The SGFA have taken over the large West Gallery with 181 artworks demonstrating a wide range of artworks covering diverse subject matter and different media.
You can see the artwork exhibited ONLINE - with links from both the Mall Galleries website and the SGFA website (although you need to wait awhile before the images appear - and only if you accept cookies, which I normally always object too as per GDPR i.e. it shouldn't need cookies to work)
The default position is you can view the artwork as thumbnails
Alternatively you can view by name of the artist
Or view a large image of each artwork - which provides details about the art and the artist
HOWEVER this only applies to artwork by SGFA members and associates.
I'm also going to be uploading my photos to a Facebook Album - more or less in the order they are hung in the Gallery - and will insert a link here when this has been done
You can also follow the SGFA on https://www.instagram.com/drawingsocietyuk/
NOTE: There is no catalogue.
About the Society of Graphic Fine Art SGFA
Established in 1919, the Society of Graphic Fine Arts is the only national Society which is based in the UK which is dedicated exclusively to drawing. It exists to promote and exhibit original works of high quality in colour or black and white. This includes traditional and contemporary media. The emphasis is on excellence in drawing and draughtsmanship, demonstrated by hand.
- Drawings in any medium, monochrome or colour - pencil, coloured pens and pencils, pen and ink, pastels and oil pastels, charcoal, conté, etc.
- Any original artwork which demonstrates evidence of drawing by hand: - original printmaking, watercolours, acrylics, oils and 3-Dimensional work.
- Any work based on a photograph must have the photographer's permission.
- Digital imagery generated by computer.
- Giclee prints and all other reproductions and facsimiles.
- Work shown previously at the Mall Galleries or hung in an SGFA London exhibition.
- Work that is more than three years old.
- Any work that might infringe on copyright law
The Exhibition
- drawings, fine art prints (engravings, etchings, linocuts,woodcuts) and paintings
- in a wide range of media: graphite, charcoal, pastels, coloured pencils, metalpoint, ink, watercolour, acrylic, paper collage, stitched media and the ever present "mixed media"
- members and associates of the SGFA - who are the only ones listed in the "view by artist"
- members of FBA Societies based at the Mall Galleries
- members of other leading national art societies (eg Billy Showell, Past President of the Society of Botanical Artists)
smaller artworks - sensibly positioned near where to people have a break |
- The exhibition is well organised and hung well.
- Artworks are grouped according to genre, theme or size. See some of my views of walls below - and in the Facebook Album of photos I took this morning for this review.
- while not all works by an artist are hung together, it is common to see two artworks by an artist hanging together - which provides greater impact in relation to subject matter and style
Portraiture
A significant number of smaller portraits and drawings of figures on the "small works" wall. |
- In general, the public do not buy artwork which features people they do not know. As soon as you include a face it's personal.
- Which is not to say it doesn't sell. But it just doesn't sell as well as other genres.
- how many sold
- what price bands they sold in
- what % of income they generated relative to
- total income
- the % of wallspace they occupied
"SC8 Hand" by Tom Mole graphite on paper |
Landscape
Plants and trees
Artworks about plants (and smaller works about trees) |
There were a very diverse range of artworks about plants - portrayed in various drawings which ranged from the measured and highly realistic bordering on scientific, through to illustrative. Plus a number of paintings - which mainly did not shout "drawing" at me.
Still Life
His Instagram indicates he has a very clear preference for creating artworks about compilations.
Old Annuals by Robert Strange SGFA coloured pencils |
More conventional still life is also popular - as exemplied by one of the early sales for Patricia Rozental (who is not a member).
Egg and Spoons by Patricia Rozental watercolour on paper |
Animal Art
Largely monochrome animals in dry media |
As always, drawing media appeals to a lot of animal artists who display their skills and techniques in this exhibition by displaying some excellent animal art.
"The Cat" by by Tianyang Wang ASWLA ASGFA charcoal on paper |
What is Drawing?
Drawing is about mark-making and essentially using the artist's eye and the media to create the marks - assuming CAD (computer aided design) is not yet one form of drawing which SGFA favours....
To go back to the quotation at the beginning
The emphasis is on excellence in drawing and draughtsmanship, demonstrated by hand.
To my mind drawing and draughtsmanship cannot be equated with realism per se. It can aim to be realistic but this is not required for a drawing to be a drawing.
To this end, looking at in reverse, realism is NOT drawing. Realism can be presented in various kinds of artwork - and most would not describe themselves as drawings. Indeed a number are created using mechanical or other technological aids BECAUSE the artists lacks skills in drawing.
For example, I certainly spotted one artwork in the exhibition which looks great - but I wonder if people would think is quite so good if they knew how it started life.
From which I can conclude that a painting which involves realism is not necessarily a good example of drawing.
Indeed I found paintings which I would argue were not good examples of drawing or draughtsmanship - but I'm not going to embarrass the artist or the society by naming it.
Given this is the ONLY art society which focuses on drawing, I'd very much like to see much more emphasis drawings and prints and rather fewer paintings. Most of the latter could be exhibited in any number of exhibitions which also have their customary "small wall of drawings".
This to my mind is an art society which should be celebrating drawings - at the expense of paintings.
THIS is an exhibition which should go all out on drawing.
I hope when I visit again next year, the balance will have changed.
PS I've not yet looked at pricing but will come back and add comments once I've reviewed that aspect. I certainly saw some ambitious pricing.
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.