Monday, December 23, 2024

More new ways to paint a live model

I'd like to say this was my idea - but it's not! Alix Baker felt that people might like a little light relief after the rather intense post PAOTY Final / Commissions and my recent three posts commenting on what happened.

Here's some really original art - relating to drawing/painting a sitter - and it's very definitely novel! Eclectic even.... I'm very taken with the very first drawing we see.

Duck Drawing by Shaun the Sheep

Here's the video


For those of you not familiar with Shaun the Sheep, you can read more about this Aardman character and his films and tv series and various other creative outlets!

This short episode was taken from the Mossy Bottom Farm shorts Series

Friday, December 20, 2024

VIDEO demonstrations by members of the American Watercolor Society

For those making lists of "things to watch" over the Seasonal Break, I have a list of videos for watercolour artists - and those interested in how watercolour paintings are created.


I've just discovered that the American Watercolor Society has some "free to air" hour long videos of AWS members giving a demonstration and talk on the AWS Watercolor Evenings which are "a highlight of each International Exhibition".  They're held in the room at the Salmagundi Club in New York where they hold their International Exhibition each year. (Note: The Salmagundi Club was created in 1871 and is one of the oldest arts organisations in the USA)

AWS Demonstrations on YouTube: Lots of useful tips

You can find links to all the demonstrations on the website under Demos. Whether or not you like the American style of watercolour, these are people who have been painting for a long time and have lots of useful tips!

Do also bear in mind these are paintings produced in an hour while delivering a talk!

I've included links to the artists' websites in their names - so you can go and take a look at more considered and finished paintings

  • 2024:  “Painting Beyond Technique” with Antonio Masi, AWS, DF
  • 2023: “Reflections on Urban Landscapes” with John Salminen, AWS, DF
    • View here.
    • This one has had over 200k views so far
    • He is a much exhibited artist who has many awards.
  • 2022 “Watercolor from Within” with Barbara Nechis, AWS. 
    • View here. It's had 89k views to date
    • Past Faculty Member of the Pratt Institute who has taught all over the US.
  • 2021 “Creating Drama” with Tim Saternow, AWS. 
He paints large architectural landscape watercolors with a thick use of watercolor paint, playing with the tension between the illusions of depth, carefully drawn linear perspective, and an obvious play on the surface of the paper through watermarks, paint runs, blooms and spatters. (From Tim's website)
  • 2019 “Finding Beauty in Places Often Overlooked” with James Maria, AWS. 
    • View here.
    • He likes to paint all the various different textures in left behind half forgotten places.
  • 2018 Evening I “In a Fog – Capturing the Elusive Feeling of Misty Weather” with Joel Popadics, AWS. 
    • View here. (30 minutes video)
    • Joel has received numerous national awards - and loves painting fog!
  • 2018 Evening II “Loosen Up! – Breaking Away from Seeing and Painting Too Many Details” with Andy Evansen, AWS. 
    • View here. (30 minutes video)
    • Interesting to see who has inspired him....
Choosing a ‘style’ was not difficult, as Andy was always inspired by the watercolor paintings of British artists Trevor Chamberlain, David Curtis, Ed Seago and Edward Wesson, among others.

AWS International Exhibitions


Every year, the AWS holds a juried exhibition of watercolors from artists throughout the world and some UK watercolourists have done well there. Notably Angus McEwan.

View submission information on the upcoming 2025 Exhibition here.
Although please note the deadline has passed because....

The artists selected for the 158th International Exhibition in 2025 have been recently announced and you can find the list of names of those selected here

Wednesday, December 18, 2024

A Critique of the PAOTY Series 2024

The level of concern expressed  this year about the outcome of Portrait Artist of the Year prompts thoughts about 

  • how much this relates to the artists - and 
  • how much to the programme format; the objective of the programme; guidelines and criteria for assessment and the actual judging.

As a result, I've decided to do an extra 'final' post this year - about the way in which Portrait Artist of the Year works and to highlight some serious concerns.

The Final: final portraits

The programme formula - and Judges - have now remained the same for over 10 years. In my opinion it's no longer "up to snuff"in terms of:

  • PAOTY Formula and format: about the participants, the design and format of the competition
  • Objectives, Criteria and Judging
    • the clarity of the judging criteria - and its communication to contestants
    • the rigour expected of the judging
    • the relevant expertise of the judges - in comparison to other shows
  • Conduct of the Competition & Duty of Care / Wellbeing - expectations about the conduct of such competitions and regulatory compliance
    • OFCOM and informed consent
    • Guidelines and Policies about Duty of Care to support Participants
    • Risk management and mitigation measures
So let's get down to business.... This has been a marathon and this post is a long one - for which I do not apologise - but you might want to go and make yourself a cup of tea first!

(PS I could probably write the short version in a couple of days - because, as they say, the short version takes longer! I might come back and provide a synopsis up front)

PAOTY Formula and Format

Is it really a show about an art competition? Or is it an entertainment programme?

It certainly has heats, heat winners and a final and a winner - but does it work the way other such programmes work on television?

The participants


One of the reasons people got very agitated by the result of PAOTY 11 was that a very established professional artist who has exhibited internationally and been selected five times for the BP Portrait Award and was producing good portraits which had been praised by the Judges was deemed to not be as good as a young artist who only took up portrait painting very recently.

It was felt to be grossly unfair as it felt like the decision was a whim (of which more later - under Criteria and Judging)

If there is anything more guaranteed to deter professional portrait artists from taking part then that is it. 

I've noticed how the calibre of participant has deteriorated over the course of the last 11 years.  Indeed in some years, it's been very apparent that the competition while not lacking entries has lacked enough people of the right calibre. Could the number of entries be influenced by what happens in the show and how it is judged? I think that's very likely.
  • Back at the beginning it attracted members of the Royal Society of Portrait Painters (RP) - but now we only get amateurs who have been selected from the open entry for the RP Annual Exhibition. 
  • For years I've been highlighting that those who were after fame and a boost for their CV who said they were "professional artists" were nothing of the sort. (Not that I say so explicitly but the clues are there)
  • Interestingly during that time it has ignored very competent portrait painters in heats who have subsequently become members of the RP

One of the aspects which distinguishes PAOTY from other shows is that others specifically stipulate that if you are a professional you cannot take part. In other words, if you make serious money from the activity covered by the programme, then you cannot take part.

Tuesday, December 17, 2024

Why visit the William Morris Gallery?

The William Morris Gallery is located in Walthamstow and:

  • holds an archive of material related to the William Morris, the English textile designer, poet, artist, writer, and socialist activist associated with the British Arts and Crafts movement.
  • currently has an exhibition which relates how the art of the Islamic World influenced Morris's design thinking
I highly recommend a visit. We visited William Morris & Art from the Islamic World last Friday.  Both the exhibition and the archive of material about his life and work of various kinds which the Gallery houses are well worth a visit.  

The exhibition continues until 9 March 2025.

I've uploaded some photographs I took to my Facebook Page where they are proving to be very popular. They show a mix of Islamic art and Morris's designs inspired by Islamic art. I've included narratives for each photo identifying what you are looking at.

You can also find some of the things I saw below.

Granada - designed by William Morris
Silk velvet brocade with silk thread
William Morris Gallery
Granada features pomegranates and almond shaped buds, connected by ogives (pointed arches) and branches, imagery that also appears in Ottoman textiles.
view of the exhibition

Monday, December 16, 2024

PAOTY 2024 - The Commission and the Reveal

This is about Brogan Bertie painting Lorraine Kelly for the National Portrait Gallery of Scotland - his £10K prize for winning Sky Arts Portrait Artist of the Year 2024.


It covers:
  • preparedness to paint a commission
  • painting with Lorraine Kelly
  • painting back in the studio
  • the big reveal - unveiling of the Commission
  • what do people think
Later this week, I'm doing a post which provides a critique of the format of the programme and the way the judging works. I won't be pulling punches....

Preparedness to Paint a Commission


It became very obvious very quickly that the Judges had chosen somebody who 
  • had never ever done a commission before and 
  • actually wasn't very clued up about how they typically work in practice / real life
That could be because he'd only taken up portrait painting six months previously and to date had only painted his friends who were happy to sit for him as he painted from life. (I shall comment further tomorrow when I get round to tackling how the series was run!)
"I think painting from life gives it an energy that I don't get when painting from photographs"
Brogan Bertie
Personally, I think he's dead set on being "the second Lucian Freud" who insisted on painting from life and never painted from photographs. There is so much of "how he paints" which is influenced by Freud who appears to be one of his heroes. He's a great hero to have, but maybe some more awareness of the stages Freud went through before he arrived at his mature stage might be educational and promote a better sense of the pace of change.

The Transition to Portraiture

There's a section after the chat with his parents - which leads straight into an important backstory.