one of the sitters with three of the artists |
Episode 5: The Artists, Self-portraits and Sitters
The Professional Artists
- Sam Clayden ( Instagram ) - an artist and art teacher. Painted his submission in 90 minutes (and acknowledged he overworked his heat portrait).
- Alvin 'Kofi' Ferris ( Website | Facebook | Instagram | Twitter ) - a second-generation West Indian who grew up in London. Born in south London in 1961, Alvin 'Kofi' (means 'born on a Friday') also spent some of his childhood years in Antigua. He studied graphic design at Richmond School of Art. He established a career in the UK art world as a fine artist in the 1990's and worked for a short time at the first Black-owned advertising agency in the UK. He has exhibited at solo and group shows in the UK, US and the Caribbean, and has received commissions for portraits, murals and sculptures. His creative perspective is very much African-centered. Kofi also teaches master classes, mentors up-and-coming artists, and runs a drawing programme.
"we felt really welcomed by the Sky production team who made all the artists feel at ease." Kofi Ferris
- Yasmin Gilani ( Website | Facebook | Instagram ) - a London and Cotswold based artist specialising in abstract impressionist art. After graduating from The Roal Academy of Dramatic Art with an MA in 2015, Yasmin went on to work for galleries and arts festivals in London. She had previously made it to being a reserve artist for Sky Portrait Artist of the Year in 2019.
- Michelle Goldman ( Website | Facebook | Instagram | Twitter ) - based in Westcliff-on-Sea where she teaches an art class. She also juggles the challenge of being a mother AND a professional artist
- see My Portrait Artist of the Year Experience - in which she talks of the value of practising working from live models BEFORE THE HEAT if your experience has only been with painting from photos
- Nick Grove ( Website | Facebook | Instagram | Twitter ) - born in 1974 near Oundle and now lives in Stamford. An artist who predominantly paints portraits plus landscapes and cityscapes in oils, ‘en plein air’ (mainly of Norfolk and Suffolk Coasts, Cambridge, Oxford, and London) He completed a foundation course in art and design followed by a BA (hons) degree in fine art at Southampton University. He worked as a professional photographer for 15 years, specialising in weddings and won numerous national and international awards. Now focuses on his painting. Currently represented by the Peter Barker Fine Art Gallery in Uppingham.
- Vicky Saumarez ( Website | Facebook | Instagram | Twitter ) - trained in the late 1980s at the Florentine realist drawing and painting academy of Studio Cecil Graves. Pre pandemic she organised and ran painting, drawing and portraiture classes in Hanwell, near Ealing, West London as well as weekly untaught drop-in life drawing session. She now runs online classes.
The Amateur Artists
- Chris Longridge ( Website | Instagram ) Heat Winner and Semi Finalist in 2020 (first series filmed in 2019). Based in Kent. He now works primarily in oils (for last 6 months) having previously used acrylics. According to my profile of him last year he's Amateur because he's got "a proper job". Loved the bit during the episode where he confesses to being a TV journalist!! He's currently the Associate Editor of Digital Spy (and prior to that was a Senior Editor of Heat for six years).
- Dilip Seshan ( Website | Instagram | Twitter ) Based in Caterham, Surrey and works in IT. As a portrait artist he considers himself an enthusiastic art hobbyist and not a professional.
- Sarah Teare ( Website | Facebook | Instagram | Twitter ) - a London based portrait artist working predominantly in oils. This was her self-portrait. Always paints from photographs, measures on her tablet (rather than from life) and likes to start with the eyes.
The Self Portraits
- SIZE
- Large x 2
- Medium x 5
- Small x 2
- Very small x 0
- FORMAT
- Landscape format x 3
- Portrait format x 3
- Square format x 3
- CONTENT OF SELF-PORTRAIT
- full size x 0
- torso including head and hand(s) x 3 (including heat winner)
- head + torso + hands with another person x 1
- head and shoulders x 4
- head x 1
The Sitters
The sitters for Episode 5 were:- Robert Rinder - a British criminal barrister and television personality who appears in a British spin off of Judge Judy
- Katie Piper - an English writer, activist, television presenter and model who is renowned for her work re. acid attacks and burn victims
- Don Letts - a British film director / videographer, DJ and musician.
Longest I’ve sat still in a while!
— Katie Piper (@KatiePiper_) November 11, 2020
Tonight 8pm on Sky Arts @skytv I had the privilege to sit for these incredible artists for Portrait Artist of the Year! #PAOTY #SkyArts pic.twitter.com/c7AQilYwD3
Episode 5: Themes
Self Portraits: the picture of the artist as an artist
- painting with a narrative - such as the one with the two children
- paintings with an overt cultural reference e.g. the Janus symbol
- paintings which are loaded with historical / cultural references - to past masters in particular and/or specific paintings
- paintings which just paint a head - but do it extremely well (i.e. this can be taken for granted - if you just paint a head, your painting better be EXCELLENT!)
- portraits which involve interesting techniques - such as
- half the head disappearing into darkness
- an apparently artificial style suggestive of maybe a different culture
Building rapport with the sitter - generating a connection
- create some sort of connection - maybe through talking
- make them feel relaxed.
"Knowing when to stop is a big problem"
I can't remember who said this now - but this is a perennial problems for all artists. This is particularly so for all those involved in a competition with a time limit where there seems to be some sort of feeling that one should use all the time available - rather than stopping when it feels finished.
What I'd say is that people need to have painted enough from life that they know:
- how much time they need to paint a sitter
- how long it takes them to work out a composition
- how long it takes them to get the basic shapes down
- how long they need to get the key features right
- what order to do things so as to
- what to paint when you're not sure whether to stop or not (the answer is "the background"! i.e. do not fiddle with the sitter when you're trying to work out whether or not it's finished)
PS If you don't paint from life it's unlikely that you know the answers to some of these questions.
Deciding how much of the background to include
Seeing people painting backgrounds when they should be painting the sitter infuriates me - unless it happens towards the end!
Working out what you are going to do about the background should form part of the checklist of questions you should ask yourself when working out the composition i.e.
- work with the background that's there - or completely ignore it
- use the colour of the background - or ignore it
- paint on a coloured ground - or not
- they are interpretations of aspects of art history.
- They may clash horrendously with the colour of the sitters clothes.
- they say nothing about the sitter.
- UNLESS IT ADDS VALUE to the sitter's portrait i.e. don't just paint it because it's there.
- ONLY paint the given background because it helps you create makes a better portrait and a better painting
Will the painting that starts well get better or worse?
- provide a sound basis for moving forward?
- add value and improve the portrait?
- risk jeopardising what they have achieved to date
Decision Time
Sitters choose portrait to take home
Robert Rinder chose Vicky's portrait - because of the overall composition
Katie Piper chose the portrait by Chris Longridge - which her gut responded to when the three portraits were first revealed.
Judges choose shortlist of three
The artists lined up to hear the outcome of the Judges deliberations |
- Michelle Goldman
- Kofi Ferris
- Chris Longridge
The shortlist
Paintings by Michelle Goldman |
I was slightly surprised by this decision but her self-portrait showed somebody who was clearly capable of going beyond the obvious - and she's also good at hands!
Paintings by Kofi Ferris |
Tai thought he was making some very sophisticated colour choices - which united the two paintings while making them distinct.
The winner
The winner was Kofi Ferris. The Judges summed up their decision as followsThe artist the Judges selected remained true to their distinctive style while creating a complex and powerful portrait.
The winner is Kofi Ferris!
REFERENCE
Sky Arts is now available on Freeview - but on demand is not.
This is probably the most important post for all those who don't have Sky or access to Freeview or want to watch on demand - it's how I watch the competition "on demand" - except I now use a Now TV stick plugged into my television
How to watch Sky Arts - Portrait Artist of the Year 2018 without subscribing to Sky
Learning Points re the 2020 competition (Series 7)
- Review: Episode 1 of Portrait Artist of the Year Series 7 (Autumn 2020)
- Review: Episode 2 of Portrait Artist of the Year Series 7 (Autumn 2020)
- Review: Episode 3 of Portrait Artist of the Year Series 7 (Autumn 2020)
- Review: Episode 4 of Portrait Artist of the Year Series 7 (Autumn 2020)
was followed by PAOTY 2021 Heats Closed to the Public - which is why there will be none of my photos of the process this year.
Learning Points re the (early) 2020 competition
- Review: Episode 1 of Portrait Artist of the Year 2020
- Review: Episode 2 of Portrait Artist of the Year 2020
- Review: Episode 3 of Portrait Artist of the Year 2020
- Review: Episode 4 of Portrait Artist of the Year 2020
- Review: Episode 5 of Portrait Artist of the Year 2020
- Review: Episode 6 of Portrait Artist of the Year 2020
- Review: Episode 7 of Portrait Artist of the Year 2020
- Review: Episode 8 of Portrait Artist of the Year 2020
- Review: Semi-Final of Portrait Artist of the Year 2020
Plus my blog posts which highlighted
- Call for Entries: Portrait Artist of the Year 2020 (Season 6)
- Does Portrait Artist of the Year ignore older artists?
- Feedback from Battersea Arts Centre PAOTY 2020 Heats
Learning Points re the 2019 competition
Below - my blog posts from last year which contains lots of learning points about painting in this competition for those aspiring to compete this year.
- Call for Entries - Sky Arts Portrait Artist of the Year 2019
- Review: Episode 1 of Portrait Artist of the Year 2019
- Review: Episode 2 of Portrait Artist of the Year 2019
- Review: Episode 3 of Portrait Artist of the Year 2019
- Review: Episode 4 of Portrait Artist of the Year 2019
- Review: Episode 5 of Portrait Artist of the Year 2019
- Review: Episode 6 of Portrait Artist of the Year 2019
- Review: Episode 7 of Portrait Artist of the Year 2019
- Review: Episode 8 of Portrait Artist of the Year 2019
- Review: Semi-Final of Portrait Artist of the Year 2019
- Duncan Shoosmith is Portrait Artist of the Year 2019
- The PAOTY Trek to Battersea Arts Centre
- Portrait Artist of the Year comes to Channel 4
- Portrait Artist of the Year: 2019 Exhibition Tour & 2020 Semi-Final
- Celebrity Portrait Artist of the Year 2019
- Sky Arts Portrait Artist of the Year 2019 starts on....
Learning Points re the 2018 competition
These are my reviews of the competition in 2018 highlighting learning points - as it was broadcast. More than one of those artists who participated in 2019 thanked me a lot for the commentary and advice - including some who went a long way!- Review: Sky Arts Portrait Artist of the Year 2018 - Episode 1
- Review: Episode 2 of Portrait Artist of the Year 2018
- Review: Episode 3 of Portrait Artist of the Year 2018
- Review: Episode 4 of Portrait Artist of the Year 2018
- Review: Episode 5 of Portrait Artist of the Year 2018
- Review: Episode 6 of Portrait Artist of the Year 2018
- Review: Episode 7 of Portrait Artist of the Year 2018
- Review: Episode 8 of Portrait Artist of the Year 2018
- Review: Semi Finals of Portrait Artist of the Year 2018
- Review: The Final of Portrait Artist of the Year 2018
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