Friday, 26 March 2021

Sky Arts Landscape Artist Of The Year 2021 Part 2- The Day Of The Competition


Me with my submission artwork, 'Empty Streets' (now sold!)

‘So what are you listening to?’ a voice from behind me asks. I disentangle myself from the headphones on my Walkman and wipe my paint covered hands with a rag. I turn to shyly greet Dame Joan Bakewell, the person asking the question, who is standing there with members of the TV crew who are all masked up. I explain that I have the shuffle setting on, but I had just been listening to Bob Dylan. ‘Have you listened to the new album?’ I have. ‘It’s really good isn’t it? I just love his words. I’ve just had Jonathan Miller’s son print me off all the lyrics so I can read them’, she says disarmingly, as if I of course know Jonathan Miller’s son, as we make our way to the front of my ‘pod’ for an interview. It’s about 11 o’clock in the morning and I’ve been painting for an hour. My interview with Joan, which lasts about half an hour will turn out to be one of my personal highlights from this rather heady and at times gruelling day, painting in the sunshine in my green bucket hat with large TV cameras just inches away. She’s really warm and engaged on and off camera (she’s been doing this for a long time after all…), and we chat quite a bit about painting of course, but also teaching and Birmingham and what my largely Muslim students would make of this place, with its enormous grounds, grand follies and houses. I don’t really know what I make of it other than it makes me very uneasy that it even exists and, with the college I work at located in one of the most deprived parts of England, I think they would feel the same.

It’s an issue that is picked up later in the afternoon by Stephen Mangan, the other presenter. We chat on camera and again I am asked, what with my submission of a landscape set in the urban streets of Birmingham, what I make of a place like this.  This time I explain how I see so much of the world through the lens of my working class upbringing and I’m very aware of the history of country estates and houses like this and how my Dad won’t visit them because ‘they are all built on the backs and blood and sweat of the working class’, he interrupts. ‘Well….yes,’ I say, not sure if he’s taking the piss.

'....one family?'
He asks me if I’m going to try and bring this into my piece, but in these circumstances I’m not sure how. Off camera, he tells me he is from a big working class Irish family and he totally gets what how I am feeling. He tells me that when he drove onto the estate in the morning his thoughts were ‘One family…?!’ 
Joan Bakewell and Stephen Mangan

I had risen early from my bed at around 5.30am. The Travelodge I’m staying in is on the High Wycombe ring road and the noise from the traffic, combined with my nerves had ensured I didn’t get much sleep. I have to be at West Wycombe Park for 7am, but it’s only 2 miles up the road so I’m really early. I have a cup of tea, shower, get dressed, and in the cool early morning air head over the ring road to where my car has been parked in the NCP car park all night. I’m a bit anxious that all my painting gear is still safe in the car (I am from Birmingham after all) but thankfully it is. I slowly drive the car down the winding ramps and head off.

 The Park is surrounded by a high wall with a huge gate that opens just as I arrive. Immediately inside there is a car park which a few other cars nervously follow me towards. These are some of the 50 ‘wild card’ artists who will also be taking part today. There is someone from the TV crew waiting for us and, and after I identify myself as a contestant, a medic takes my temperature and I’m invited to load all my gear onto a golf buggy and trundle off, masked up and holding on tightly to all my stuff. We cross the enormous estate to where I eventually find myself at the site of the six ‘pods’ where the 6 competing artists will work from today. We are situated by a large lake opposite which, on an island in the middle, is a large temple like building, The Music Room. The estate once belonged to the Dashford family, who still live here, but it is now owned by the National Trust after debts were accumulated. I’ve done my google research. 

The 'Wild Card' artists 

I say hello to the other artists, who all seem as nervous as me, and we exchange a bit of banter. I immediately get on with one painter, Dougie Adams, but also enjoy talking to Kirandeep, who is also from Birmingham who is here with her sister, and Sophia and Rosemary who are both here with their spouses, and we chat away about painting and the show. I never get chance to speak to Renata until the end of the day as she arrives later with the air of an artist on a mission so I’m a bit afraid to approach her if truth be told.  I’ve watched 2 series of this programme during lockdown so it all seems very familiar on one hand, but of course very strange to now find myself here being escorted to pod number 3 while the camera crews set up. I jump up on the stage, which is smaller than I thought it would be, excited, inside feeling a bit like a little kid trying to take it all in. I’m feeling ok after all my preparation, but it’s hard to think straight with all the activity around. I have thought all along that it would be unlikely that I would win today given the nature of the task, but I do think I’m a pretty good painter and so my own slightly more modest ambition is to at least be recognised in the top three artworks of the day. 
The Pods
I’m coming out of the portable loos at 9.30 when I hear a voice say to me, ‘So you must be the guy from West Bromwich who doesn’t like football!’. It’s the judge Tai Schierenberg, a very fine award winning painter, who had been an artist in residence at West Bromwich Albion a couple of years ago. I had watched a fascinating programme about it, as Tai, now a devoted Baggies fan, had never even been to a football match before his time at the club, but now he regularly travels up to The Hawthorns. We have a nice chat about it all, including my personal misgivings about football, as we walk in the sunshine towards my pod where I am now being invited to at last to set up and get ready to start at 10am. He wishes me good luck. The camera crew wants to film us getting our art equipment out, squeezing tubes of oily paint etc. before Stephen Mangan and Joan Bakewell announce (twice) the start of the programme and our four hours of work. The silence as we all set to work by the lakeside as the cameras finally roll feels deafening. It all feels very surreal. I was waiting for the incidental music to crank up…
The start...
...starting my painting

And on the whole I thought my day’s painting went well. I took my time getting the composition and drawing right on the canvas in the first hour. I thought my composition, although simple, was strong and well-balanced. I would occasionally leap off my pod’s stage to look at my painting from a distance and would steal a glance at the other 2 easel painters work, Dougie and Sophia, but not for long, there seemed no point really. It was important to just stay totally focussed on my own work and think about what I wanted to do with this rather sentimental, picturesque scene in front of me.  But there were many interruptions as you were invited to speak to one of the judges- I spoke with Tai and Kate Bryan- and the presenters, but also to speak ‘to the camera’ where one of the crew would ask you lots of questions about how you were feeling about taking part, how your painting was going etc. In these ‘to camera’ sections I kept having to repeat my spiel as I constantly referred to being in ‘the show’ and not ‘the competition’, which was how they preferred it to be referenced. ‘Can you not say ‘The Show?’ Can you say ‘The Competition?’ And again…’ the woman in charge of these segments kept patiently telling me. That was a bit more difficult but all good fun too, but admittedly it did get in the way of thinking about what I was doing. At the end of the day I don’t work like that. I work for long periods uninterrupted trying to reach a place with a painting where it takes on an integrity of its own that you then have to respond to. Finding this was difficult.

After two hours work a packed lunch was bought over and I ate mine under a shady tree chatting with Dougie. When I returned to my pod I felt the pressure mount in the afternoon as I tried to push on and try and shape my painting into something more exciting and original, which I found hard given the scene. 



We had started back at 1, and with the competition being to create the painting in 4 hours, I had my mind set on 3pm or thereabouts as when we would finish as no one had said otherwise. I put down my brushes at five to three, feeling a bit wiped out at this point. and looked around only to see everyone else still working away as if they had bags of time. I asked one of the TV crew what time we finished and she said, ‘Oh, we have another hour and a half yet!’. As a teacher by day, with my exam invigilator’s head on, I thought, ‘well we could have had more warning about that!’ They were of course, including all the stops taken by us all to do interviews etc into consideration but no conversation had actually occurred about how this would affect the time which would have been helpful. We probably all did about 6 hours painting in the end. Anyway, feeling rather foolish, I sat for a while looking at my work with fresh eyes before picking up my brushes again and before long found myself working with a deeper concentration than I had managed all day back into the painting for another hour. I tried to maintain a more holistic approach to the painting than fuss with details, although the Music Temple, which was central to the view, made this near impossible, until time was finally called.


My finished painting, oil on canvas, 100 x 78cms

We were all really exhausted as we stepped off the stage and walked towards the cameras for a shot of us ending the session. It turned out to be four more shots as we all did this really badly, much to the director’s dismay but my amusement (we are all artists not actors after all…) ‘Just look at my red T shirt as you come towards us!’ he barked before ‘no, back again….jeezuz’ he muttered under his breath.

The finished artworks by the 6 Pod artists
The six Pod artists 
The artists were escorted to another, cool in the shade, part of the park for a sandwich and a welcome drink but with little opportunity to look at each other’s work which I thought was a shame, while the judges assessed our efforts back near the pods.  
The Judges, curator Kate Bryan, artist Tai Shan Schierenberg, curator Kathreen Soriano

Of the easel painters I could see that Sophia had struggled to finish, but Dougie had completed a nice, subtle painting and I felt sure he would get in the top 3. I felt very nervous but also very unsure of where I would end up in the selection. I thought I had done a good painting that had a great deal of vitality and life to it despite being created in these difficult circumstances (although I can see now that I didn’t do very well with capturing the integrity of the Music Room/Temple). Would I make the top 3? I really hoped so as we were eventually called back to stand in line next to our work in front of an audience of many of the ‘Wild Card’ artists who had now made their way down. I felt like Maximillian in front of the firing squad in Manet’s painting ‘The Execution of Emperor Maximillian’(I’m actually not kidding about this).
  
Waiting to hear the shortlist (this was horrible...)

And then the names were called out by Stephen Mangan as the Judges stood behind him- I’ve noticed they never make eye contact with the artists at this point- ‘Rosemary Firth, Renata Fernandez…’ and at this point after the calling out of the names of the first two artists I had a terrible, sinking realization that I had not gotten into the top 3 as I knew Dougie would certainly be in it. ‘and Dougie Adams…’. I felt absolutely gutted, really surprised at how competitive I had felt in the end. The judges applauded and walked past us with their commiserations but I felt a bit numb. Kathleen Soriano said to me as she passed ‘Oh, I loved yours!’ and I thought to myself, ‘Yeah? Well why didn’t you bloody pick it then! (My apologies for my lack of magnanimity at this point. I’m just trying to write honestly about the experience). The three artists who hadn’t made it through were told to wait in the field adjacent to the easels until the winner was called. I felt really fed up, and to make it worse I was then asked to do one more interview to camera to tell the viewers how I felt about losing….great. 

Dougie won the heat, a worthy winner I thought. We then had to tidy up our pods and pack up our equipment as our paintings were taken away to be wrapped up somewhere else on site. There had been some art materials available- some nice oils, acrylics and charcoal which I was told I could have which was very generous. Looking around all the activity as the crew started to pack up to my surprise I noticed the judges walking away. After spending six exhausting hours painting, weeks preparing, and then not getting through to the top three, I was hoping they would come over and offer us bit of feedback or at least some advice for the future- I think we all deserved that, but no, they were off. That was it. I was left with my disappointment, and a sense of ‘well, what happened there then?’. I suddenly felt like a small cog in the big machine of the TV production. They had got what they needed. I’d made a painting for the TV show. I could go now.

 When I made it back to my car and headed back up the motorway I felt exhausted, but also surprisingly upset about it all. To not get any feedback at all had really knocked my confidence, as if I wasn’t really worthy after all. I put Courtney Marie Andrew’s ‘On My Page’ album on the stereo, which seemed to fit my mood perfectly, and went home. 

After...

'The Far Field IV', oil on canvas, 30 x 30cms
Five months later I finally hear some feedback on my painting, which I have not looked at since I came home from West Wycombe Park, when I sit down to watch episode 2 of series 6 of Sky Arts Landscape Artist Of The Year in January.  In the five months since the filming I have made 20 new paintings- my recent pylon works- trying several new approaches in my painting through the autumn to winter with a quiet determination to prove something to myself and try and put some creative distance between myself and the TV experience

I’ve been absolutely dreading watching the programme and have even had sleepless nights about it wondering what the judges actually thought and said, but also how I will come across. Yes, it would be fair to say I had lost a bit of perspective.

 It turns out that the judges, particularly Kate and Katherine, did like it after all, even referring to it as the ‘Disco Temple’ because of my use of colour, which I liked.  

Independent curator Kate Bryan

At the halfway point, when the Judges have a bit of a conflab Joan Bakewell had said ‘well Shaun seems to know what he’s doing’, a phrase I thought I might get printed on a T-Shirt with Joan Bakewell’s name under it.  The episode itself was not the best. I thought all the interesting bits of watching the artists at work which I have liked about the show when I have watched it did not feature, and neither did I in the end despite all the interviews and filming. I thought that might be the case though as I hadn’t made the top 3. I thought the ‘narrative’ of the episode would be cut around the 3 top artists of the day. Within an hour of the show being on however, I had sold a painting from my website store and by the weekend had sold two more, including my submission piece. For the next few days and more I received loads of positive feedback through my social media accounts about my appearance and more importantly my painting from friends but also fellow artists from all over the country, many of them past contestants on the show, praising my work and wanting to know more about my painting practice.  Although I’m aware that it can be creatively fatal to take much notice of criticism both good and bad and that it’s best to just get on with ‘the work’, all this positive feedback does really give my confidence a much needed boost. Other artist friends offered a more critical perspective ranging from wondering what I was doing on the programme anyway as It seemed nothing to do with what I do, that the judges were ‘so empty’ and ‘where do they get these people from?!’. One friend the way the ‘wild cards’ are treated is ‘demeaning’, and many thought my painting was the best by far, which was nice (let me put that that one in).  One friend said the difference with my work and the others was that it was actually ALIVE! Another artist friend who I met in Cornwall a week after taking part gently reminded me, ‘It’s just a TV show…’

'Empty Streets', oil on canvas, 50 x 40cms (the painting that got me 
in the competition. Now sold)

A TV show or not (I hear those words again…’can you say ‘competition, not show?’) the programme has seemingly created a ripple effect in the weeks that have followed with more and more people taking an interest in my work. The best and most tangible thing to come out of it however, is the contact I have made and the relationships I am beginning to form with other professional artists. In fact, later in the summer I’m returning to West Wycombe park with the artists I met at my episode and the others who featured there in episode 4 to stage a live (not online!) exhibition of our work from the competition and some of our other work at the National Trust house at the Park (I’m not sure what my Dad will say!). That’s a lovely and unexpected outcome.  In the meantime, I’m learning a great deal, not least that I’m not as good as so many of the artists I’m in touch with, and it is pushing me on to try and make my own work much stronger, be more critical and ask myself more questions about the work I do make and put out there. I’m making a lot of work at the moment, but a great deal of it I’m rejecting, painting over things to and try again and be more willing to try something different.  

Beckett’s famous quote: “Ever tried. Ever failed. No matter. Try again. Fail again. Fail better’’ seems to sum my experience up, as it does so much of anyone’s attempts to be creative and to try and do something worthwhile and fulfilling, which in the end my participation in the competition has proved to be. 

******

Can I move on now…? I’m sorry this has ended up reading more like a short story. It’s been difficult to write as I’ve been very conscious whenever people have asked me since what it was like my thoughts always come back to the difficult end to the experience. Yes, maybe I did lose perspective, but painting is so important to me, and I still think the judges should have taken the time to speak us with us all after how much work we had done. As an artist we are always made to feel grateful for any opportunity, and I felt that this was no exception and have had this said to me about this opportunity too, but as artists  our passion for what we do is also continually exploited. We have to exhibit for free, give up our time for free, often we have to pay to exhibit (!), appear in front of millions watching on Sky Arts for free and yet still be grateful. It will do our careers good etc. And we are, and sometimes it does and sometimes it doesn’t and on it goes…I’ve had so many experiences as an artist very similar to this over the years. I wanted this one to be a little different. I just wish that our skills, experience and passion for what we do was respected and treated a bit better sometimes.