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WELCOME from the editor

whilst I can’t agree with The Guardian critic’s view that this year’s Royal Academy Summer Exhibition is a ‘sprawling dustbin of has-beens and never-will-be’s’ I did feel that compared to last year’s exuberant and playful exhibition co-ordinated by the ever-popular Grayson Perry, visually it does come across as somewhat dull. Last year Perry had the walls painted a bright yellow and went for colour and fun in many of his key selections and hanging decisions. His inclusion of a Banksy introduced a self-deprecating irony and humour to the show, whereas this year, another Banksy in the opening gallery appears to give him the status of an establishment regular. It was bound to be a tough act to follow.

This year’s co-ordinator, Jock McFayden, adopted as one of the criteria for selection how art ‘reflects the world in different ways’. This is all-encompassing (surely what this world’s largest open-submission exhibition should be about anyway) and clearly evident in the mix of painting and photography, abstraction and figurative works displayed in the main hall in an arrangement intended to be pleasing on the eye. For me it is, although on closer observation abstraction and contemporary approaches dominate the room, with what come across as polite nods to traditional figurative art in the placement of the paintings of Royal Academicians such as Fred Cuming, Ken Howard and Diana Armfield.

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The Artist
August 19
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The Artist
NEXT MONTH IN the artist
IN CONVERSATION Winner of The Artist Award in last
PLUS
YOUR VIEWS
Letters, emails and comments
THE ARTWORLD
NEWS, VIEWS, INFORMATION AND SPECIAL EVENTS IN THE ART WORLD
In the STUDIO
Taking inspiration from its art societies, the Federation
Solo show
It’s been 14 years since The Artist contributor, Judi
NEW Rembrandt watercolours
Commemorating the 350th anniversary of the death of
The art of dining
A new collection of RAF-inspired works by artist, Tim
WILLIAM BLAKE
TATE BRITAIN Millbank SW1P 4RG September 11 to February
EXHIBITIONS
GALLERY OPENING TIMES AND EXHIBITION DATES CAN VARY; IF IN DOUBT, PHONE TO AVOID DISAPPOINTMENT
OPPORTUNITIES & COMPETITIONS
Check out the latest competitions to enter and make a note of important deadlines
PaintersOnline editor’s choice
Meet this month’s editor’s choice winner from our PaintersOnline gallery, who receives a £50 Jackson’s Art Supplies gift voucher
ART BOOKS
Reviewed by Henry Malt
FEATURES
Landscape in focus
Jayne Stokes puts the landscape under the microscope in her miniature landscapes, which she paints in a mix of media, including watercolour, acrylic and collage, as Susie Hodge discovers
Oil studies, any time, anywhere
Haidee-Jo Summers shares her tips for choosing and using the best pochade box for your needs
Portraits in charcoal
Charcoal is a beautiful medium and very adaptable for drawing portraits – you can smudge it around or be very precise and detailed, as Kathy Barker demonstrates
Heather moors
Follow Paul Talbot-Greaves and paint a heather moorland scene using acrylics, in just five stages
OPEN STUDIOS… how we did it!
Artists involved in setting up the newly formed North Pembrokeshire Open Studios share their experience of how they organised their event
An artist’s book
Creating your own book can be very rewarding. Robert E Wells, who published his own book, In Perspective, shares his experience, with a guide to the costs involved
PRACTICALS
Animal patterns
explains how to paint animal coat patterns, using these to help describe the form, and how to cope with the effect of shadows on coat patterns
Difficulties with promising subjects
Found an appealing subject but worried that you might not be able to get the composition just right? suggests strategies that will help you decide what to include and what to leave out
AUGUST
Along the Thames Estuary paints his first ‘proper’ acrylic of the year but reverts to watercolour for a trip to Little Venice
Dealing with all those greens
brings his four-part series on landscape painting to a close by looking at green and hopes to convince you that it’s not a difficult colour, it just depends on how you use it
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advises on colour choices and mixing, painting equipment and tactics to capture a sunset en plein air in oils
Summer trees
shows how to achieve light and depth when painting summer trees
Out in the landscape
shows you how to paint a watercolour landscape full of interest, whether it be near or far, and shares her ten top tips for better landscape compositions
Out in the landscape
Amanda Hyatt demonstrates her ‘near’ landscape painting, which she adapted from a photo (not shown)
Contemporary portraits
Hashim Akib introduces his method of painting portraits in acrylic by applying blocks of paint. Follow his demonstrations to discover how to de-clutter your brain and concentrate on the bigger picture, rather than the details, to achieve a likeness
Pastels with a difference
Pan Pastels are ‘a fascinating medium’, says Les Darlow as he demonstrates how they can be used like watercolour – but without the water – and with other media, too
Rembrandt watercolours
Royal Talens have introduced new colours and improved hues into their range of Rembrandt artist-quality watercolours, including a break-through addition of metallic paints. Watercolourist Max Hale finds them exciting and effortless