Chalk Church – July 2024 – Saturday

On Saturday twelve members visited Chalk Church and enjoyed drawing and painting in perfect weather. It was sunny but not too hot, being pleasantly warm with a gentle breeze. The Monet bridge and pond area looked very bare last year but is now planted with wild flowers such as red, white and pink poppies and yellow and blue flowers too. In the pond we saw a newt and shrimpy things swimming with their little legs, dragonflies flew above whilst water boatmen and beetles scurried on the water’s surface.

We all enjoyed the day as we sketched and painted and enjoyed a good natter. Thank you for the £36 for the church fund.

Some members drew and painted the view in front of them and others created pictures to their own theme.

Look out for next month’s newsletter which will be published on Thursday 1st August.

We will be painting in the gardens of Rochester Cathedral on Saturday 24th August. Please note there will be 5 Saturdays in August but we always meet on the 4th one, which is on the bank holiday weekend this year. Please check the date to see if you’re free as Tracy will be asking for names to attend the day.

The next session at the hall will be on Wednesday 14th August from 7-9pm.

Steve’s dictionary pages

Steve’s surname of Goldson isn’t in the dictionary so he used the pages with the words ‘gold’ and ‘son’ on to create images of other words on the pages. He used soft pastels to draw a golden eagle and a man wearing a sombrero.

Very imaginative, Steve. Great colours and details you’ve achieved with the soft pastels, well done!

Frida Kahlo – July 2024 – Wednesday

Just 7 members attended the session yesterday evening, with several members away on holiday or others watching England in the Euro football semi finals. We had a good natter and enjoyed creating our pictures to do with the life of artist Frida Kahlo.

Several portraits by Brenda, Steve and Tracy, a flower study of similar blooms Frida wore by Myrna and a picture by Angela of the Casa Azul (the Blue House) Frida’s family home were started and will hopefully be finished at home. Chris couldn’t attend the session but completed a portrait at home, sending a photo for inclusion. If you do draw or paint the suggested subject at home, please send a photo to Tracy or Steve and they’ll be happy to add to it the relevant post.

Here are our pictures, including a photo of Tracy wearing a t-shirt and holding a bag and tin all with Frida Kahlo’s image on.

Patrick drew a picture of the Frog Princess.

Two more dictionary pages have been finished and they will be shown in the next post.

Our next session is at Chalk Church on Saturday 27th July from after 10am to just before 3pm

Peta’s pictures

Peta was named ‘Artist of the Week’ on the Londonist website last week. Well done, Peta, that’s so deserved. Here’s the info taken from the website…

Link to Peta’s Instagram page if you want to see her other artwork and give her a ‘follow’… https://www.instagram.com/petabridleartwork/

Link to the original page… https://londonist.com/london/things-to-do/things-to-do-this-week-in-london-1-7-july-2024

Well done Peta, it’s really good to see that all your hard work is getting you more well known as your artwork is fabulous!

(Apologies for not posting the link sooner, but being away I couldn’t post this on the blog. Tracy)

Graham’s dictionary page experiment

Graham chose several pages from the dictionary to paint on, but before he starts he tried painting on a spare dictionary page to experiment with how much water to use with watercolour and gouache paints and he tried using a pen too. His process is really interesting and is useful to everyone who has painted a dictionary page or who wants to paint one, especially his technique of mounting the page on scrap board to start with. The dictionary will be brought to future sessions in case anyone wants to paint more pages.

In Graham’s own words and photographs…

“I was determined to test the Dictionary Page paper to see how much abuse it would take.  Firstly, I mounted it on some scrap board. This gave it rigidity. Then I drew on it, deliberately doing a fair bit of rubbing out and re-drawing.

For the background watercolour wash I adopted my usual procedure of wetting the paper, then putting in very faint wet washes, and as the paper dried, ever stronger and less wet washes.  The paper stood up to this exceedingly well. It might be interesting to see how the page reacts when fixed to watercolour paper.

When this was all dry, I tried painting the rear figure with equally wet into wet washes. This failed abysmally.  All the washes bled beyond where I had applied them, and they did not mix well.  When dry, to try to redefine the edges of the figure, I applied some white gouache tinted with the background colours.  

For the man with the umbrella I tried applying the watercolour with a 50/50 mix of water and gum arabic.  This thickened the paint and stopped it bleeding but left it looking very streaky and unsightly.

For the man on the bicycle I mixed all the colours in the palette and applied them with a fairly dry brush, often taking most of the wet paint out of the brush with a tissue.

Once all the paint was dry I applied fresh colour to several of the washes on the other two figures.  These were similarly applied fairly dry paint.  The paler colours were again mixed with gouache so that under washes would be covered.

Finally, I did some ink drawing .. I’m not sure how successful that was.

This was all very experimental.  Glueing the paper down was certainly a good idea for me, and I will continue to do so when using a wet medium.  I was surprised how well the paper stood up to the original wet washes and to the number of layers of paint I could apply to the figures.  I used watercolour throughout. 

The lesson I learned was to apply it in a “dry brush” fashion.  Although I suspect Gouache and acrylic paints may well work better on this sort of paper I shall continue to experiment using watercolour.

Happy Experimenting and Painting 

Graham”

Thank you very much, Graham. To read your process from start to finish was very helpful and having the photos too made each stage easy to follow. Many of us have found that a dryer application of paint is the way forward and once one page is painted we want to paint several more!

July 2024

Wednesday 10th 7-9pm – Frida Kahlo

Draw or paint a picture inspired by Mexican artist Frida Kahlo (July 1907-July 1954). Her colourful paintings are full of colour but often filled with angst as she suffered life-long injuries from polio as a child and a terrible bus crash when she was 18.

Draw or paint Frida Kahlo’s portrait on her own or with her husband Diego Rivera. Study one of her paintings in depth or use her colourful style to paint a picture of your own subject.

Here are a few websites to read up about Frida Kahlo and to see her pictures… www.museofridakahlo.org.mx

www.fridakahlo.org

www.frida-kahlo-foundation.org

www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frida_Kahlo

Saturday 27th AFTER 10am – 3pm – ‘Do your own thing’ at Chalk Church

We return to our summer venue at St.Mary’s Church in Chalk. Please arrive AFTER 10am so we don’t block the lane to the church before the gates open.

The church and ‘Monet’ bridge are popular subjects to paint, but you don’t have to.

Many of us have painted these several times, so instead start any project for our Open Day (Saturday 23rd November), continue or start a Frida Kahlo inspired picture or bring paintings you want to finish.

If it’s raining we still meet at the church as there’s an indoor room in the barn with tables and chairs for us to use. There’s a large car park, toilet, and tea, coffee and biscuits as usual.

Please bring along a folding chair or stool if you intend to paint outside and a packed lunch too. If you can only make the morning or afternoon, please come along and join us for a couple of hours. We pack up before 3pm as the church warden locks the gates then.

The church doesn’t charge us to use the barn or gardens, so any donations to the Church Fund are appreciatedthank you.