experimental painting …

 

Experimental painting © Mari French 2015

Experimental painting © Mari French 2015

Experiments with expressive painting and drawing techniques to loosen up and develop my mark making. 

Exciting, fun and frustrating by turns, I’ve found it a worthwhile exercise.

These are painted with acrylics and Inktense sticks, plus gesso, on 300gsm 30×20″ watercolour paper.

Experimental painting © Mari French 2015

Experimental painting © Mari French 2015

 

Experimental painting © Mari French 2015

Experimental painting © Mari French 2015 


experimental drawing © Mari French 2015

experimental drawing © Mari French 2015

 

experimental drawing © Mari French 2015

experimental drawing © Mari French 2015

 

Experimental painting © Mari French 2015

Experimental painting © Mari French 2015

 

a painter’s progress …

Rosewall Hill (detail). © Mari French

Rosewall Hill (detail). © Mari French

 … every so often I get the urge to paint hills. I live in Norfolk (not flat, beautifully rolling – well it is where I live) and I love its sweeping beaches and huge skies, but I used to live on the Isle of Skye and I visit Cornwall often, so you can imagine I might enjoy a change in level occasionally. It’s also a change from the more abstract work I’ve been producing lately.

This painting in acrylics and watercolour pastel on deep sided canvas (80×60 cm), is inspired by Rosewall Hill on the Penwith peninsula, Cornwall. Not an accurate representation, I’ll admit, but for me it attempts to capture its looming presence over the moor.

It might not be completely finished yet, but I thought I’d share the progress of the work, step-by-step. Hope you find it interesting.

Rosewall Hill (stage 1). © Mari French. Acrylic and watercolour pastel on canvas depicting uphill landscape in Penwith, Cornwall.

Rosewall Hill (stage 1). © Mari French

 

I started with a very loose broad brush under-painting in Paynes grey and a mix of Raw Sienna and Titanium white to establish shape and tone (above). As with many of my canvases I prepped it first with a rough coating of texture paste, which I sometimes prefer to a perfectly flat surface.

I deliberately used an unusual colour palette next, of Wedgwood blue, Permanent Rose and a little white, roughly mixed on canvas, to unite the separate areas of the sky and foreground (below). I avoid greens like the plague in my landscapes, in case you hadn’t noticed! They’re too obvious, I prefer colours that create an atmosphere.

Rosewall Hill (stage 2). © Mari French

Rosewall Hill (stage 2). © Mari French

In the process much of the lovely initial under painting is lost, but I’ve learnt not to be too precious about this otherwise I’d  end up too nervous to create an effective artwork. 

I also had to adjust the shape and position of the hill a couple of times. Before the new purple mix dried I splashed and  dropped water here and there, allowing it to run in places, creating pale lines in the paint.

Rosewall Hill (stage 3). © Mari French

Rosewall Hill (stage 3). © Mari French

Having left the work for a few days I approached it today wanting to lighten it and get some marks and movement in there (below). Much of the violet colour is brushed over with a dryish mix of Yellow oxide and white, quite fast and vigorously, gain mixing on canvas. I then sprayed with water, semi-dried and wiped back in places. 

Finally, watercolour pastel (neocolour) in black, was scribbled on loosely, hinting at the rough land forms and distant skyline. To allow for any further over painting acrylic matt medium was carefully applied over the pastel and dried.

Comparing the last two stages, I feel the third stage might have made a finished painting, but I’m still excited by the way the work has developed. I’ll post any further changes if/when I make them.

Rosewall Hill (stage 4). © Mari French

Rosewall Hill (stage 4). © Mari French

 

a wide open space …

 

Sketchbook. Burnham Overy salt marsh, December.

Sketchbook. Burnham Overy salt marsh, December. Mari French 2014 

Recently on an overcast winter day I visited the small Norfolk coastal village of Burnham Overy Staithe and for the first time explored the salt marshes there along the path to the beach. I went back soon after on a cold but bright December day to do some sketching and photography. 

Such an exhilarating place, with the calls of the migrating geese, waders on the mud flats and sun in the reeds. I liked the sinuous shapes the left-behind creek water made in the tidal mud, with the delicate running patterns of prints from small sea birds; the way the wet mud reflects the blue sky with the brown water trickling through it.

Burnham_Overy_Staithe_December.JPG

Burnham Overy marsh, low tide.

Burnham Overy marsh, low tide. Mari French 2014

My usual stomping and sketching ground is a few miles west at Thornham’s salt marsh area but the Burnham Overy marshes are different, with, depending on the tide, large areas of sand, tidal mud, saltwater lagoon, freshwater drainage channels fringed with silvery reed beds, grass pastureland grazed by flocks of overwintering pink foot and Brent geese. 

This wonderful variety can be easily enjoyed (and sketched, there are several nicely positioned benches too) from the 1 1/2 mile path along the sea defences to the sand dunes and beach. 

Sketchbook. Burnham Overy marsh, December.

Sketchbook. Burnham Overy marsh, December. Mari French 201 


Woven bank supports, Burnham Overy marsh.

Woven bank supports, Burnham Overy marsh. Mari French 2014 

Like much of the Norfolk Coast there is a wide open limitless feel to the landscape and sky here, which inspires me. The light on a clear day is amazing. 

Even in bad weather it’s endlessly interesting; I’ve always been intrigued by the decaying evidence of man’s work in the landscape and here the woven willow/hazel bank supports and stone breakwaters supply punctuation marks to the scene. This is clearly going to become an important area of source material for my work on salt marshes.

Woven bank supports, Burnham Overy marsh. Mari French 2014

Woven bank supports, Burnham Overy marsh. Mari French 2014

 

Reed_beds_Burnham_Overy_marsh.JPG

Reed beds, grazing geese, Burnham Overy marsh. Mari French 2014

 

Tidal mud, Burnham Overy marsh. Mari French 2014

Tidal mud, Burnham Overy marsh. Mari French 2014

Burnham Overy marsh, high tide.

Burnham Overy marsh, high tide. Mari French 2014