This is the second year the Society of Women Artists have opted for an Online Annual Exhibition as a Virtual Gallery. Given not knowing how effective jabs would be, what the resistance to jabs might be and whether there'd be another variant which made all this academic are some jolly good reasons to be very cautious!
The exhibition is online until 31st December - so plenty of time to view it - and view it again!
Reviewing an Online Exhibition
That said, I find it very difficult to review Online Exhibitions. I've been trying to work out the reasons why - and here's some thought to date
- I really like to walk around an exhibition - at a distance from the artwork to get a sense of the exhibition as a whole and what some if its themes or highlights (and lowlights) might be. On this circuit, I'm looking to see what catches my eye. I can "sort of" do something similar with an online exhibition - except all artwork is diminished to similar size images - which knocks my sense of scale out the window!
- Then I walk around again and look at each artwork in turn - and this time I check the labels to ee what media it is and who created it. Naturally I get a very good sense of size - which I particularly miss when viewing online. I do so wish each image had a standard size "something or other" in the picture as well or a "this is what it would like on a wall next to a standard sized sofa" to give me that sense of scale.
- Then I ponder on what I've seen - and walk around again to revisit images - and see if I've missed anything for the third circuit
Review: SWA Online Annual Exhibition 2021
- individual artworks
- pages of thumbnails
- artwork by artist
Initial impressions - as I look at the thumbnails
- the overall quality of the artwork is good - and some is very good
- unsurprisingly, women feature in a lot of the paintings
- many artists seem very attuned to what artwork looks like on a screen and know how NOT to create flat boring artwork - however this is not a lesson which has been learned by all
- there were far fewer paintings relating to the last 18 months prior to the exhibition opening than I was expecting
Individual artists whose artwork stood out for me included
- they included red - it always works
- they had a strong monochrome shape and design
- the image read well as a thumbnail - and wasn't too complex or cluttered
- Linda Kritskaya Website: www.lindakritskaya.com/ Instagram: linda_kritskaya_art/ - a Russian artist who apparently does not speak English (based on her Instagram). Her three pastels of children are excellent. Her pricing is way off though which I take to be unfamiliarity with showing in the UK.
Back to School 1, 2 and 3 |
- Iona Howard Website: www.ionahoward.com Instagram: iona.howard - Her works in Carborundum, Collagraph and Drypoint read well on screen. Of the two, I preferred Towards The Church On Great North Fen She's a very well educated and experienced contemporary printmaker who lon the Fen Edge near Cambridge for the last twenty years - and it shows in her work. She's somebody who I'd like to see more artwork from in other shows.
- Katherine Reekie Website: katherinereekie.co.uk/ Instagram: katherinereekieartist/ Facebook: katherine.reekie - Her still life compositions using frames were novel and intriguing - both of which are characteristics I like to see in artwork. She was made an Associate Member of the SWA and received the received the ‘President and Vice Presidents’ Award’ in The Society of Women Artist’s 160th Annual Open Exhibition 2021. (Note: I intentionally did not look at the awards until after I'd reviewed the artwork)
- Sally Solomon Website: www.sollysolomon.com/ Instagram: solly_solomon/ Facebook: sollysolomon.art/ - her oil painting 'You Have No Idea Of The Gift You Once Gave Me' is very striking and the reason why it was painted was very poignant. It just goes to show that those who paint from the heart often impress.
- Sheila Goodman SWA PS http://www.sgart.co.uk - I'm a fan of Sheila Goodman which I date back to when she won The Threadneedle prize in 2009 (see Sheila Wallis wins £25,000 Threadneedle Prize 2009).
However her paintings in this exhibition just jumped off the page at me. I knew I knew the artist and I thought it might be Sheila a I've seen landscapes by her I've really liked in the past - and these felt similar when viewed as thumbnail.
Two of four Pastel Paintings by Sheila Goodman |
- Ayna Paisley www.aynapaisley.com/ - Her two paintings did not jump out when I viewed the thumbnails but instantly got my attention when I viewed artworks by artist
- Doreen Langhorn www.doreenlanghorn-artist-official-site.com - Her two paintings were instantly recognisable as pandemic related. Interestingly he one below is an imagined painting of an Art Demonstration - and the responses of different participants!
- Ninni Heldt Website: www.ninniheldt.com / Instagram: ninniheldt/ - Her format is unusual (a 70cm circular painting) and her work is extremely distinctive and works well as a series grouped together. She also uses a traditional water golding technique. However I do think her work is overpriced.
- Eleanor Mill Website: melibertine.com/graphic/ Instagram: melibertine Facebook: Melibertine - Her graphite drawings of architecture and ruins is meticulous and handled extremely well in terms of the treatment of values and rendering.
Two of her four graphite drawings |
- Gill Morrow Website: gillmorrowart.com Facebook: gillmorrowart/ Her porcelain bust - partially glazed with barbed wire - is amazing!
Award winners
Pricing
One thing I did notice while reviewing artworks is that some
pricing is badly out of kilter for typical wall pricing that sells art at the Mall Galleries.
I've been writing about pricing and sales by FBA Societies and analysing the prices of works which sold for some months - if not years. I have identified price thresholds (i.e. what NOT to go above), if you want to have a serious chance of selling your work - within the context of experience, expertise and name recognition - plus what price ranges can see artwork selling very quickly.
The message does not for some reason appear to have got through to many of the artists exhibiting in this exhibition. I saw some quite ludicrous prices.
This to my mind explains why so few artworks have sold to date - despite the exhibition having been online for a month.
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