The first episode of the new art competition to find the Portrait Artist of the Year for 2023 kicked off last night
The first episode of Series Ten will be repeated at 7pm tonight on Sky Arts. If you've not yet watched, you might want to stop reading now as this review continues in the same pattern as all the reviews I've written since series 4 in 2018
i.e. this review post considers:
- the sitters
- the artists
- the self-portrait submissions
- themes observed during the episode - and observations on different approaches
- the Judging
- the Shortlist
- Episode 1 Winner
Overview of the filming of this episode |
Portrait Artist of the Year Series 10
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 Channel 11) and via the NOW TV app (if you want to look back at an episode after it's been broadcast)
- a prize of £10,000 for a commissioned portrait of a celebrated sitter for distinguished institution
- 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 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 (age 55 - who likes to dye his hair and appear younger!) and the inimitable and extraordinary Dame Joan Bakewell - who hit 90 earlier this year
- 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.
(L to R) Tai Shan Shierenberg, Dame Joan Bakewell, Katheleen Soriano, Stephen Mangan and Kate Bryan |
In terms of people watching the proceedings, the Series is limited as to who can watch Sky Arts in the UK - on terrestrial Channel 11 or Sky or Now TV.
What's New in Series 10?
So far as I can see, it's virtually the same as always. Except there are a few things.
- No mention of who the celebrity sitter will be for the final episode - except I happen to know it's going to be the world-renowned conservationist Dr Jane Goodall, DBE (as previously announced by Sky!)
- It was the first time we've had a couple being two of the sitters.
- it's the first time we've had a CAT as a sitter!
Episode 1: The Sitters
- Fleur East (Singer),
- Emma Freud (Broadcaster) - with the family cat Badger (which was a first!)
- Richard Curtis (Screenwriter) - which famous films and tv shows has he not written?
Episode 1: The Artists
The mandatory photo of all the artists in this episode sat on the steps outside Battersea Arts Centre |
- Léa Brunet-Wong (Instagram) - A student at Central Saint Martins in London. Interested in multidisciplinary arts. This is the self portrait she completed to enter the competition
- Allegra Gordon (Instagram) - based in London. A freelance illustrator who works in a pottery cafe. Completed ‘The Drawing Year’ at The Royal Drawing School in 2022 after graduating from the University of Kingston with a First-Class Honours in Illustration and Animation. Her drawings on her website distort perspective and have a look of early Freud.
- Tim Hall RSMA (Instagram) - Comes from a family of artists. Graduated from Kingston with a degree in fine art in 1989. Currently a professional painter and teacher who provides painting holidays in Cornwall. Member of the Royal Society of Marine Painters and has won prizes for his work.
- Sinead Lawless (Instagram) - an artist and teacher from Cork in Ireland. She is a professional member of Visual Artists Ireland and the Dublin Art Society and teaches at the Schoolhouse for Art in Enniskerry. She has exhibited in open exhibitions at the Mall Galleries and the Royal Hibernian Academy.
- Anna-Louise Loy - a music student from Liverpool. Graduated this year from the Royal Welsh College of Music and Drama with an Honours Degree in Music (as a a Tenor/Bass Trombonist). Her self portrait is part of a series of annual self po
- Matthew Lyons (Instagram) - a Nottinghamshire-based figurative artist, living and working in Beeston who is a design standards manager. Find out more about Matthew's experience here. - It's a very realistic assessment of what the day is like and the sorts of issues which are likely to arise.
Overall, the whole experience was pretty good. The people at Storyvault films are wonderful and kind to you; and they go out of their way to make you feel like you are the most important person there. Every interaction, every email, every conversation was, without exception, lovely.
- Emily Rogers (Instagram) - born in Oxford in 1996. Trained in art at Oxford Brookes University (Foundation), Leeds University (Fine Art Degree) and Charles H Cecil Studios (classical sight size portraiture) in Florence. Lives and works in London and is an instructor at the Cecil Studios. This is her self-portrait.
- Victoria Sills (Facebook, Instagram) - a full time artist and graduate of the University of Brighton (1999) and The Other MA (2020). She is based in Westcliff on Sea. Her blog post has a lot of still pics of what the episode looked like while being filmed.
- Melissa Speed (Instagram) - a heritage volunteer and pastel artist living in Buxton, Derbyshire. This is her blog post about Preparing to Take Part in a Televised Art Competition which is worth a read
Self portrait submissions
As I've been saying for ages, the self-portrait submission is the ONLY bit of information they Judges have as to:
- how well you can paint a portrait when NOT under time pressure
- whether you can paint anything more than a head
- whether you have the necessary talent and skills to paint a commissioned portrait for a distinguished instituition - for a fee of £10,000 (i.e. no poor submissions allowed for this!)
Size, content and calibre of submissions
Reviewing the self-portrait submission wall |
Following on from the notion of what the submission is all about.....
FORMAT
- Portrait format x 9
SIZE
- Large x 2
- Large/Medium x 1
- Small x 5
- Tiny x 1
SCOPE
- full size or most of body (including hand) x 3
- upper torso (no hands) x 1
- head, shoulder and hand x 1
- head and shoulders x 3
- head x 1
Themes
Will just "a head" do for a heat?
How an artist works
- drawing
- composition - including cropping images to make it interesting to look at
- techniques used to get the map out the work on the support
- underpaintings
- painting
- glazing
The use of Graphite is problematic
It's not just about the likeness!
The Judging
Who the Sitters chose
- Richard Curtis chose the painting of his cropped head by Sinead Lawless because he knows he worries a lot and her painting made made him look worried!
- Emma Freud chose the painting by Tim Hall - because he nailed "a cheeky look"
- Fleur East chose the painting by Anna Loy - because it made her emotional
I am absolutely floored by this. With this one I feel like I'm feeling this rather than seeing it - its's just moving me looking at it
Richard Curtis by Sinead Lawless |
The Judges - engaged in judging |
- before the heat - when reviewing who should be selected for the Heats
- at the beginning of the heat - when they consider the self-portrait submissions
- at lunchtime and then
- again at the end after the sitters have reviewed the artwork.
- how an artist works
- how they start and how they make corrections and adjustments
- whether they can work under pressure and complete within a time allowance
- how they respond when things go wrong - or don't go right
- how the paintings look when sat next to the competition
- how the heat painting matches up to the self portrait (for those who are shortlisted)
Judges LIKED:
- the incredible hair which Anna painted
- the attempt to paint a full person
- paintings which tell a story
- great use of colour
- eyes which engage
Judges were less enthusiastic about:
- problems with proportion
- problems with likeness
- problems with artwork not being all of the same level
- painters not progressing to achieve what they are capable of (generally an issue of time)
The Shortlist
The artists and their self portraits |
- Léa Brunet-Wong
- Sinead Lawless
- Anna-Louise Loy
Self portrait and Portrait by Léa Brunet-Wong |
These two small paintings are very good - but I'd have liked to have seen something bigger.
That's a very masterful portrait of Badger though!
Self Portrait and Portrait by Anna-Louise Loy |
Oddly, although I recognise the self portrait as good, it doesn't reflect for me the lovely face of the artist we saw in the programme - so I feel a bit of a disconnect. Her portrait of Fleur East is however stunning in terms of both finding a way to tackle the hair in the time to give body and tone and colour - but not fussing about detail. Plus she "got the mouth"!
Episode 1 Winner
Anna Loy was selected as the winner of the first heat.- producing a large complex self-portrait which clearly demonstrated she can paint and produce large paintings.
- Plus a simply stunning portrait of Richard Curtis that achieved an excellent likeness, character and temperament through lush use of paint.
🚨⚠️ SPOILER ALERT ⚠️🚨
— Storyvault Films (@StoryvaultFilms) October 11, 2023
The heat one winner of this year's #PortraitArtistOfTheYear is...
Remember to tune in next week for more #PAOTY 🎨 pic.twitter.com/Rc1GKAEeKR
Do you want to paint in a heat next year?
This is my post about the Call for Entries: Series 11 of Portrait Artist of the Year (next year). Essential reading for all those who want to do well - it's got links to all my past reviews and all the themes and tips identified in the last five years.
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