Wendy Barratt won the 10th series of Portrait Artist of the Year on Wednesday night last week. She is, in my opinion - and in the opinion of many of those whose comments I've seen online - a very worthy winner.
I predict good things and a lot of commissions in Wendy's future due to her skill in painting portraits. She's both grounded in drawing and traditional skills and yet has a very contemporary style of painting which both appeals to a wide range of ages and tastes - and looks good in contemporary spaces.
Wendy's PAOTY Portrait Paintings (left to right: self portrait submission; heat (Nicky Spence); Final (Dame Joan Bakewell); Semi Final (Emma Bunton); Commission for Final (her husband Fred) |
This week's review has been postponed while I travelled north and then moved "my inheritance" south at the weekend. The intention was to start writing the review on the trains up and back - but inevitably it didn't quite work out like that. Then I experienced a domestic emergency when I got home which delayed matters further - but here we finally are!
I'm going to do the Final and the Commission separately so Final today and hopefully Commission tomorrow.
This review covers:- The Final: Artists, Sitter and Set
- The Judges' Perspective
- The Final Portraits - and my comments
- Why Wendy won.
- READ: How to enter the competition in 2023
The Final: Artists, Sitter and Set
The Finalists
- Wendy Barratt
- Davide di Tarantino
- Lorena Levi
- amply demonstrated her artistic skills, sensitivity and mental toughness in her heat to make her presence in the Final a foregone conclusion - by me.
- Her subsequent calm and well considered performance in the Semi Finals simply outshone everybody else and I must confess by the end I in no doubt she would be selected for the final - but was also assuming she would win!
Resulting in Davide and Lorena becoming the other two finalists. They offered:
- Davide - the ability to paint portraits as if they were produced in the past - but always small
- Lorena - an approach where likeness is not always delivered and a technique which relies heavily on line but is not intended to be illustrative
Sitter and Set
The Sitter
Dame Joan Bakewell |
As Joan had her 90th Birthday in April 2023 - when Series 10 was being filmed - this last episode of the 10th series is to be Joan Bakewell's last appearance on Portrait Artist of the Year. She's been hosting from the very beginning - but she is now not always able to make the filming for every episode.
"She's a great sitter, bad at sitting"
The Set
What all the Portraits tell the Judges
- The Self Portrait submission - painted in your own time - and submitted as part of your entry to the competition - demonstrates:
- what you can do when not under a time pressure and you create the time budget you are comfortable with
- The Commission Portrait - done within a very limited time periodas part of the final - but away from the television cameras (to some extent). You need to record yourself painting the commission.
- The Artists have four days to develop and complete their Commission Painting.
- this also demonstrates what you can do in a limited timescale - given very famous people whose portraits need painting often have a limited amount of time they can give yo you.
- you actually painted what you submitted (i.e. there is a consistency of approach)
- you can find a way to paint a decent portrait in less than four hours
- you know your way around design and composition, a given perspective on a sitter and tones and colours
The Final Portraits - and my comments
Three artists and six portraits (Left to right) Davide, Lorena and Wendy How do you judge which are most impressive? Often by just looking at them like this - from a distance..... |
There is such a pressure on the artists. There's the normal pressure of it being the Final. Then there's the pressure of it being "The Baroness" Kate Bryan
All three artists had a good go at doing a portrait of Joan - but each continued in their normal style, adjusted for the fact it was the Final - so needed to be impressive - and also that they still only had four hours to complete the portrait.
There was a carry over from the Final Artists' Commissions done during the Pandemic. Insofar that each artist got to painting somebody they knew and could get easy access to.
Wendy Barratt
- she spent quite a long time choosing which photograph of Joan gave her enough information to make an interesting
- from drawing in the shape and structure of the head with a brush
- to adding large brushmarks of pure colour to create a tonal palette of the shape and colour of the head
- then drawing back in again with a small brush - using small marks - to readjust and refine her previous mark-making
She paints in earth colours. Nothing is too bright Tai Shan Shierenberg
Wendy also had her husband Fred with her - close by - to support her while painting Joan's portrait - see below.
I just love 🥰 this photo. From the first heat of @artistoftheyear to the final Fred has been by my side (or hiding behind a curtain somewhere). Neither of us imagined we’d be doing this more than once. Fred has stayed calm, kept me calm(er) and provided me with all the giggles and cuddles I needed to be able to paint in front of TV’s.
For the commission portrait, she worked on an even bigger support. Probably to demonstrate that she's NOT just "a head and shoulders artist" and can paint hands.
I wonder if she read my repeated comments that artists must demonstrate they can paint hands at some point in the competition?
The advantage of Wendy painting Fred is that the Judges had seen him in the heats and semi-final and hence knew that it was an excellent portrait of him.
What the Judges thought of Wendy
They have a lovely serenity to them. They feel harmonious Kate Bryan
What Wendy's portraiture reminds me of is that paint can do something that photography can't. There's a humanity. There's a realness .....You feel their emotion, there's a direct human connection Kathleen Soriano
- Tai summed her up by saying Wendy paints in a "traditional" way but makes her paintings look very contemporart
- Kathleen recognised the look that Wendy had chosen and thought she was trying to capture Joan's restless energy in her brushstrokes.
- Kate liked the way she paints big very structured heads which don't have anything heavy about them
- They found her portrait difficult to assess at halfway because it lacked Joan's very particular alert eyes
Joan decided to call her portrait "thoughtful". The notion was that she'd been asked a question about which she had to think or was getting ready to disagree with somebody else around a dinner table.
Davide di Taranto
Davide di Taranto produced another miniature artwork in the Final - but this time he used goldleaf to create an icon like feel. I have a feeling somebody probably had a word with him and indicated that one of the reasons the Judges loved his work is because of the icon-like approach he used for it
Davide talked about using small brushes - but I know there are many which are much smaller than the ones he used in the Final. I'm surprised he doesn't know this from his work.
His Commission Painting was a lot of gold leaf, a lot of black paint and some very accomplished work in relation to the head and skin. He deliberately did a full body to demonstrate he was capable of a lot more than just a head. However in my eyes, the figure looked very stiff. I needed a bit more background and context to understand why he was standing like that.
What the Judges thought of Davide
They much appreciated the fact he was giving them the icon 'look' this time with the goldleaf background - which they really liked from his submission - but had not seen in the heat or semi-final.- he'd been practising, was using feathery brushmarks
- he was NOT using very naturalistic colours
- he's had to find short cuts for doing what he can do so well - when not limited by time.
- he's rendered the skin in the commission portrait as it if it was a pointillist painting
- Tai liked the fact he's used gold to "sanctify" Dame Joan
- there is a contrast between a portrait which is more traditional and a portrait which feels a lot more contemporary.
Lorena Levi
Lorena Levi The Final Portrait of Joan Bakewell; and Her Commission Portrait of her partner and cat and backgarden |
Lorena has a habit of introducing distortions when painting people - and the Judges have accepted this as her style - as opposed to an inability to draw and paint accurately.
Interestingly the comment this time was that when looking at the portrait of Joan at the end, the feeling was that she had caught a particular look of Joan's.
She started with the head and didn't want to progress to the rest of the support until she'd got the eyes in. Oddly the eyes are far too large to be realistic.
She took the opportunity with her Commission Portrait to also demonstrate she can
- work on a larger scale
- include a lot of what she saw as detail
- demonstrate that she can work in other approaches to painting
- do more sophisticated hands and also proper backgrounds.
What the Judges thought of Lorena
Previously the Judges have really liked the works of art that she created - even though they didn't look like the subject. Which is a polite way of saying that Lorena's likenesses aren't always very like her sitter.- Lorena's emphasis on line which was not cartoonish
- a very elegant Joan - whose likeness they found a lot more persuasive by the end
- they liked the way she had gone bigger, done more and developed their understanding of what she could do
- the way she introduced iconography to tell a story
Why Wendy won
"Barrat" should read Barratt |
Quite simply, Wendy Barratt won because she was the best portrait artist in the series.
- excellent understanding of the structure of the head;
- great technique in terms of design and crop - she got it right every time;
- very effective use of brushwork for both drawing the head using a brush and applying paint;
- interesting and sensitive use of colour;
- brilliant use of tonal values through her entire palette;
- excellent mix of drawing and painting which adds to the appeal of the portrait;
- AND IMPORTANTLY a really good ability to capture both likeness and character.
- PLUS the ability to persuade this is a very real person.
- all very clearly by the same artist
- who has developed a very mature approach and process to painting portraits - grounded in drawing (i.e. a very good reason to wait to apply until you are competent at drawing people in both graphite and paint)
- her style is clear and unfussy but looks contemporary at the same tine
(I'd like to congratulate her for having updated her website and got it into good shape to capitalise on her win post the broadcast of the final two episodes of Series 10 covering both the Final and the Commission for the National Portrait Gallery.)
Below you can find out more about how to participate - and learn about what happened in previous series.
Do you want to appear in PAOTY Series 11 (in 2024)?
- don't enter if you're not ready
- don't enter unless you've watched previous series AND READ MY REVIEWS - which are listed below. They include learning points and tips and I've had more than one winner tell me how useful they are!
- Finally READ 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 which contain all the themes and tips I've identified in the last five years.
- Want to watch the Portrait Artist of the Year 2023 being filmed? - the dates relate to filming which is not past but the process should be pretty much the same
- How artists are selected for PAOTY or LAOTY - an IMPORTANT blog post I wrote last year. The process as explained by Stuart Prebble, the Chairman of Storyvault Films, the independent television company who make the series for Sky Arts
- What do you do if you don't respond to the PAOTY call in 48 hours? for those who don't make a particular note of the dates they will contact you
Sky Arts Portrait Artist of the Year - REFERENCE
Previous Finals
Here are my posts about previous finals
- Morag Caister wins Portrait Artist of the Year 2022 (Series 9 2022)
- Calum Stevenson wins Portrait Artist of the Year (Series 8 Autumn 2021)
- Curtis Holder wins Portrait Artist of the Year (Series 7 Autumn 2020)
- (I'm still trying to work out what happened to the pandemic post about the Final in Spring 2020 when Christobel Blackburn won)
- Duncan Shoosmith is Portrait Artist of the Year 2019
- Review: The Final of Portrait Artist of the Year 2018
- Gareth Reid is Sky Arts Portrait Artist of the Year 2017
Reviews of PAOTY Series 10
Dates after the listed reviews below relate to the date of the first broadcast
This year's heats are:
- Review: Episode 1 Portrait Artist of the Year (Series 10) 11 October 2023
- Review: Episode 2 Portrait Artist of the Year (Series 10) 18 October 2023
- Review: Episode 3 Portrait Artist of the Year (Series 10) 25 October 2023
- Review: Episode 4 of Portrait Artist of the Year (Series 10) 1 November 2023
- Review: Heat 5 of Portrait Artist of the Year (Series 10) 8 November 2023
- Review: Heat 6 of Portrait Artist of the Year (Series 10) 15 November 2023
- Review: Episode 7 of Portrait Artist of the Year (Series 10) 22 November 2023
- Which PAOTY Semi Finalists will be in the PAOTY 2023 Final?
- Review: Semi Finals of Portrait Artist of the Year 2023 (29th November 2023)
Reviews of Previous Series of
PORTRAIT ARTIST OF THE YEAR
Reviews and Learning Points: Series 9
- Review: Episode 1 of Portrait Artist of the Year (Series 9)
- Review: Episode 2 of Portrait Artist of the Year (Series 9)
- Review: Episode 3 of Portrait Artist of the Year 2022 (Series 9)
- Review: Episode 4 of Portrait Artist of the Year 2022 (Series 9)
- Review: Episode 5 of Portrait Artist of the Year 2022 (Series 9)
- Review: Episode 6 of Portrait Artist of the Year 2022 (Series 9)
- Review: Episode 7 of Portrait Artist of the Year 2022 (Series 9)
- Portrait Artist of the Year - The Semi-Finalists
- Review: Semi Finals of Portrait Artist of the Year 2022
- Morag Caister wins Portrait Artist of the Year 2022 (Series 9)
Learning Point re Series 8
- Portrait Artist of the Year 2021 starts 13th October 2021
- How Portrait Artist of the Year actually works in practice
- Review: Episode 1 of Portrait Artist of the Year Series 8 (Autumn 2021)
- Review: Episode 2 of Portrait Artist of the Year Series 8 (Autumn 2021)
- Review: Episode 3 of Portrait Artist of the Year 2021 (Series 8)
- Review: Episode 4 of Portrait Artist of the Year 2021 (Series 8)
- Review: Episode 5 of Portrait Artist of the Year 2021 ( Series 8 )
- Review: Episode 6 of Portrait Artist of the Year 2021 (Series 8)
- Review: Series 8 Episode 7 of Portrait Artist of the Year 2021
- Review: Series 8 Episode 8 of Portrait Artist of the Year 2021
- Review: Semi Finals of Portrait Artist of the Year (Series 8)
- Calum Stevenson wins Portrait Artist of the Year (Series 8 Autumn 2021)
Learning Points re the 2020 competition (Autumn 2020)
- 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)
- Review: Episode 5 of Portrait Artist of the Year Series 7 (Autumn 2020)
- Review: Episode 6 of Portrait Artist of the Year Series 7 (Autumn 2020)
- Review: Episode 7 of Portrait Artist of the Year Series 7 (Autumn 2020)
- Review: Episode 8 of Portrait Artist of the Year Series 7 (Autumn 2020)
- Review: Semi-Final of Portrait Artist of the Year - Autumn 2020
- Curtis Holder wins Portrait Artist of the Year (Series 7 Autumn 2020)
Learning Points re the 2020 competition (Spring 2020)
- 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
Learning Points re the 2019 competition
- 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
Learning Points re the 2018 Competition
- Call for Entries - Sky Arts Portrait Artist of the Year 2019
- 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 (now updated with the interview with the winner)
- Review: Episode 4 of Portrait Artist of the Year 2018
- Review: Episode 5 of Portrait Artist of the Year 2018
- Review: Episode 6 of Sky Arts 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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