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Hellebores R Us!

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Going on to look at white hellebores with the weekly class groups now.  These lovely nodding creamy coloured flowers are still showing up well in the garden and I continue to find them fascinating with their busy pale yellow stamens set off by dark crimson blotches inside the flower.  It's remarkable how non gardening people don't know about Hellebores, I suppose because they are not available to buy as cut flowers from florist shops.  So if you don't have a perennial border in your garden then it's quite possible to remain blissfully ignorant of their existence.

We did some sketching with different media, watercolour crayons, fineliner pens and watercolour washes from real examples last Wednesday just to have a good look at the flower and its structure.

I singled out one hellebore and cropped a photo so as to do a close in flower portrait.


I liked the shadowy interior of the flower and the contrasting white petal edges.  I thought this would look good with a dark background to make the flower look sunlit, which is my favourite effect to try and capture.

Here's my version, a small painting done as a study but, I hope, with plenty of impact.


White hellebore. Watercolour by Ann Mortimer

Tuesday group Hellebore paintings...Wow!

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I'm so proud of my Tuesday Group students.  Look at these paintings!  Fantastic work Ann, Susan, Jane, Pauline, Margaret and Heather.


Tuesday group hellebore paintings May 2013

Click on the photo to enlarge.

The Wednesday group rock the Rhodos...

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Just look at what some of the Wednesday group produced for our Rhododendron project.  Some fabulous work, I think you'll agree!
Well done Molly, Helen and Maureen.  Margaret produced a work of similar fine quality but didn't have her painting to show!





Rhododendrons by the Wednesday group


Click on the photo to enlarge.


Patchings Festival coming up soon...

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Just got back from a week in Catalonia, Spain and an exciting time coming up what with the Patchings Festival next week, (see poster below), and then my first watercolour painting break in Cromford, Derbyshire on 24th June.

Lots to think about and prepare for...Hope to see some of you at Patchings.  It's always a good place to meet up with former students and other friends and I get to paint for four days straight!



Click on the link for more information

http://www.patchingsartcentre.co.uk/patchingsfestival/patchings_festival.php

Autumn 2013 and Spring 2014 Workshop dates

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Here are the dates of workshops I have planned for Autumn and Spring.  I hope you'll be able to come along and enjoy painting these new projects.  Numbers are limited to no more than 8 painters so book early to avoid disappointment!



Day Workshops 2013/2014

 -Workshops will take place in my studio at home in West Bridgford, NG2 6GF.
-Only six painters per workshop so plenty of individual tuition and attention.
 -Workshops run from 10am til 4pm.  Refreshments included.  Bring a packed lunch.

PRICE:  £50    (£10 deposit on booking.)


2013 AUTUMN

Tuesday September 24   “Negative Painting Technique”

Wednesday October 2  “Autumn Fruits”

Tuesday October 15  “Autumn Leaves”

Wednesday October 30  “Painting Flowers with Impact”

Wednesday November 6  “Seasonal Flowers and Leaves”



2014 SPRING

These workshops will deal with various aspects of flower painting with the aim of producing paintings that have vibrant colour, depth and tonal contrast.

Tuesday March 4

Wednesday March 19

Tuesday April 1

Wednesday May 14

Tuesday May 20

Please email me at ann@annmortimerart and I will give you address details for your deposit.


Sunny Derbyshire awaits!

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Today we took a trip up to Cromford to whet our appetites for the holiday next week.  Sophie wanted to have a look at the studio space and the lie of the land.  The sun was shining when we arrived.  The house faces South and it's a real sun trap outside the lounge (which we noted had beautiful new chairs!) and we had a nice cup of coffee and admired the garden.


Coffee break in the sun.



June garden, looking good.

Outside the studios the dog roses were in bloom and looking good enough to paint!  we looked up past the old apple trees to the wild flower meadow beyond and thought...Yes, this'll do nicely!
Can't wait til next week!



Cromford June residential course...We had a good time!

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Back from my first residential painting course in Derbyshire and it couldn't have been better...even the weather behaved and the sun shone upon us.

(Click on any of the photos to enlarge)


Happy band of painters

We painted, sketched, stretched in our morning yoga class, and were expertly massaged by Sophie.  
On the morning that I had planned a pen and wash sketching session outside the weather was perfect, sunny, not too hot, no wind, wonderful.  


Pam and Gwen sketching in the sunshine



The local chickens provide a great subject for Jacky and Averil.

We did some great work in the studio, painting a stunning hollyhock study and a colourful exotic orchid composition.  Some worked very successfully on their own individual compositions.  Everyone enjoyed their opportunity to really get stuck in and concentrated and worked so hard; and I think when the paintings were displayed we were all a bit amazed at what we'd produced!


Some of the work produced over the three days was stunning.

Our aim was to RELAX! and we worked hard at that....joke!  There was a collective tribute at the end of the course consisting of a card with a cartoon drawn by the very talented Jane (Ford).  I don't usually roar with laughter quite so exuberantly but that was funny!



You had to be there!

You are one in a million Jane and thanks for keeping us entertained.

Alison House did us proud as always and we had some delicious meals and were very comfortable in our rooms.  We had fun and I want to thank all those lovely people, painters and non painting partners alike for making this event a real success and one which will always bring a smile to my face and good memories to mind.








Update on Courses in Autumn 2013 and calling all beginners...

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A quick update on my Autumn workshops.  They have booked up well.


2013 AUTUMN

Tuesday September 24   “Negative Painting Technique” FULL

Wednesday October 2  “Autumn Fruits” One place left (2 for 2 friends coming together)

Tuesday October 15  “Autumn Leaves” One place left (2 for 2 coming together)

Wednesday October 30  “Painting Flowers with Impact” FULL

Wednesday November 6  “Seasonal Flowers and Leaves” FULL

Book soon for the remaining places if you want to come.  

These are whole day workshops, 10am til 4pm in my garden studio in West Bridgford, NG2 6GF.  Normally only 6 students (sometimes 7 or 8) so you get individual attention.  Price £50 to include refreshments throughout the day.  Please bring a packed lunch...there'll  be a glass of wine to keep you inspired!

BEGINNER'S TASTER DAY

I get enquiries now and again from people who want to make a start with watercolour and I do love setting people off on their journey. 

 If you are interested in a workshop which will cover the main points and get you started and where you will produce your first watercolour paintings to be proud of, then get in touch.  I need a group of at least four to make this viable.

Please email ann@annmortimerart and perhaps we can arrange a day for a small group in the studio.

Here's the sort of thing you might paint...




The "copying" Debate...

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I came across a post about "copying" on my facebook timeline in response to a recent post in an artist's blog.

I generally try to keep away from controversial topics, preferring to offer tips and techniques or straightforward information in my blog.

However I do feel strongly about this subject.

I think to use the word "copying" is inadvisable.

It seems to me that there is one indisputable fact and that is that we are ALL influenced more or less by artists who have come before us.

Those artists might be the old masters from centuries ago from Leonardo to Claude Lorraine to Monet to Lowry; or they might be the contemporary, living artists whose work is very familiar to us through contemporary media such as Warhol or David Hockney, or they might be the active teaching artists whose work we follow and from whom we learn from day to day from the books, magazines and dvds that they produce or contribute to.

And all this is so much more accessible now with the availability of endless images on line with a click of the mouse.  Where people 100 years ago would have to make a long journey to the city to visit a gallery to see paintings by their preferred artist, now we can google those images in a matter of seconds.

If we are passionate about art and painting we deliberately immerse ourselves every day in a bath of art.  We are hungry for inspiration and ideas and we are always on the lookout for images that please and give us a sense of wonder and make us think, Oh I wonder if I could do that?

And the images that please us the most are going to be the ones that we try to emulate.  But I would say that we are not "copying" but admiring and wondering at the beauty of what we see and wanting to make it our own and master it because we love it so much.

Students of painting in the past would be encouraged to sit at their easel in front of an old master and literally copy it in order to learn.
Now our sensitivities do not allow these blatant methods...well at least not in art colleges.

But hold on...now we have the Step by Step Books!

I myself have had two step by step books published by Search Press where I painted watercolours and someone took photos of me doing it.

Am I surprised that "copies" of those paintings are proudly displayed?  Of course I'm not!  I'm delighted!  That is the whole point of the books.  If they appear on line then of course they should be credited to the artist to avoid confusion and it's always better to display original work on line.  But nowadays it's the name of the game that we are all encouraged to have a go.

When I paint my watercolours, I know that I am benefiting from all I learned from every single book I read voraciously and every single artist I admired in the process of learning.  But those watercolours came from my hand and through my personality even though the techniques and methods were garnered over years and years of study.

I think that to say that someone is "copying" my style would be an example of extreme hubris.  Because I know that my style is simply a conglomeration of everything that has passed in front of my eyes and made me gasp with delight.  I warmly thank every artist that I have ever admired for inspiring me.




To feel inspired, not diminished...the "copying" debate continued...

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Iceland Poppies by Ann Mortimer

Sometimes I catch myself wondering why I write a blog.  Because the truth is that I am uneasy talking about myself.  It doesn't come naturally to me.
And that is why in this blog and my watercolour techniques sister blog (www.annswatercolourstudio.blogspot.com ) I am mostly either sharing and explaining watercolour techniques or putting out information about events and workshops.

However there is nothing I like better than a touch of philosophising about  art today!  Not that I want to get on my soap box or anything...!

Reading peoples' views about the subject of "copying" has left me asking a lot of questions.

Such as...what should be our motivation as artists and aspiring artists?  How do we weave our way through the complicated maze of ideas and influences these days without disappearing down hidden trap doors or inadvertently tripping over hidden hurdles?

In my reading of people's comments on facebook and on blogs I am struck by how some artists seem to be tying themselves in knots trying to fit into a mould that isn't comfortable for them.
Take the subject of "looseness" for instance.  It appears to be compulsory at the moment to be "loose" in style and people feel they are failing if they don't stay loose and free to an extreme and sometimes counter productive extent with their watercolours. (ie. you can't even tell what they are trying to depict!)
I am the first to joke with my classes telling them to be "loose women" (because women they usually are) and to try not to be too perfect in their painting, but we have to remember to be true to ourselves as well.

It seems to me that you have to follow your heart in this.  When looking for inspiration, perhaps it's better not to follow a fashion such as "looseness" but to look to real things,  the things we can see around us and which move and excite us.  A group of people sitting at a cafe table casting shadows on the pavement, a red rose zinging out against a green background, a line of  colourful washing blowing in the breeze, an intensely dark leafy shadow falling across a country road, the pattern made by a network of stalks and buds against a blue sky.
It's not being kind to ourselves to try to impress. Much better to allow ourselves to feel what these things make us want to say and have the confidence to say it.  Let us be inspired and not diminished.

(At this point I'll mention the picture at the top of this blog.  I remember painting this years ago and feeling uplifted by the process.  I came out of the studio smiling.)

It seems to me that you have to keep techniques uppermost in your mind.  It is the techniques which will provide the anchor to keep us fixed on the path to originality and honesty in our work.  We should look to exploring  techniques to help us express what we want to say, not the work of others.  This is what one of my favourite contemporary artists Ann Blockley has been doing over the last year or two with amazing results.  She had said that she was looking for new challenges and she used experimental watercolour textures to carry herself forward.

Another way forward if we are stuck in a rut and looking for inspiration is to set ourselves challenges.
I noticed one artist on facebook had set herself the task of painting with red.  Great idea!  Setting constraints such as only using two colours or using a palette knife or stick to paint with can simplify the brief, concentrate the mind and therefore lead to exciting and original art.

I'd like to quote another watercolour artist, New Zealander Nancy Titchborne to end with.  She says in her introduction to her book that despite being lauded as a wonderful artist, she suffers from an "ongoing personal angst" which means that she is never entirely pleased with whatever painting she has just completed.
I love this self revelation and honesty in an artist!  The final sentence in her intro. reads, "As with so many things in life it is the anticipation, planning and doing that can be more satisfying than the actual completion"
"And don't forget" she says"be immediately suspicious of any artist who tells you how good they are".

With that thought in mind, Happy Painting everyone!



New painting...ready to start...I'll just go and make a cup of tea first...

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I made this drawing of a clematis growing against a wall a few days ago and I've been dithering ever since.  Sometimes a subject just doesn't inspire and then I think of all sorts of things to do before starting.  I've even been doing housework this morning so things must be bad!

Anyway, I've worked out my colours which are unusual this time.  The reds of the wall and the stamens and stalks are complementary to the green leaves.  There is no sunshine in my reference photo and perhaps that is why I'm not raring to go as sunshine and shadows really inspire.  But there is contrast and I like the way I can make the painting have depth by making the leaves stand out against each other.



I liked doing the drawing too.  I do start with a detailed drawing, but the first thing I do is ignore the lines when I put in the first wash when I drop colours in quite randomly but with a cunning underlying plan! .  The lines only really become significant when I start outlining the flowers and leaves in order to get the depth and 3D effect I'm looking for.  So the drawing doesn't inhibit spontaneity at first but acts as a guide later on in the painting.

I've masked out the stamens but not the flowers as I will take care to not drop too much colour over them in the first wash.  I will wet the whole of the paper as some colour in the white flowers is desirable for a natural effect.  So here goes...






Clematis...first stages

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So I took a deep breath and started on the clematis.

Here's my palette with colours mixed for the first wash.


Colours mingled in preparation for  the first wash.

I had aureolin and raw sienna  for my yellows, winsor blue and quinacridone gold to mix the greens, permanent rose, alizarin crimson and indian yellow for the wall in the background and a dark mix of alizarin, blue and some yellow for the stamens and dark areas.  I had a grey mixed with cobalt blue and some alizarin.


First wash

For the background I had to drop colours in for the wall as well as dropping in yellows and greens for the leafy areas.  I had to think ahead and drop in greens where I knew I was going to bring out more leaves in the background which I hadn't actually drawn.  So a lot to think about but as the paper was wet I had quite a long time to decide where to drop in colours.  The flowers were left without colour apart from some shadows dropped in.  Colour drifted into the petals from the surrounding wash but this gives a more authentic look I think.

I let this dry when I thought I'd gone far enough.  


Stage 2  Flowers and leaves brought out with darker washes.


Then I started bringing out the flowers and leaves with darker washes.  I used greens or the wall mix, sometimes wetting the paper first and dropping in various mixes in order to keep the illusion of things happening behind.  In the photo for stage 2 you can see that dropping in the first wash wet in wet has left interesting colours and tones among the leaves.  This helps with the illusion of light falling on the different elements in the painting.


Stage 3 More leaves brought out from the background wash with negative painting

I made sure the painting was dry before going in again between the leaves and flowers and bringing out more leaf shapes.  At the edges of the painting, I kept the shapes very vague by dropping in thick dark colour into a wet surface.  At the same time I was painting some of the leaf surfaces and also dropping colours into the stalks.  The next job was to start painting the background flowers.  More tomorrow.



Clematis... final stages.

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Here's the final painting of the clematis subject.


Miss Bateman Clematis final painting

I painted the flowers by looking carefully at the reference and seeing where the darker tones were within the petals.  I wet the whole petal and stroked in a mix of cobalt blue and a touch of alizarin crimson and a touch of the green mix on the palette.  

I removed the masking on the centres and painted the stamens with a pale yellow and then stroked in alizarin crimson on the ends to make the distinctive centres.

When the flowers were painted I had to adjust the tones considerably among the leaves around the flowers.  I laid the dark mix over the leaves etc. that were underneath to make them recede even more and put in some very dark paint up against the petals to make the flowers pop out.

I quite enjoyed the challenge with the emphasis on the "quite".  I think my reservations before painting the subject were correct and that in itself is good learning.  The subject was too flat and needed some sunshine in it.  But onwards and upwards...what next I wonder?  

Suddenly it's all go...

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Last year's pen and wash sketch of an old characterful building
 in lovely Cromford


I was in the studio bright and early this morning.  Suddenly there's lots to do and think about.  I've been lulled into a sense of time stretching out endlessly as it used to feel in the school holidays as a child.

There's my residential course in Derbyshire coming up soon in September. This is the second course I've run this year with the help of daughter Sophie. She's providing relaxing yoga and massage to complement my art instruction and coming all the way from Seattle where she lives to do it!

We had a great time in June with 12 artists joining us and some gorgeous weather and I can't wait for the next one.  Three days of a relaxing hotel stay, delicious meals provided and nothing to think about but our art.


There were dog roses in full bloom outside the studio.  A quick sketch in watercolour.


So that's coming up in three weeks.  But before then I'm going to be doing some DVDs of my painting techniques which I'll make available on line.  Several people have asked if I've done any DVDs and the answer is no, until now.
If anyone who reads this blog has any ideas as to what they would like me to demonstrate, well I'm open to suggestions.  Backgrounds, negative painting, painting white flowers?


Yesterday I was trying out some mixed media work, using inks, oil pastels and other texture media.  Had a splashy time!



Mixed media study of another Cromford scene.






Trying out mixed media

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I experimented some more with mixed media yesterday and came up with this small sketchy watercolour of another scene from Cromford village where my painting holiday is happening in less than three weeks time.  I took the photo in June when there were lots of wild flowers in full bloom.  The walk down to the village from the hotel was a delight with all sorts of wild and cultivated flowers, escapees from local gardens, along the side of the path through the cottages and their allotments.

I saw this scene with the sun coming through the gap in the wall and saw the potential for a watercolour.



My mixed media sketch


My Photo reference

You can see that I've "romanticised" the view a bit, and changed the lighting to put emphasis on the light coming through the gap.  I've used inks and pastels which are new to me, but which have been lying about in the studio for ages so I thought why not have a go.

Here are the different stages. I started with an all over wash as usual but I had masked out the tops of the walls and some flowers, and also used some oil pastel as a masking medium for saving the flowers at the front of the wall.  

Stage 1

Then I painted the wall, vaguely following the under drawing, with acrylic ink, and spreading it with a brush and water.

Stage 2

Then more work with watercolour, inks and a pen made out of a piece of bamboo cane from the garden.

Stage 3



Finished Sketch


As is often the case in my work, I almost prefer the next to last stage to the finished.  What do you think?













Painting glass...always exciting!

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I'm thinking of painting my favourite glass vase for a project to film.  Watercolour is a fantastic medium for depicting glass because as the pigment moves in the water, it diffuses and becomes lighter in tone which happens within glass and of course it's translucent, as is watercolour!




Nasturtiums...oranges, yellows and greens,winding tendrils and a negative painting fest. Love them!

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Nasturtiums...love them with their gorgeous vibrant egg yolk yellows and oranges, flat plate like leaves and pale winding tendrils and stalks.  Monet knew his stuff when he had them crawling out into the gravel under the long pergola at Giverny.

They just make me want to paint them and they are great for those hungry for a negative painting fest.

So as always I'm painting them the only way I know how, even though they scream out to be designed into an art nouveau style composition.

I hate to admit this but they haven't grown in my garden this year.  They often self seed among the lettuces but I must have been too tidy and weeded them out or something.  Luckily I took photos last year and the year before when the sun was shining on them and there were cast shadows aplenty.



I made a drawing using this photo and others in my collection.


I like the drawing as it has solid lines and these flowers would be so good for an art nouveau sort of treatment with lots of black lines.  I remember seeing a Tiffany glass design featuring nasturtiums, so beautiful.

But because I love to do the negative painting stage, I have started as I always do with an all over wash of yellows and oranges, blues and greens.


I can't wait to get in there and find the negative shapes!

The walls, the walls... chickens, rose hips and orchids too!

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I love Cromford where we've just had our painting holiday.

Perhaps because it seems to still remain on a human scale.  I know this is due to the fact that it is a conservation area and there are buildings, houses, village ponds, wharves and waterwheels and cart tracks that still bear the mark of hundreds of years of real human experience, of toil and suffering, as well as celebration and play.


The old wharf on the canal


The hotel where we stayed used to belong to the family of Richard Arkwright who, with the development of his massive cotton mill housing the first water powered spinning frames, became a leading entrepreneur of the Industrial Revolution.  The cottages and farms and even the original village school and weavers' houses surrounding the hotel seem to carry a weight of fascinating social history.


Arkwright's Mill



The quay at Cromford canal


Course members at the village pond

For me Cromford provides an antithesis to the brash hustle and bustle of Nottingham city and is why I enjoy it so much. It provides a sense of retreat from the modern world.

We, the twelve painters and me (and daughter Sophie) had a really nice time.  The weather was good most of the time and we got outside and re aquainted ourselves with the ubiquitous dry stone walls...oooh look at those textures!...the chickens and the abundant seasonal signs of late summer moving into Autumn.  There were rose hips aplenty following the pink dog roses of June and the old orchard trees were dripping with their fruits.


Rose hips, a delight to paint with pen and wash

Everyone enjoyed creating their own record of the delights the hotel surroundings had to offer with pen and wash and various texture making materials.  This was fun and I was amazed to see such originality and close observation.



We enjoyed our delicious meals in the restaurant overlooking the garden and the adjoining bar provided even more fun!  


A relaxing lunch before a return to work in the studio


The orchid project was a great learning experience for many of us and everyone worked so hard to produce some amazing results.


Our beautiful orchid paintings


A happy band of painters!

My thanks go to everyone for making this a really positive and enjoyable painting break.  Can't wait til next year!

Crab Apples...

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Today I did a workshop at Gotham art group and I promised to post the photo we used today for the participants to be able to finish their paintings.

So here it is...



You can enlarge the photo by clicking on it and also have my permission to print it out.

We had a good time.  They were a lovely friendly relaxed group and did so well with unfamiliar (to them) techniques.  I hope they have great fun using the techniques on further projects.

Happy Painting everyone and thanks to Anne Howick for organising the event so brilliantly...that display of biscuits was first class!!!


Autumn, beautiful Autumn...

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I've been posting a lot of my facebook page.

https://www.facebook.com/pages/Ann-Mortimer-Art/267868499166

I really wish more people I know were on Facebook.  It's a really sociable place for artists like us to share thoughts and discuss issues in Art.  When I post something on facebook, I tend to think I have written a blog post which is why I haven't been posting a lot lately.  I have to say I do enjoy the immediacy of facebook where people respond with a "like" (thumbs up) and leave a comment.

Anyway I've got around to posting here at last.  My mind is full of Autumn at the moment.  I have been out foraging in the hedgerows down by the nearby Grantham canal.


Here's a little set up telling the story of what I love about Autumn.  


I have done a few workshops over the last week or two.

The autumn fruits on got me painting a new blackberries composition.  Here are the WIPs.












I love painting those juicy fruits and the changing  leaves allow you to go mad with the colours.

Also love the challenge of depicting a tangly bramble hedge with chinks of light shining through.





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