On this studio-based landscape painting course, learn how to use your materials and equipment to evoke the qualities of space, light, structure, mass, movement and direction, qualities shared by both landscape and painting. Make works that are evocative, pictorial equivalents for the subject, rather than just a depiction of it, and where the content is found in the act of painting.
Working from your own photographic sources, you will use drawing to find simple fundamental visual qualities and dramatic compositional structures. Then, working with acrylic paint and utilising a broad range of painting processes, derived from both the history of landscape painting as well as from abstraction, you will produce a minimum of twenty experimental paintings on paper and prepared board.
The course will include daily slide lectures on historical and contemporary approaches to landscape. There will be technical demonstrations and lots of one-to-one and group tuition. As the course progresses, your personal choices and direction will increasingly become the focus.
By the end of the course, you will have produced a substantial body of atmospheric and expressive landscape paintings. You will have gained confidence in exploring the notion of equivalence between painting and subject, and the role of process as a powerful pictorial element. You will also have become increasingly comfortable in making personal critical judgements and taking control of the direction of your painting.
As well as the photographs you have brought along, you will be encouraged to explore and make use of the grounds and surrounding landscape at the college.