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November 5, 2009 | Scottish Landscape Art - Scottish Landscape Paintings

Archive for November 5th, 2009

RSA Annual Exhibition: the “Nature of the Beast”

'NW from Conival, May', Acrylic & Pastel, 2009, 80 x 80 cmOn Friday 23rd October my partner Anita and I drove across to Edinburgh in order to hand in the two paintings I was entering for the RSA Annual Exhibition. 

Of course, things are never quite as simple as that!  We really don’t know Edinburgh well, especially the roads and with my not being able to see a map clearly, even with a powerful magnifier, it makes finding anywhere somewhat interesting.  Back in May I’d had to take work to George St in Edinburgh as part of the Jolomo Award and we’d found that if you get there early enough you can get parking.  So then, not being confident that we could find our way to the RSA, we decided to head for George St early enough to get a parking space, and then carry the paintings from there.  Seemed like a good plan …but of course we missed a turn somewhere on our way into Edinburgh and ended up driving around the city centre …eventually finding a car park somewhere below the castle.  This left us a 20 minute walk through the gardens with two quite large and heavy paintings …but not too bad.

On Friday 30th October I received an email from RSA saying that regrettably my two paintings had not been selected and that I’d need to collect them on the Saturday 31st.  So, back in the car and this time heading straight for the car park we’d found the week before ….and we found it again.  By the time we reached the RSA it was lunchtime and as we approached the door Anita said …there’s a queue out onto the pavement!  We joined it and then waited. 

'Below Mid Hill, Luss', Acrylic & Pastel, 2009, 90 x 60 cmThankfully it was a beautiful day with bright sun and it was nice just to stand and look at these fantastic buildings.  It was also quite fun listening to some of my fellow ‘failed to get selected’ artists moaning and complaining about the long wait!   It took about an hour and a half to get to the front of the queue and I felt rather sorry for the people working there, the woman who helped us find my paintings said she hadn’t had a minutes break since 10 o’clock and she looked in desperate need for a cup of tea.  There were still many many works to be handed back so it looked like it was going to be a long day for them all, but somehow they were all still smiling and doing a great job.  We eventually got back to the studio at around 5pm …both feeling a little shattered.  All that effort not to get the work into the show.  But that really is the nature of the beast.  If you enter these large competition exhibitions the odds are well stacked against you.  You know there will probably be several thousand other hopefuls entering too and that your work will be viewed for just a matter of seconds in the selection process. 

Why put yourself through all that? 

I guess it’s the prestige of having work in an RSA exhibition, but for me it’s also the whole adventure …the drives there and back, the getting lost, the lugging of paintings across the city centre, and the inglorious queuing to get the work back a week later …but of course the next time the work might just catch the selectors eye and then it’d all seem worth it!  Try again next year…..

RSA, RGI and Scottish Drawing Exhibitions

I’m really not the most organised person in the world, although I am trying to do better.  This said however, in the last few weeks I’ve missed deadlines for two important open exhibitions; the RGI exhibition and the Scottish Drawing exhibition in Paisley.  On both occasions I failed to read the relevant dates and rules, and so missed out on a chance to exhibit work in these shows.

I decided then that I really had to enter a couple of paintings for the RSA annual exhibition ….handing in days Friday 23rd Oct and Saturday 24th

I read through the dates and rules very carefully this time.  I got my partner Anita to read through the dates and rules carefully too!   Then of course it comes down to what paintings to enter ….and this is always the difficult bit.  You can never predict what a selection panel will like or dislike, so it really comes down to what you think is your very best work …always tricky!

This summer I’ve been trying to develop my paintings a little.  I’ve been using a bigger range of brushes, a bigger range of paint …the thick heavy bodied acrylics as well as the standard ones.  I’ve been mixing paint with mediums to create far more fluid colours.  Added to these I’ve still been scribbling into the paintings with oil pastel …but now with perhaps less abandon than in some earlier works.  I want to create good Scottish landscape paintings, but I want them to go beyond simply producing a view.  It’s vitally important to me that the paintings work as Scottish landscape and as paintings in their own right …to be viewed and enjoyed for their purely abstract and aesthetic values.  I’ve therefore been working hard on this side of my work ….I’ve had many failures along the way over this last few months, but a few of the pieces are starting to work in this way to a certain extent.

'NW from Conival, May', Acrylic & Pastel, 2009, 80 x 80 cmI decided then to enter two of these new paintings for the RSA exhibition.  Both of them are slightly bigger than I normally work on and this increase in size has allowed me to be a little more expressive in the way in which I put the paint down.  The two paintings are:

 ‘North west from Conival’, Acrylic & Pastel, 80 x 80 cm

 This painting is based on a walk we did on Conival, one of the two rough and wild Assynt Munros.   It was an almost perfect May day, warm, bright sun with odd clouds producing a wonderful patchwork of light and shade on this rocky and barren landscape.

 

‘Below Mid Hill, Luss’, Acrylic and Pastel, 90 x  60cm

This, the third painting of a small series of works I’m doing based on one particular winter / early spring day in the Luss Hills.  As we descended from the freezing temperatures and gale force winds on the tops, we were treated to an amazing array of colours as the sun caught the different grasses, bracken and heather lower down and the snow and ice higher up.

'Below Mid Hill, Luss', Acrylic & Pastel, 2009, 90 x 60 cmWell then, the two paintings are now in the hands of the RSA along with no doubt several thousand other hopefuls work.  With these ‘open’ exhibitions it’s always a bit of a gamble …you never really know whether your work will be accepted …but it’s always good fun entering.  I always say to people who come into my studio and who are entering works in such exhibitions …don’t get disappointed if your painting is rejected.  But of course, when the rejection letter arrives, it really is hard not to be just a wee bit aggrieved! 

Oh well, here we go again.  If my next blog is a bit on the grumpy side, you’ll know my two paintings failed to get into the show!