Wednesday saw a very welcome return of Portrait Artist of the Year in a new Autumn slot on which used to be occupied by Landscape Artist of the Year.
There's been quite a few changes introduced with Series 9 so I'll start by highlighting these before getting down to my review of this week's episode
What's new in Series 9?
The new introduction screen for Series 9 of Portrait Artist of the Year |
The new £10,000 Commission
- Sir Lenny Henry is the sitter for the commission to be undertaken by the winner
- the commission is for the National Portrait Gallery
Artists no longer split between professionals and amateurs
Artists are now defined in terms of their work and how they approach their art.
In the past the artists determined whether they were professional or amateur - with some being bold in their assertions while others were bashful. I know I've spent a lot of time in the past commenting on how stupid the totally artificial distinction has been in past episodes - so this is a very welcome move. Especially since it eliminates the notion that new graduates are real proper professional artists even if they've not sold a thing or that very experienced professional illustrators are actually amateur artists!
Introduction of 'The Prop'
Artists are not made to include the item - but in general it seemed to me that it added to their understanding of the individual they were painting.
I like this idea. Portraits often include objects which tell you something about the person.
I was also left wondering if this was a bit of an effort to stop people just painting heads in 4 hours - and we shall see over the course of the series whether or not it has this effect.
Stephen Mangan has stopped dyeing his hair!
Anyway Mr Mangan has opted to let us know he's actually older than he was trying to look and I think could look a lot better for it - when he gets a hair cut!
He should really take tips from Joan Bakewell's hairdresser - she's still presenting age 89 and really does not look it!
One other thing I noticed is that from certain angles, Kate is a dead ringer for Lizz Truss!
The Set Up
Back to the basics.
Portrait Artist of the Year is
- commissioned by Sky TV UK
- made by Storyvault Films an independent production company.
- filmed at Battersea Arts Centre - generally in April
- broadcast every Autumn - generally starting in October - by Sky Arts Channel on digital television (now also on Freeview at Chanell 11) and via the NOW TV app (if you want to look back at an episode after it's been broadcast)
- 3 sitters and 3 artists allocated to each sitter
- one sitter and three artists are located in one of three sections of a rotunda type frame (think three segments of a pie or cake) in the large room at the Battesea Arts Centre where the PAOTY series are now filmed. This allows the cameras to rotate around the room
- None of the artists know who their sitter will is until they arrive in the room.
- There's no choice as to who paints which sitter
- There's no choice as to what angle you get on the sitter
- Artists have - in theory - four hours to complete a portrait working from a live model - with a break in the middle of the day.
- Two presenters - Stephen Mangan and the inimitable and extraordinary Joan Bakewell (age 89)
- Three Judges: who are the same as for previous series:
- award-winning portrait painter Tai Shan Schierenberg. Studied at St. Martin's School of Art and The Slade. Lives and works in London, Norfolk and the Black Forest in Germany. Has artwork in a number of important national and regional public collections
- independent curator, art historian and arts broadcaster Kathleen Soriano worked in museums and galleries for over 30 years.
- arts broadcaster, curator, mentor and writer Kate Bryan is also currently Head of Collections for Soho House.
Episode 1: The Sitters
- Elizabeth Day (age 44) who is an author and presenter of the How to Fail podcast - which celebrates the things which haven't gone right. I bet she gets extra followers from being a sitter!
- Nick Grimshaw (age 38) a disc jockey and occasional TV presenter who announced he was leaving Radio 1 after 14 years and has also become a podcaster.
- Khadija Mellah (22 this year) who was the first hijab-wearing jockey in a competitive British horse race - and wore a helmet mounted 'dashcam' which recorded the entire race when she won the Magnolia Cup. She wore a traditional Islamic garment, an Arabian scarf and her jockey helmet - and was sat next to her silks she wore in the day she won.
Episode 1: The Artists
The artists of Episode 1 on the Battersea Art Centre steps |
- Steve Bennett (Instagram) - Based in Leeds and a graphic designer by trade, who has spent many years working in print, advertising and display. He recently set up a new studio and website for his printmaking in linocuts and drypoint.
- Anne Blankson-Hemans (Facebook | Instagram | Twitter) - studied Fine Art at the College of Art, Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST) in Ghana and came to live in the UK in 1984. She has won numerous awards and is a member and Vice President of the Society of Women Artists. She's also been a semi-finalist on BBC's Big Painting Challenge.
- Darren Cairney - (Instagram | Twitter) - a professional artist - specialising in 2D design and backgrounds - living in South Tyneside
- Morag Caister - (Facebook | Instagram) BA. Painting, University of Brighton (2019). Brighton Metropolitan College, Foundation, Art & Design (2014). Heat winner and PAOTY semi-finalist in 2020. Has exhibited her art internationally. Has her work in Brighton Beach House, Soho House, 2022 (i.e. known to Kate Bryan)
- Ruby Hagen - a sixth former doing A Levels - who painted for five weeks solid prior to the Heat and missed a maths test to participate!
- Preslav Kostov (Facebook | Instagram | Twitter) - a painter and draughtsman who currently lives and works in London. He is a Bulgarian (b.1998) who is studying for a Masters in Painting at the Royal College of Art he's also studied at Leeds College of Art and The Royal Drawing School. He's the recipient of The Elizabeth Greenshields Award and an elected member of The Contemporary British Portrait Painters Society.
- Nathan Lowry (Instagram) - a Background Artist and 2D Designer based in Dublin, Ireland. He graduated with a BA(Hons) in Visual Media with Animation from BCFE in 2019 and now creates artwork for projects in different mediums such as short film, games and TV production.
- Mod White (Facebook | Instagram | Twitter) - a GP who has also studied fine art at a 12 weeks workshop at a Florence Academy in 2017. Her work was in the 2022 Royal Society of Portrait Painters annual exhibition in 2022.
- Julie Wright - a former Art Director in Advertising. Lives in London and now retired and has taken up watercolour painting - but has only been painting for 12 months.
Self portrait submissions
- the self portrait submission represents what an artist can achieve when not under time pressure.
- in this respect it speaks volumes about how they would approach a commission.
Self portrait submissions |
Size and content of submission
FORMAT
- Portrait format x 9
- Large x 1
- Large/Medium x 3
- Small x 3
- Tiny x 1
- full size or most of body (including hand) x 5
- upper torso (no hands) x 0
- head and shoulders x 1
- head x 3
Media used
Themes
In every review I try and draw out what seem to me to be some of the themes for this episode. A lot of the themes will be applicable to all the participants, episodes and future participants!Getting a Good LIKENESS
Failing to achieve a good likeness in a portrait competition does not impress Judges. Achieving a good likeness MUST be a priority for every artist.- drawing the head first - before you start painting - allows you to learn how it works and gets you settled
- at the end, if the background is missing it's not the end of the world.
TIME Management
- you will be interrupted by Judges and presenters
- you will lose sight of the subject while cameramen are filming other contestants
- you will be nervous and take time to settle
It's all in the DRAWING
- Drawing well is about being able to draw what is in front of you by eyeballing.
- Using a photo on a digital device is for being able to see what is there because you can't get close enough to the sibject and saves time in walking back and to!
Use of COLOUR
- colour harmonies are pleasing - and mud is not
- mud is what you get when you mix too many colours
- don't treat the face as a palette for mixing
- getting the colour right first time saves time
- it's more about choosing and mixing and placement
- it's never about how much colour you can get on - it's much more about whether you chose the right colours and used them in the right amounts in the right places
The Judging
The Judges review the artists' artwork at lunchtime and then again at the end after the sitters have reviewed the artworkChallenges experienced - worth noting
- a couple of artists had 'false starts'. With most artists this is often due to nerves and/or lack of a plan and/or thrown by the subject.
Judges liked
- achieving a good likeness
- getting the age of the sitter right
- sophisticated use of prop within the overall portrait
- phenomenal draughtsmanship
- enthusiastic use of colour
- fantastic colouration / colour harmonies
- crisp painting
Judges were less enthusiastic about very few things.
APPROACH
- not achieving a good likeness
- leaving the head too late to achieve a good likeness
- losing the likeness when moving from drawing to painting
The Shortlist
One of these days, the director is going to suggest to the cameramen and the artists that they line up NEXT TO THEIR PORTRAIT rather than standing in front of it so we can see both portrait and artist!- Morag Caister
- Darren Cairney
- Preslav Kostov
Submission paintings and heat painting by Darren Cairney, Morag Caister and Preslav Kostov |
Morag Caister |
Darren Cairney |
Preslav Kostov |
Preslav is an interesting painter. I liked his self portrait submission - and it would have been great to have seen a much bigger self portrait submission.
Episode 1 Winner
However I knew she was going to win the minute I knew she'd been a previous semi-finalist in 2020. You've really got to mess up or come across extremely stiff competition to not win another heat and make it through to the semi-finals again. It's happened before and it will happen again. It's a route reserved for those who seem to be identified as being people who had just missed out and worth another 'go round'.
Episode 2
Sky Arts Artist of the Year - REFERENCE
- Portrait Artist of the Year (Series 9) starts 5th October 2022 - this also allows you look back at reviews of episodes - and themes which cropped up - in previous series in my post
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