Watercolour Workshop June 14th

Copy of P10702423 Watercolour Workshop June 14th

Copy of P10702523 Watercolour Workshop June 14th

Claudia Myatt said (http://www.claudiamyatt.co.uk/blog/)

” …a watercolour workshop with Elizabeth Haines, who has an inspirational studio in the Preseli hills, and a profound understanding of how art works. She is particularly good at getting students to try new ways of working, experiment and see where the painting wants to go. I had a thoroughly enjoyable day…………”

Experimenting with mixed media – and other things. Workshops with Elizabeth Haines 2011.

These exciting workshops are designed both to hone drawing skills by learning to look in different ways, and to challenge and re-animate ways of using water-based paint media. We always start by drawing –  with the left hand (if normally right handed), looking at the shapes in between objects (‘negative shapes’), taking a line for a walk, drawing with eyes shut, anything to both loosen up and refine habitual ways of seeing. We start with simple line, move on to tone and finally to colour.

Working from initial marks, the painted image is allowed to evolve, disintegrate and re-emerge, rather than having a particular idea or motif in mind from the outset. Through sabotaging our habitual ways of working we allow the subconscious to surprise us, and the medium to shine without being constrained by what the picture is ‘supposed to be’. We learn to watch the unpredictable image as it emerges, and to respond to it. By experimenting we can really free ourselves up, and the techniques so learnt can be incorporated later into any genre such as landscape, still life or figure painting. Watercolour and gouache can be used as a precursor to the mixed media, and collage and monoprint are also very effective.

If there are people who have already been to one of these workshops, and need to develop their previous work, or want to do something slightly different, then they are free to do so. The negative shape drawing is, however, an essential ‘warmer up’ to any kind of painting.

I’m also doing some ‘special interest’ workshops, (see below) where we will start with drawing and then move on to a specific project. No previous experience is necessary.

Venue – Bryn Morris studio and (newly re-furbished!) barn

Fee £40 per day, 10 – 4.30, bring own lunch.   Tea and coffee provided.    6-8 people.

Dates for 2011:

May  Tuesday 3rd Mixed media

May   Saturday 14th Painting and music. Here we explore the connections between these two arts, a subject which formed the basis of my PhD. Listening to music in different keys and by different composers, attempting to express their individual characteristics in colour and form. Looking at the abstract qualities which these arts share, for example line, tone, colour, composition, modulation and texture.

June  Wednesday 1st Mixed media

June   Tuesday 14th Watercolour Just transparent paint on white paper, but there is so much more to it than that. (And there are already a million books on how to do it).

This most subtle of mediums requires above all a fluency achieved through constant practice, a mixture of panache and control.  We study some of the early masters, Turner, Girtin, Bonnington, as well as contemporary practitioners. Simple colour mixing, washes, glazes, resists (masking fluid etc.).

July  Saturday 2nd Mixed media

July  Friday 15th Colour Experiments with complementary colours. Hue and saturation. Colour theory/ exercises based on Johannes Itten, (Bauhaus) Baudelaire and Goethe. Studying and analysing the colour in master paintings, especially those with limited colour schemes – Velasquez, Braque. ‘Decorative’ colour – Marc and Matisse.

July Friday 29th Mixed media

August  Tuesday 16th Drawing Some perspective drawing. Developing the ‘negative shapes’  by observing cows, sheep, trees, or the plethora of interesting objects in the barn.  5 minute drawings and longer studies, using line and tone. How does drawing differ from painting?

September Friday 2nd Mixed media

September  Tuesday 20th The two sides of the brain. Some years ago I was forced to use my left hand for painting. It was a revelation, proving to me that the right hemisphere does offer an entirely different way of thinking and working. We develop and build on the ‘ right brain drawing’ with which we  always start the workshops, and also look at philosophical backgrounds to this idea, (Ornstein, Stevenson) as well as Betty Edwards’ well known book Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain.

October  Wednesday 5th Mixed media

I could also do a 2- 3 day workshop during the summer: please get in touch if you are interested.

MATERIALS bring your acrylic paints and brushes and coloured inks, (not too many different colours) as well as ‘ rubber colour shapers’ (these can be bought from art shops) For drawing, good quality cartridge paper and SOFT pencils; for painting, offcuts of mounting card, (ask your framer) coloured paper for gouache, canvas boards or canvases, and primed paper (can be bought in pads). White gouache can be mixed with watercolour to make it opaque, and old kitchen pump sprays can be filled with diluted ink for interesting effects. Please contact me if you need advice.

Elizabeth Haines:  01437 532 498  or  haines_studio@hotmail.com

Art & Music Workshop at BrynMorris May 14th 2011

Copy of Jim341 300x116 Art & Music Workshop at BrynMorris May 14th 2011It was a marvellous day: Seimon Morris played various chords and sequences which we listened to carefully, and then visualised in colour the character and intervals in each one; this included the unresolved dominant 7th at the end of Messiaen’s L’Ascension. (During this some swallows were chirping in the barn – wouldn’t Messiaen have loved that!)

Erika Seimon JennieC Art & Music Workshop at BrynMorris May 14th 2011

12 versions of Tallis’ ordinal were played in different keys, and everyone wrote down what they thought was the character of each, having briefly discussed aspects of tonality, and then did a coloured image of their reaction to one of them; some amazing similarities here.

We visualised a journey through Bach’s strictly tonal 1st 2 part Invention, then listened to Birtwistle’s Imaginary Landscape and each did paintings which expressed their understanding of this very different journey. My friend the composer Erika Fox was here, she knows Birtwistle and loves his work, and gave us some salient insights into the music. Even people who never usually listen to contemporary music made a great effort to engage with it. Jim included the call of the cuckoo in one of his pictures.
We ended up with a home made version of Ligeti’s Poème Symphonique using some metronomes and various clocks, all ticking slightly at odds with each other.

I am very much hoping to do this again, and especially with children: there are still a lot of things we didn’t have time for – a 19th century Credo where the words are intoned on one note while a succession of chords play around it. (Seimon had suggested that this was like a single transparent colour moving against a changing landscape of other colours.) Also the contrasts in Vivaldi’s Concerto for Piccolo and basso continuo, Fratres by Arvo Pärt, and perhaps one of Schenker’s Graphic Analyses.

People really enjoyed the day, and came up with an amazing variety of individual responses.

Seimon BachS Art & Music Workshop at BrynMorris May 14th 2011

Jim wrote:

From Bach to Birtwistle

“From fixed view, or familiar- to unexpected surprise
From sleep or habit
- to awake.
From sitting in one place
- to moving around.
Fragments – unrelated to each other
- seemingly.
Details, parts, seen on a background
-  yet not seen as a whole.”

Thanks, Elizabeth-  A brilliant day

Erika said
“I found it wonderfully liberating to try and express something in a (for me) new medium. I feel I have learnt something about spacing, colour and texture. Doing is not at all the same as observing. A cliché, but one needs reminding.”

LigetiS Art & Music Workshop at BrynMorris May 14th 2011

Catherine
Such fun! Really interesting exercises. It makes you think again about art and music, and puts the fun back into it. I would love part 2!

More workshops at BrynMorris are coming.

music workshop Erika Art & Music Workshop at BrynMorris May 14th 2011Art Music Workshop01w Art & Music Workshop at BrynMorris May 14th 2011

Workshops with Elizabeth Haines 2011

Experimenting with mixed media – and other things

Workshops with Elizabeth Haines 2011

These exciting workshops are designed both to hone drawing skills by learning to look in different ways, and to challenge and re-animate ways of using water-based paint media. We always start by drawing –  with the left hand (if normally right handed), looking at the shapes in between objects (‘negative shapes’), taking a line for a walk, drawing with eyes shut, anything to both loosen up and refine habitual ways of seeing. We start with simple line, move on to tone and finally to colour.

Working from initial marks, the painted image is allowed to evolve, disintegrate and re-emerge, rather than having a particular idea or motif in mind from the outset. Through sabotaging our habitual ways of working we allow the subconscious to surprise us, and the medium to shine without being constrained by what the picture is ‘supposed to be’. We learn to watch the unpredictable image as it emerges, and to respond to it. By experimenting we can really free ourselves up, and the techniques so learnt can be incorporated later into any genre such as landscape, still life or figure painting. Watercolour and gouache can be used as a precursor to the mixed media, and collage and monoprint are also very effective.

If there are people who have already been to one of these workshops, and need to develop their previous work, or want to do something slightly different, then they are free to do so. The negative shape drawing is, however, an essential ‘warmer up’ to any kind of painting.

I’m also doing some ‘special interest’ workshops,  where we will start with drawing and then move on to a specific project. No previous experience is necessary.

Venue – Bryn Morris studio and (newly re-furbished!) barn

Fee £40 per day, 10 – 4.30, bring own lunch.   Tea and coffee provided.    6-8 people.

Bryn Morris, Rhosfach,
Clunderwen, Pembs, SA66 7QN.
Tel 01437 532 498
haines_studio@hotmail.com

Remembrance Day – Sketchbook from the Somme.

In 2004 Elizabeth Haines travelled to the Somme with the David Jones Society, returning with a full sketchbook.pict1trans Remembrance Day   Sketchbook from the Somme.
Sketches relate to Mametz Wood, the Ulster Tower (memorial to the men of the 36th (Ulster) Division), the memorial to the 38th (Welsh) Division and to the Somme.
“The men of the first wave climbed up the parapets, in tumult, darkness, and the presence of death, and having done with all pleasant things, advanced across No Man’s Land to begin the Battle of the Somme.” (Masefield).
The 56-page facsimile sketchbook is 150 by 110 mm and printed on quality 170gsm cartridge with board covers.
You can still order your own signed copy for £25 directly from Elizabeth Haines.
Telephone 01437 532498 (from the UK), +44 1437 532498 (international)
or email: Haines_Studio@hotmail.com