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Table-top landscapes

One thing that bothers me about the way painting is often taught is that it divides what we all see into categories. Paintings on the borderline between realism and abstraction interest me greatly – people that aren’t quite portraits, and records of our surroundings that could be landscapes or something else.

When I started teaching full time, the head of department at the school where I was employed gave me a guided tour of the art rooms. Amongst all the usual paraphernalia of a busy studio I noticed a number of wooden open-fronted boxes which, I was told, were for still life. There were lots of bits and pieces from which little tableaux could be constructed, mostly rather tired bits of pottery. These assemblages would be placed in front of a hapless pupil who would be required to draw it.

Now, don’t get me wrong, drawing is a good thing, a really good thing, but this way of teaching seemed to be a dismal way of going about it. I could see why it might be useful: the shallow depth and the fact that it could be placed out of the way of pesky sunlight to avoid any cast shadows meant it could be a sort of nursery slope. In those pre-health and safety days I sometimes used to take in live chickens as a subject for my drawing classes, and don’t recall using the still-life boxes much.

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THE ART WORLD
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EXHIBITIONS
GALLERY OPENING TIMES AND EXHIBITION DATES CAN VARY; IF IN DOUBT, PHONE TO AVOID DISAPPOINTMENT
FEATURES
Memorable painting
Caroline Saunders talks to Rob Adams who paints serene watercolour landscapes with limited highlights and achieves an effect similar to that of an engraving in his pen and ink works
The easy gift to give WORTH £57.20
£37.99 by annual Direct Debit or £39.99 by all other
Abstract arrangements
Dennis Spicer shares his thoughts about his intuitive approach to colour and form and the sense of ‘stillness’ in his still-life oil paintings
Impressionists in London
Susie Hodge reviews this must-see exhibition at Tate Britain
Why use a gallery to promote and sell my work?
This subject arose during Mark David Hatwood’s live Facebook podcast for our website Painters Online in April 2017. It’s a valid question in this digitally interconnected, social-media age. He attempts to shed some light on that quandary
The artist OPEN COmPETiTiONS & ExhibiTiONS 2018
These listings are in chronological order according
Charles Williams’ musings Illustration
Last year one of my main activities as programme director
PRACTICALS
The dark and the light
Jake Winkle shows you how to capture light in watercolour by the use of extreme shadows in both daytime and night-time subjects
How to draw the horse
In the first of two articles equestrian artist Ruth Buchanan shares her 10 key techniques for making a successful drawing of the horse
Watercolour techniques for misty days
Peter Cronin demonstrates pure watercolour painting techniques for atmospheric landscapes, including fog, mist and haze
Painting the ground
In his final instalment in this series, Graham Webber advises what you need to consider, and how to make it all come together, when painting land in a landscape
Still life with flowers
Judi Whitton looks at what to consider when painting still life in watercolour – what to leave in, what to take out, and how to bring all the separate elements together for a balanced painting
A new class of oil paint
Sennelier has recently launched Rive Gauche, a range of oil paints for which, says Max Hale, they have made some interesting claims. Read to on to find out what’s different about them and why his first impression was one of pleasure
The head and neck
In the second part of her series, Adele Wagstaff identifies the superficial structures and anatomy of the head and neck so you know what to look out for when drawing the figure
Painting by instinct
Painting by instinct is a great way to achieve freedom of expression, says Barry Freeman, who urges you to be bold and paint in a looser style using acrylics