Sunday, 14 October 2012

The Best Art Books about London and the River Thames

I've recently created a new website - The Best Art Books about London and the River Thames - which was prompted by review of the book Spanning the Thames: The River and Surrounding from the Barrier to Teddington Lock - see Book Review: Spanning the Thames.


It made me ponder on how many good books there are about artists who have painted London and I decided to try and assemble them all in once place.

My new website comprises my recommendations about the best art books about London and the River Thames. You'll find it has three main sections:
  • Art Books about London - these are ones which focus on places in London - often places people are trying to get to
  • Art Books about the River Thames - the theme of painting at points up and down the River Thames is a popular one and many artists have developed this theme
  • Artists and London - some artists are very closely associated with painting London eg Canaletto and Monet to name but two
It includes books by a diverse set of artists past and present
  • Edward Bawden CBE, RA (1903 – 1989) was a British painter, illustrator and graphic artist. (This is a link to the Edward Bawden Archive
  • David Gentleman - a very popular artist who paints London in pen and ink and watercolour
  • various artists who have produced sketchbooks of London
  • Plus books about the paintings, drawings and fine art prints produced of places in London by artists from the past such as CanalettoMonetWhistler and Dore.  
It also includes a lot of artwork related to transport in London.  There has always been a very strong association between good graphic art and its use on the London Underground, in stations and on posters around the capital.

I've not yet finished adding books to this website but this seems like a good start.  I've got the Camden Town Group on my "to do" group and am happy for people to suggest other artists whose artwork about London and the Thames should also be on this website.

I am also planning a guide to the guide books about seeing art in London!

Saturday, 13 October 2012

Book Review: Spanning the Thames

Spanning the Thames: The River and Surrounding from the Barrier to Teddington Lock

Reading Spanning the Thames: The River and Surrounding from the Barrier to Teddington Lockprompted me to think about the number of books there are about the Thames or reference art and artists who have painted the Thames which led to a new website - of which more in the next post!

The Best Art Books about London and the River Thames
Do you like drawings and paintings of London and the River Thames? If you do then you'll want to review the best art books which show you places in London and along the banks of the River Thames.





However, first my review of this book.  The list of artists whose paintings appear in the book is at the end

Title: Spanning the Thames: The River and Surrounding from the Barrier to Teddington Lock
Synopsis: This is a book about the tidal Thames - in paintings, drawings, prints, stories and historical anecdotes. Twenty five artists were commissioned to illustrate their favourite bridges and buildings along the Thames and this book is the result.  These are accompanied by a story or historical commentary by Michael Harrison  The title is of course a pun on the topic of bridges!
Summary review and recommendation: This is a small book for a small niche market.  Those who buy it are very likely to enjoy it a lot - although I'm not sure it will ever find a large audience. I enjoyed both the artwork and the history stories and the background information about the different bridges and buildings along the tidal Thames.  You think you know something - and then you see it in a completely new light and learn something brand new!
Highlights
  • excellent range of good artists - producing good paintings and fine art prints in a range of different ways using different media
  • the diversity in the artwork produced for this project. 
  • strong on figurative landscapes
  • no photorealism (why bother painting if you can photograph it to achieve this result?)
  • interesting stories
Think Again?
  • no artists of note from the past (ie Monet's paintings of London Bridges and the Houses of Parliament in the fog do not feature in this book!).  This isn't a negative but anybody wanting wanting or expecting such paintings need an another book
Who should buy this?:
  • people who love London and/or the the River Thames and/or marine art
  • people visiting London - it makes a great and unique souvenir
Who should not buy this?
  • those who don't like art and prefer photos
Author / (Publisher) Commentary and stories by Michael Harrison / Images by various artists / (Artists Choice Editions)
Technical data:
Publication Date 2008
Hardcover - 84 pages, 160 × 160, casebound with dustwrapper, £12.95
ISBN-10: 0955834309
ISBN-13: 978-0955834301

    Amazon.co.uk Spanning the Thames: The River and Surrounding from the Barrier to Teddington Lock
    Amazon.com  Spanning the Thames

    The list of artists whose paintings appear in the book are:



    Monday, 24 September 2012

    The Best Sketching Chair - An Update

    This is an UPDATE about the availability of the Phillips Folding Chair which I use for plein air work.  I've written previously about it
    I cannot recommend this chair highly enough for people who want a very good quality chair which will be robust, reliable and longlasting.
    My Phillips Folding Chair on a trip to sketch Walden Pond in Massachusetts in 2006
    A Reader's Query

    This morning I got an email from a reader of Making A Mark which asked as follows
    I've followed and loved your blog for quite a while. Now I have the opportunity to do a 10-day workshop pastel near Avignon in Oct. 2013 and am looking for a portable, comfy travel chair with back support. On your "what I pack when I travel" post you mentioned such a chair. Please can you share the brand? I'm in the U.S. but perhaps could find it over here.

    I took a look at the two links I'd previously provided to supplier in the references above and found that neither now led to a live website - partly because both suppliers have updated their websites!

    Here then is an update which goes along the lines of first the bad news and then the good news.

    I'm setting out the situation as per the different suppliers I know have had it in stock in the past

    Green & Stone

    This is how Green & Stone list the chair on their Portable chairs and stools page

    Phillips Folding Chair
    This product is currently unavailable
    Lightweight metal frame with strong canvas seat and back. Two heights
     
    Lo Luxe Chair | Weight 1.48kgSeat height : 40cm62.30
    De Luxe chair | Weight 1.6kgSeat height : 45cm63.25

    That means they do NOT have a folding chair with back support in stock.  They do however have three stools by Phillips available.  I'd certainly recommend Phillips as a good quality brand if you can get on with only having a stool.

    Heaton Cooper

    Since I last wrote about this chair Heaton Cooper have introduced a super duper new website for art materials and supplies.  This has a Seat Easels, Chairs and Stools page.  This does not have my Phillips Folding Chair - in its original incarnation - either.

    Phillips Bag Chair - available at Heaton Cooper
    However what it does have is the Phillips Bag Chair - listed as costing £54.50. The product description indicates the following:
    • Tubular aluminium frame, compact and easily portable with a shoulder strap.
    • Spacious integral bag with zipped side pocket.
    • Seat height 18 inch (46 cms), In green Cordura fabric
    Which means it keeps the tubular aluminium frame and the green cordura fabric (which is very strong).  The seat height is slightly higher (presumably to accommodate the bag).

    I can't find any other supplier online for this product - so if you're after a very reliable sketching chair with a back, then I suggest you give this product a review. The Heaton Cooper Website also allows you to Send To A Friend | Add to Wish List if you want to bookmark this for future reference.

    If you balk at the price, I'd just comment I have taken mine on several long haul international trips involving all sorts of carriers and apart from arriving a day late (to my door) on both American trips, it has had absolutely no mishaps.

    and finally......

    You too can ask me a question and I'll answer it to the best of my ability - or refer you to a person who can!

    Tuesday, 7 August 2012

    The Best New Art Books: May - July 2012

    I've updated The Best NEW Art Books for the period May-July 2012.

    I've not had time to update this site each month since March although nearly pulled it off twice! Hence I think what I'm going to be doing in future is display the best new books in the last three months and that way I'm updating a few at a time.

    I do however regularly maintain the following in which new books are listed by the month they are published - and you get to see which books are coming up for publication!
    The Main Changes

    Fewer art books from print book publishers: It seems to me that fewer art books are being published by the major publishers.  I can still see a lot of self-published books around but I'm not persuaded that many of these are high quality

    Manipulation of Amazon ratings: I've also observed what I regard as manipulation of Amazon.  One book in the list somehow managed to acquire 134 customer reviews within 3-4 days of publication.  When you see a very high number you have so fast you have to wonder what that was all about.  Is it genuine?  Who knows?

    The Kindlisation of art books continues.  I don't tend to list these as new books unless they have also been out of print for some time.  I've also still to see many publishers who have managed the transition from print to ebook successfully.  I've seen a lot which are "so so" and some which are downright poor.

    Did you know that Amazon now sells more ebooks that print books in the UK?  eBooks outsold print books in the USA4 years after the introduction of the Kindle.  It only took 2 years in the UK
    For every 100 print books sold through the site, Amazon said it sold 114 titles for its Kindle e-reader device.
    This of course is "hype" by Amazon as an awful lot of those who are reading ebooks - like me - are not dong this on a Kindle. We're using our iPads!

    Valentin Serov (Best Of Collection)
    The Best New Art Book

    Of all the books in the list I think the one I'm most interested in buying is about the Master Russian Impressionist painter Valentin Serov.  I keep trying to get to grips with the Russian painters and this particular one reminds me very much of John Singer Sargent so I should really try to find out more about him.

    Another reason is because the image websites don't have a lot of images of his paintings eg see paintings by Valentin Serov here

    I'm also quite intrigued by the "look inside" Blogging for Creatives: How designers, artists, crafters and writers can blog to make contacts, win business and build success by: Robin Houghton.  I don't there's much it contains for me to learn but I'm interested in how it's presented.

    You can see what I've actually bought this year in Making A Mark - My Book List

    More about Best Art Books

    You can find out more about my "best books" series of websites in Making A Mark's Art Book Lists


    Saturday, 21 July 2012

    Art Bookshop Review: Foyles (Charing Cross Road)

    This is a review of the Art Bookshop area on the second floor within Foyles Flagship book store at 113-117 Charing Cross Road in central London. Below you will find a review including photographs of the bookshop.

    Foyles Art Books
    about half of the shelving in the art section on the 2nd floor of this bookshop
    First a note for those who know the Foyles of old and have not visited for some time.

    I first started going to Foyles when I was a student in the 70s when it was ran by Christina Foyle.  It was a complete and utter maze interspersed by book stacks on the floor as well as the shelves.  It had the most books of any bookshop in London but finding them wasn't easy and the process of paying for them was completely antiquated and very slow.  As a result, it's one of the few bookshops that has made it into Wikipedia.
    Foyles was once listed in the Guinness Book of Records as the world's largest bookshop in terms of shelf area (30 miles/50 kilometres) and number of titles on display.[1] In the past, it was famed for its anachronistic, eccentric and sometimes infuriating business practices, so much that they made it a tourist attraction.[2]Wikipedia - Foyles Bookshop
    However all that was swept away and the shop has enjoyed a complete and comprehensive makeover.  The shelving is now exemplary and shopping for books is a complete pleasure.


    RECOMMENDED:  I'd go so far as to say this is probably my bookshop of choice for art books.  The only improvement I can think of would be the addition of a few comfy chairs and a rethink of the location of books on shelves relative to the demographics of its customers!

    Name of Art Bookshop: Foyles Bookshop
    (Branch) Address: 113-119 Charing Cross Road, London, WC2H 0EB
    • conveniently located for people visiting Oxford Street / Tottenham Court Road / Covent Garden / Leicester Square area. 
    • Two minutes from Tottenham Road Tube station (involves a walk around the CrossRail development between Centre Point and Tottenham Court Road Tube Station
    Website:
    Shop hours:
    • Monday - Saturday 9.30am - 9.00pm
    • Sundays 11.30am* - 6.00pm (*11.30am - 12.00pm browsing only)
    • Public holidays 11.00am - 8.00pm: Closed on Easter Sunday and Christmas Day
    • Easter Good Friday and Easter Saturday, normal hours apply; Easter Sunday, closed; Easter Monday, 11am - 8pm
    Telephone: +44 (0) 20 7437 5660
    Email: customerservices@foyles.co.uk
    Of interest to:
    • art students (beginners through to Higher Education);
    • amateur artists;
    • professional artists;
    • art lovers;
    • graphic designers; illustrators; typographers
    Major section on Art Theory and Aesthetics
    Highlights
    • very well laid out with good labelling; 
    • includes a “new books” section specifically for art plus a section on catalogues for current exhibitions
    • absolutely huge section devoted to art history and artists
    • biggest selection of books on art theory that I’ve seen in a long time (this shop is close to a leading art school)
    • good selection of books relating to art instruction targeted at amateur artists
    • very extensive sections devoted to graphics, design, type, illustration and photography
    • a selection of art DVDs - including fictionalised films about artists
    • very wide range of specialist art journals
    • lots of knowledgeable assistants and speedy processing of purchases
    • a very good bookshop for other books as well (the music and history sections kept my other half absorbed for over two hours!)
    ART DVDs and Catalogues for Current and Future Art Exhibitions
    specialist shelving features not often seen in art bookshops
    Think Again?
    • not for those who like their art “dumbed down”
    • you have to be able to bend down to see the art instruction books - Foyles might like to think about the fact that a lot of (less bendy) older people take up art in their retirement
    • a visit could get expensive - because you see so many books you want!
    Art Instruction books a little too low for my liking
    A bit too low for those whose backs and knees don't bend as well as they used to
    Art Instruction: Anatomy for Drawing and Portrait/Figure Drawing section
    Summary: This is the bookshop to go for art books if you like a good selection and you enjoy a better quality art book. I’ve got a very good awareness of art books in print and on offer and I was generally very impressed with the books they’d chosen to stock.  This is a very good place to start if looking for books on a particular art topic.

    A New Bookshop and a Move for Foyles


    Foyles is due to move to a purpose-built bookshop in the adjacent former Central St Martins building in late 2013 or early 2014. They are now actively involved in planning the design of the new bookshop.

    Their leasehold for site of this original bookshop is and other adjacent properties are being marketed for a very considerable sum. One can only surmise that this relates to taking advantage of the development of the new Crossrail station and retail hub at Tottenham Court Road

    Other art bookshops

    You can read other reviews of Art Bookshops in London in the following posts:
    Plus good art bookshops in the UK are listed in Art Bookshops - Resources for Artists

    Monday, 9 July 2012

    Ning's abysmal communication on billing

    I use Ning to provide a framework for online discussion groups about art. The framework they offer and the service they provide is great.

    However I have one MAJOR complaint about Ning. I complained about it last year - to Ning.  The situation is no better this year so I'm going to complain about it again - and this time I'm doing it in public.

    Ning's communication with respect to annual subscription billing is absolutely APPALLING!

    ABYSMAL is another word I would quite happily use.

    Communication is limited to a pop-up message on entry to the network.
    • There are no emails to the network owner prior to payment becoming due
    • There are no invoices delivered via email to the owner's inbox - PRIOR to payment.
    • Continued subscription is assumed and revisions to existing arrangements are made difficult for network owners due to the lack of information on the network dashboard
    • Payment can be made BEFORE an owner has had a chance to review the payment.
    Now as it happens I don't want to revise my current arrangements.  However if I did Ning doesn't give me much of a chance to do something about it.

     However as somebody who is very familiar with the proper statutory requirements and other good practice standards applied to systems for billing accounts I know that Ning's arrangements fall far short of what's required.

     I conclude that Ning's communication on invoices is very poor and below all reasonable expectations of standards for online payments.

     It made me think last year that there's a need for some sort of online financial systems ombudsman. I'm thinking the same thing again this year.

    This is the online billing enquiry they're receiving from me today.
    Please answer the following questions:
    1. Why does a responsible company not have a setting for account details and payments of invoices linked to an individual's personal account and/or the network account.
    2.  
    3. Why do you not communicate with the site owner via email in advance of the billing date with respect to annual billings.  I do not in any way regard a flash-up message when logging in as any sort of adequate substitute for proper communication.  For one thing there is no online record which is accessible to me that it has occurred.
    4.  
    5. Are your billing arrangements fully transparent and completely compliant with all statutory legislation and prevailing good accounting practice relating to the payment of bills for online services?
    I'd be very interested to hear about other people's experiences of Ning's Billing arrangements.


    UPDATE:  Here's the automated response which completely fails to address any of the questions asked. Like I said - their communication is abysmal!


    Hi there,

    Thanks for contacting us. You can view all of your account information, including your complete billing and invoice history, by signing in directly to Ning.com using the email address you used to create your network. You can also access your Ning.com account from the dashboard of your network by clicking "My Account." For any questions, please refer to our Help Center article located here: http://www.ning.com/help/?p=5859
    We hope this helps.

    Thanks,
    The Ning Team




    Monday, 18 June 2012

    Which is the best pastel ground?

    There are a wide variety of pastel grounds - and I've finally got round to listing them all out in a poll to find out from pastel artists which pastel papers or pastel boards they like the best.

    You can find the poll in a new "resources for artists" site I've created - Pastel Papers and Pastel Grounds

    This is the link POLL: Which pastel paper or other support do you like best for pastels?

    These are the options:
    • Ampersand Pastelbord
    • Art Spectrum Colourfix Paper
    • Art Spectrum Plein Air Painting Board
    • Art Spectrum Suede
    • Art Spectrum Supertooth
    • Canford Black Pastel Paper
    • Canson Mi Teintes Pastel Paper
    • Canson Mi-Teintes Touch - sanded texture board
    • Clairefontaine Pastelmat
    • Daler Rowney Murano Pastel Paper
    • Fabriano Tiziano Paper
    • Fisher 400 Paper
    • Hahnemuhle Bugra Paper
    • Hahnemuhle Velour Pastel Papers
    • Ingres Paper (various)
    • Richeson Pastel Paper
    • Saint-Armand Sabretooth paper
    • Schminke Sansfix
    • Sennelier La Carte
    • St Cuthberts Mill - Somerset Pastel Paper
    • Townsend Pastel Paper
    • UART Archival Sanded Pastel Paper
    • Wallis Archival Sanded Pastel Paper - Museum Grade
    • Wallis Archival Sanded Pastel Paper - Professional Grade
    • Watercolour Paper (various)
    • Winsor & Newton Tints Pastel Paper
    • Other (please comment below)
    I'm developing a systematic analysis of the range of pastel grounds on the website according to:
    • characteristics
    • made of
    • colours
    • size
    • consumer opinion
    This should make it easier for people wanting to consult the site to find out which pastel ground might suit them best.

    If you are a pastel artist could you please:
    • vote in the poll 
    • share your personal views as to the pastel ground you like the best - lave a comment below or on the website
    • let me know if you've ever reviewed a pastel ground - and let me have a link to the review
    • let me know if I've omitted a pastel ground which should be included in the poll!
    You can find out more about pastels and other papers and supports in two related websites:
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