You can find my review of Episode 4 of Landscape Artist of the Year 2023 - at Blackpool Pleasure Beach - below.
It includes lots of quotations from the programme - from presenters, judges, artists and wildcards!
The Pods in front of the Rollercoasters |
My review covers:
- the location and weather
- the artists' profiles
- themes arising during the episode
- who was shortlisted and who won
Episode 4: Blackpool Pleasure Beach: Rollercoasters
Blackpool Promenade with Blackpool Tower and the North Pier (Episode 1)in the far distance and Blackpool Pleasure Beach and the rollercoasters in the right foreground |
Location and Weather
"This year we've reimagined landscape art"
The location for Episode 4 was Blackpool Pleasure Beach - with the pods set up to face the rollercoasters.
- As if artists have been falling over themselves to paint this particular location because it is so iconic!
- Quite how this location relates to the commission relating to the Van de Veldes is quite beyond me.....
I've never painted a structure before. I normally paint hills.Blackpool Pleasure Beach was founded in 1896 as a pleasure park for adults. It is still run by the granddaughter of the founder.
The location adviser / whoever decides locations for Landscape Artist of the Year really needs a radical rethink before next year. I shall doubtless continue to comment at length on this topic on my Facebook Page. I'm also considering writing a blog post all about how to choose a location to make an interesting programme which generates good future applicants for the series.
Anyway, this is the view the pod artists had from their pods - minus the blue sky! This pic must have been taken the day before. Lots of curves and hundreds if not thousands of struts (i.e. the track sits on top of something that looks remarkably like scaffolding.)
View from the Pods |
As a painter I would find this very difficult Tai Shan Shierenberg
The weather
The Artists in the Pods
- Links to their websites are embedded in their names.
- Social media platforms are also referenced.
L to R: Joseph Schneider, Anne Byrne, John O'Neil and Jenny Wightman |
L to R: Kwesi Awotwi, Nigel Murray, Mark Lippett and Lorna Hamilton |
- Kwesi Awotwi - an artist and film-maker based in Hackney in London. Trained in London at the Art Academy, Atelier Fine Art and Heatherley School of Art. Works in his studio in Clapham. Co-Founder/Producer at GroundHog Pictures Ltd
- Anne Byrne (Facebook | Instagram) - retired marketing Executive from Chester and a contemporary landscape painter interested in a contemporary take on traditional approaches to landscape painting. Trained at St Helens School of Art in the late 70’s. Currently represented by The Harbour Gallery in Portscatho, Cornwall. Her work suggests she knows how to create a composition. Works in oil with big brushes relative to format size.
- Lorna Hamilton (Instagram) - b. 1973 in Northern Ireland. Works in mixed media. Currently lives and works in Nottingham. BA(Hons) in Fine Art in 1995. She has worked as a full-time professional artist for 27 years and has exhibited work across North America, UK, Ireland and China, with 3 sell out solo exhibitions. Her work has been featured on television programmes in the UK and Ireland, with paintings in public collections in N.Ireland and several others in a significant private collection in New York. Won the Winner of Parker Harris Mentoring Award & exhibition award in 2022. In 2023 she has a Public Art Commission for Northern Ireland and the Falkland Islands Residency: Arts, nature & wellbeing!
- Mark Lippett (Facebook | Instagram) - an art tutor from Stafford. Mostly known for his architectural work depicting abandoned buildings which have been exhibited across the UK in a number of solo and group shows. 2000: MA Fine Art - Painting at Wolverhampton University. 1997: BA (hons) Fine Art at Cumbria College of Art and Design. Works as an art tutor delivering workshops and teaching classes to people of all ages, abilities and backgrounds. Currently current artist-in-residence at Spode Works Studios. He'll be exhibiting with the SGFA at the Mall Galleries in March.
- Nigel Murray - a retired art teacher from London. Trained at Harrow School of Art and did his Art History degree at Camberwell, Nigel has worked as an illustrator, teacher and artist. His artwork is rooted in a deep love of drawing, especially from direct observation
- John O'Neil (Instagram) - former Navy weapons engineer based near Aberdeen. He's been exhibiting for a couple of years and has succeeded in getting into a number of competitive open exhibitions. He paints traditional landscapes in Scotland in oils.
- Joseph Schneider (Instagram) - artist and part-time tax driver from Shropshire. 2009-2011 MA in Painting, Royal College of Art. Creator and Director of the Rural Art Hub - an accessible community art space providing innovative, inclusive opportunities for all ages to experience artistic collaboration and discovery. He has 30 years of experience as an Artist, Artist Educator and Creative Play specialist working with all ages in a range of different community setting.
- Jenny Wightman (Instagram) - from Macclesfield. Worked for 15 years as an English teacher before returned to university to realise my long-held ambition to study art.
The Wildcards
As usual 50 wildcard artists set up nearby to paint the same scene.Wildcards on the promenade - numbers diminished as the weather got worse. |
I suspect one of the reasons we saw relatively little of the wildcards' artwork was it was either hidden by polythene or the artists were disappearing by the time they came to look - due to the appalling weather which they were exposed to.
Submissions
It's becoming very tiresome that we never ever get a shot of all the submissions together - so we never get to see what stands out or how they look next to one another.Considering how important the submission is to decisions about the shortlist and winner I'm very surprised at this omission.
The Judges with Joan Bakewell considering the submissions. (Note Joan has is observing the Blackpool on a grey day dress code) |
Artists in Episode 4 with their submission drawings/paintings |
Themes, Learning Points and Tips
Dress appropriately - bad weather can be really bad news
Tai Shan Schierenberg wearing his normal kit for some abnormal weather and sheltering under a large umbrella held down to avoid the wind allowing it to take off! |
"One of our hardest challenges"
- it started grey - which is never good news
- the wind blew for most of the day and by the looks of it got stronger over time
- when it rained it did what always happens on the west coast when there's a strong wind - it rained horizontally rather than vertically i.e. driving rain - right inside the pods
- the wildcards were out in the open - like sacrificial lambs!
"Gosh, it's blowy today!"The really bad news is that some media really does not like rain. Which immediately impacts that artist's chances of winning anything. Mark switched to coloured pencils
"windscreen wipers for my glasses would be good" Pod artist
- winds in this country typically blow from the west - and carry rain (Blackpool is on the west coast and is very exposed to rain collected by winds blowing across the entire Irish Sea)
- locations on the west coast very often get a LOT more rain than locations further east (East Anglia is very dry! The westerly winds have dropped all the rain by the time they get there; the East Winds in winter months are vicious as they come straight from Siberia)
- basic physics means that the rain drops as soon as it hits land and/or anything high - like rollercoasters.
- Joan knows this. I know this.
- We both come from the North West and have both been to Blackpool in the summer. Enough said?
- completely waterproof outer gear - top and bottom. (my waterproof overtrousers have zips up the side for getting on and off easily). Incorporates
- a peaked hood - to stop rain getting in your eyes / drenching your face
- high neckline - to stop the rain getting down the back of your neck - and neck warmer underneath
- 'Big peak' cap held on by a tight beanie to stop it blowing off in the wind.
- Helps you see colours better in sunlight
- keeps the rain out of your eyes when it's raining
- stops your ears suffering in strong persistent wind.
- Waterproof padded gilet underneath also helps to keep you warm.
- lots of zip pockets to hold vital bits and bobs on your person - and keep them dry.
- deep pockets to hold your hand warmers!
- cuffs at end of legs and arms - keeps you warmer.
Jo Burns - kitted out for Blackpool wind and rain |
Verticals and Horizontals - lots of straight lines
The rollercoasters in front of the Pods |
- some cropped tight and made it more feasible to finish
- some didn't crop tight enough and ended up painting endless struts
- some hadn't been practising painting to four hours in really poor weather - and as a result had great compositions and unfinished paintings
- some tried to ignore the rollercoasters and painted the car park / rusty railings instead - and then tried to work out what to do about the rollercoasters
- one turned sideways and painted a small part of suggested rollercoasters, a lot of sky and the sea. Guess who won?
- stiff card - in different sizes - which can be dipped in paint and then applied to the paper / canvas to get a sharp completely straight edge. (I think only one artist did this)
- flexible curves t- o create the right curve that you can then draw in to create a curve to follow
Getting the format right for the view
Sometimes you have to decide whether you need to change your normal format when faced with a view which is very unusual.- you stretch your composition sideways
- you include one of the carriages with people in it
Decision Time
Wildcard Winner
She studied Fine Art at Jacob Kramer College in Leeds and went on to St Martins briefly and then did a BA in Fine Art at Loughborough College of Art. She completed an MA in Fine Art Painting at Manchester in 1984.
She has had five major Arts Council Residencies.....has received a number of Arts Council Awards.
Wildcard winner Jo Burns with Tai Shan Shierenberg |
The Wildcard Winning Painting by Jo Burns |
⚠️ SPOILER ALERT ⚠️
— Storyvault Films (@StoryvaultFilms) February 1, 2023
Congratulations to our latest wildcard winner!#LAOTY #LandscapeArtistOfTheYear pic.twitter.com/eLFPBiJfOo
Shortlisted Artists
Artists waiting to hear who has been shortlisted |
- Jenny Wightman
- Kwezi Awotwi
- Anne Byrne
Below is, for me, "the one that got away" - because that was the view and that was the day - and I really don't understand why he didn't get a place on the shortlist - other than that submission probably wasn't the best choice even if it got him a pod place.How can you dismiss one as being too colourful then choose another that's like a child's? What happened to the wild cards this week. Barely more than a snippet. #laoty
— Julie Harris (@JulieHa78605710) February 1, 2023
- Initially it has to be something "different" that gets you noticed.
- Plus it has to work hard when it comes to deciding who gets shortlisted.
I stand by my approach of putting EVERYTHING in. Also off camera Tai-Shan Schierenberg said "you have a miraculous ability to capture the world with concision."
Jenny Wightman: Submission and Heat Painting |
Her submission was an impressive and towering pencil drawing. The judges commented on its vertiginous perspective.
"what a day to choose to use pastel!"I liked the way she blurred parts of the image using line. The Judges liked the way she added in colour for the heat in a controlled way.
Kwesi Awotwi: Submission and landscape painting |
I'm afraid Kwesi's style of painting - whoever has painted it - does absolutely nothing for me. I see similar in art galleries and wonder what it is I'm missing that curators think is good.
Anne Byrne: Submission and Heat Painting |
I thought it absolutely fascinating that she decided to turn side on and paint what was in front of her - after she had removed six other pods as that great area of nothingness bottom centre is where the other pods were. When I saw where she had been positioned, I thought she was very, very brave AND she came up with a solution which was about the place but didn't allow the rollercoasters to dominate.
There's a wonderful feeling of air Judge
freer, expressive, contemporary, original, delicate serenity
The Heat Winner
Shortlisted artists waiting to hear who's won |
Next Week
The competition continues as the contestants take a trip to Ascot to capture the glamorous racegoers at the Royal Enclosure Picnic.
I love #laoty but so far this season I haven’t loved Ascot or Blackpool. I’ll leave it there.
— Paul Hughes (@paulhughespsych) February 1, 2023
REFERENCE:
The programme is broadcast by Sky Arts ( available on Sky, Now TV and Channel 11 on Freeview) and the films are made by Storyvault Films.Landscape Artist of the Year 2024
(Note the Terms and Conditions appear to have disappeared from their website i.e. you shouldn't need to register to see if you would want to register!)
2023 series
All the reviews in Series 8 include themes for reference by future participants - or plein air painters working to a time frame - in terms of problems experienced and challenges overcome.I'll be archiving the reviews of each episode in the reference section at the end of each episode.
No comments:
Post a Comment
COMMENTS HAVE BEEN CLOSED AGAIN because of too much spam.
My blog posts are always posted to my Making A Mark Facebook Page and you can comment there if you wish.
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.