i go, so i went to the house Morris built but only lived in for 5 yrs.  Nat trust only took it over in 2003 so there is lots or original features to be bought back to life.  Interesting to see it at this point.  Eg: you can see pinprick holes all over ceilings that he used to paint designs on ceilings, some of which have been painted over white but could be redone using the holes.   There are lots of squares cut out of ceilings and walls where the conservators are looking for oriignal paper etc.   There is also amazingly -  non original white white woodwork (dovecoting) which the manager recently bravely cut into to discover  wall paintings done by one of the pre-raphaelites beautifully preserved by the wooodwork protecting it from light.  They've hinged the cut out wood so it can be opened for tour groups.   Though not a spectatular house, it has a lovely largish English Garden and since it's only 25mins from me, a good place to go and draw.

The house


 There was an exhibition with  2 of his design books so i went thru them for inspiration.









 Drawing
1. Went to cafe and copied postcard of his wife Jane Morris   and overhead them mention getting rid of used mini jam jars which i always forget to ask for (friend uses them as presents with homemade jam etc and i for mixed watercolour etc.


I haven't been able to capture her beautiful strong chizeled jaw line and just couldn't stop her left hand looking like a sausage.  I should have worked more on the shading but had enough.

2. then got out my camera obscura i had bought with me to try outdoors.   It's impossible.  I need to reread the instructions.  Need to sit back further and work out how to stop the secondary reflections.   I ran out of patience and did a couple of scribbles.  The pics are feint and blurred but not worth spending time on.  First one is of 2 pople sitting on round tree seat  and second is of the top of the house - couldnt get lense lower enough for bottom half.   Even so i can see it being very useful once i work it out.

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Learning to draw - bad drawings, grid method, projecter and camera obscura

1.  My first drawings in 2008 - oh dear - in animation course we did one day a week drawing class - it had been 30 yrs since i'd drawn and i was shocked that i couldn't do it - very high school level (well not even that, i went to mall galleries student show thinking they meant degree students but they were yrs 11,12,13 high school.  i was amazed.  even now i am average high school standard compared to them.  one student i am trying to track down cause i love her screaming furious child portrait.  she will be a great portraitist - she also did beaming old ladies at bus stop and she really captures character.)




2. then the teacher showed us the grid method - draw a grid on a photo, say 10 squares, then draw a big grid of 10 big squares on big drawing paper and in each square draw what is in the square on the photo.  i used this method for my picture of kim which is probably why it is a bit stiff.  here is the very first one i did in that class using a picture from a magazine.  She's a bit wonky cause i got the square/grid measurements a bit wrong.
3.  then i started drawing classes.  but at the same time i bought a drawing Projector called Tracer (usually £60 but on sale for £40)  i wanted to be able to do things while i learnt to draw at same time.  However i used a few times only - the draw back is the lense can be easily knocked out of focus (the expensive projectors cost hundreds) and it has to be used in total darkness.  You place the projector on a photo and it's projected onto vertical surface - wall, paper on easel etc.   Here is the projector and a the first (only) pics i did with it.  I also copied a picasso simple line drawing but can't find it.  The thing with tracing is not to trace, but to try to draw freely and shade, using the image as a guide, unless as in the case of the picasso i did, where i wanted to capture exactly the pure 5 lines he used for a face.  in the body of the drawing you can see how i kept the lines free - ie they are my lines drawn freely over the image without trying to keep to the original lines so the image just helped me keep in the right areas and shapes.  it is still a better drawing than i could have done alone.  the second one i traced pretty exactly from a vogue magazine so looks more like an illustration than an art drawing but you can see it could be useful for a design element.  i was a bit more free with the scribbly shading.

3. Camera Obscura   is a prism of 2 plastic mirrors that reflects what is in front of you down onto your drawing pad.   i had read the book by david hockney about the use of lenses and camera obscura thru the centuries by the masters etc (not everyone agrees with him).  I got one couple of weeks ago for £124.  again it has drawbacks - image not clear, arm moves easily or if your eye moves then image moves - as you will see with john's head where he has 2 noses, plus you sometimes get funny reflections so you can't see your drawing hand or paper properly as the image is too strong (hard to explain).  but you don't need to be done in total darkness.  you can use outdoors to capture buildings or a landscape or you can attach photo holder to front, as shown in photo. the following photos are shown in order i did them on the day i got it.  i think it will be particularly useful for landscapes when i go away or as you will see drawing the rooms etc - see the little table in corner of my room which only too 10mins and quite accurate - much easier than if i had done without the camera.  Bit hard to see - black base drawing board with moveable black arm holding the camera/prism/lense at the top.  You look down the hole in the top of prism.  Photo sitting on board on the front photo holder arms.  the last one is of my brother in law at my sisters wedding over 40 yrs ago - here i used the image as a guide to shading and shapes and not so much tracing some of it works but his face looks badly traced.
i hope to experiment with all the above methods as well as learning to draw without them and in combination with them.  I have also used tracing using blue and black typewriter copy paper which gives a lovely monoprint quality.

Hurwundekai cafe, cambridge heath rd nr hackney rd

went past this 'new' cafe place near me in old car sales place (open since 2009 apparently - that me the ever observant artist - i didn't even know that about 1/2 mile from me is a street full of gallery spaces - shows as major london gallery area on map).  Looked interesting and had sign saying life drawing classes, has amazing front outside area - sand and kids play things and tables.  it's website says is owned by a south korean and he also owns funky boutique and hairdressers.  http://hurwundeki.com   in other parts of trendy east london.   so i went there yesterday but they have reduced opening hours to day time and no more classes for now - don't know what that means.  anyway the owners child was asleep on the sofa so i drew him.  got in 10mins before he moved.  cute kid.

Friday, July 29, 2011

My visit to Watts Gallery, Surrey

Very inspiring.  Is it just me or is the minotaur a bit sexy in a brutish way?  Watts would have hated what i did with it - he had much higher moral/classical meanings.  The minotaur was classical figure that young men were annually sacrificed to.  His cruel left hand has squashed a small bird.  Watts did it when he heard of the problem of child prostitutes in london in the late 19th century.   Clytie is turning into something, can't remember - i saw his sculpture of it at the V&A Cult of Beauty exh, the white marble version.  His gallery has a black bronze version.  The way she twists her body and throws back her body is beautiful and it just seemed to go with Mr sexy bull.


Watts Minotaur

Watts Clytie
Clyt, Mino and me having afternoon cream tea

My drawing of Mino getting fresh with Clyt


I was going to throw in him most famous 'Hope' which is also beautiful - have her a bit like 'while rome burned' kind of thing hovering above them but i ran out of space and time.
It is a beautiful work though - she listens closely as she tries to pluck the one remaining string of her old harp - now that's hope for you - there have been many tribute pics done - one latest one is of Obama as hope.