The Artist - UK (2021-03)

(Antfer) #1
44 artistMarch 2021 http://www.painters-online.co.uk

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I


particularly enjoy still-life painting
at this time of year. Playing
with objects, flowers and their
arrangement is a wonderful testbed
for ideas, let alone images, and I can
work in the comfort of the home/studio
whilst the weather wrecks its havoc.
Before I start painting I go gathering. I
look for objects and flowers that I need
to reflect a mood or an attitude. Lurking
in the back of my mind are recollections
of dreams, passages of poetry or pieces
of music. In fact what I am doing is
beginning the process of abstraction,
the process of distillation.

Abstract process
My gathering process works on two
fronts: the physical, where I am looking
for shapes, colours, tones and textures;
the other is about thoughts. Many of

Abstracting the still life


Let your thoughts wander as you think of ideas for a still life,


advises Paul Riley. Here he shares his own thought processes


along with tips for getting started and watercolour techniques


to employ in your painting


these thoughts are jotted down in
a small notebook by way of thought
sketches. One idea leads to another,
then progresses to another and so on,
and eventually I come up with a unique
idea. For example, as demonstrated
(pages 46-47) I thought of autumn, then
colour. During my gathering process I
came upon some mushrooms, old gold
in colour and rotting. I knew that much
of the disintegration was due to slugs
and snails – which led to spirals, and
on to fossil ammonites, which then led
to the Fibonacci spiral, known as the
golden spiral. I then thought of gold
and back to autumn with the Fibonacci
spiral implying the Golden section. This
led me to geometry and its relationship
to disintegration, etc.
As you can see I enter the realm of
abstract thinking. This is thinking of

associations and juxtaposition triggered
by objects. The objects don’t need
to be directly associated, I could add
my grandmother’s porcelain teacup
by way of dislocation or purely as a

p Flowers and Fantasy, watercolour on
Saunders Waterford High White Not, 140lb
(300gsm), 221/2 3 30in (57 3 76cm).
Here I have tried to reduce forms into
gestures. The fruit was wiped with a sponge
and dipped in colours ranging from cadmium
red to permanent rose and orange. The plate
was dealt with similarly in blue. I invented the
large dish to create a fantasy image outside
the still life. Note how the decoration invades
the space. Each item of pottery has been
depicted in a different way and the flowers
expressed in a wild way to contrast with the
handling of the ceramics
Free download pdf