Calling all Lanark artists! Lanark Tolbooth Trust and Lanark Community Development Trust have put their heads together and come up with a great idea for artists living within 7 miles of Lanark, by holding a rainbow themed art competition.
YMCA, St Nicholas Church, Tolbooth window ,
The competition is to create rainbow inspired images for an exhibition to be held at the Tolbooth, Lanark when the restrictions are lifted.
They have been inspired by the uplifting colourful pictures of rainbows that children have put in their windows spreading messages of hope and thanks to the NHS and key workers.
Images from New Lanark
I thought I would do something a little different…
I don’t think I’ve mentioned here yet but since last October (until lockdown) I had been attending a weekly drawing and mixed media class at Paintbox School of Art in East Lothian. I’ll get round to telling you a bit more about the classes on another day (they’re great!) but for now I’ve discovered that preparing your surface makes quite a difference to your work.
New Lanark
There are many ways to do this but for the idea I had in mind, I wanted a lightly textured background, for a mostly monochrome drawing apart from the rainbows.
In my mind’s eye, I had a composition of disordered buildings, interweaving fragments drawn very simply, with the emphasis on windows and the rainbow posters. I’ve only been into Lanark twice since lockdown so it felt apt that it was more dreamlike. The monochrome sums up how things feel at the moment and helps the rainbows pop out.
Rough sketch of one of the compositions. This was a bit too congested so I thinned out the final sketch.
I prepared 4 sheets of A3 paper with a coat of white emulsion paint mixed with a dash of blue grey. It gives a chalky tooth for the graphite and a varied flow to ink. I then worked directly on to the paper, starting with one key building placed off-centre and then placed other buildings in response to that one and so on.
This shows the simplified line drawing and the textured background.
I got carried away doing four sheets but I kept finding parts of buildings that I wanted to include. I now have to decide on which drawing to enter or do another one!
Towers of St Nicholas’s Church and GreyfriarsFinials, Spires and Chimneys above the High Street
The drawings have been cropped into squares – top and bottom sections so you can have a good look.
St Mary’s Church tower, the Girnin Dug and part of the Tolbooth
If you are a professional or amateur artist living in or near Lanark, there is still time to enter – closing date 1st June 2020. I’m looking forward to seeing a lot of colour next month!
Thanks for reading,
Ronnie
Window on corner of Jack’s Ironmonger, Tolbooth and Christ Church
PS. I decided to enter ‘Finials, Spires and Chimneys’ in the Professional Category and….it won 🙂