I should have written about the
Annual Exhibition 2024
of the
Royal Society of Portrait Painters
(RP) last week - but my "mega spring clean" rather got in the way.
Suffice
to say this is one of the very best RP Annual Exhibitions I've ever seen - and
I'm very sure that those who have seen it have been broadcasting that fact far
and wide.
In fact, it's so good that I'd be very surprised if the The Portrait Award
Exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery (sponsored by Herbert Smith
Freehills) is any better.
How to see the exhibition
You can
see the exhibition at the Mall Galleries. The last day is 18th May and the exhibition is open between 10am and 5pm.
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View of the East Gallery from the Reception area - the semi circle is the commission area |
You can also see images of the portrait drawings and paintings hung in the
exhibition
on the Mall Galleries website
I've also now posted my albums of photos of the work in the show on my Making
A Mark Facebook Page - and you can view them there. These are:
-
North Gallery
- which mainly comprises most of the artwork by those who are not members of
the RP and who entered via the open entry.
-
East Gallery
- which includes some impressive work by non-members of repute as well as
portraits by RP members.
-
West Gallery - these are mainly be members.
You can also see all the artworks which won awards or were shortlisted or
received runner up awards on
this link.
RECOMMENDATION:
I recommend that all those aspiring to be selected for a future RP Annual
Exhibition should pay particular attention to the following when viewing the
artwork
-
this is a very competitive open exhibition. This year
the RP received 3,500 entries
(which is more than BP Portrait used to get!)
-
the kind of portraits selected for the exhibition - particularly
those by non-members. Also note my comments below about how portraiture
has changed over time and with this exhibition in particular
- the quality of the artwork - which is very high
-
the media used i.e. there are drawings in a variety of media as
well as paintings.
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North Gallery |
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North Gallery |
I saw the exhibition on Private View day - which is actually not the best
day to see the artwork. That's because of the very high number of visitors
which an exhibition like this generates.
-
You've got artists and their friends and families, plus sitters, plus
people who get invited to these things - like me.
-
It is however the very best day for talking to people and seeing people
you've not seen in a very long time.
Or in the case of
Joshua Donkor, who I've not seen since 25th April when I met him at the RBA Rising Stars
exhibition as one of the young artists shortlisted for the Rome
Scholarship!
I really liked his painting of his grandmother with one of her grandchildren
- there are so few artists who can portray black skin in all the wonderful
colours it can be - but Joshua can! I also liked how he built in echoes of
the past in terms of photos which are suggested in the background. It's much
more complex and layered than is suggested by only a quick glance.
He also received a Highly Commended Award for The de Laszlo Foundation Award
for the most outstanding portrait by an artist aged 35 years or under
|
Worlds Apart
by Joshua Donkor (in the North Gallery - middle room)
|
I've been hanging on all day to find out who won what re the two biggest prizes for portraiture - but cannot find anything yet....
I'll add it in here later......
Review of the Exhibition
Overall, this is an exhibition which displays one genre - portraiture - of a very high standard - with a wide diversity of subjects, styles, sizes and media.
It's very much changed and developed since I first started reviewing the annual exhibition 15 years go.
(see the end for links to previous reviews).The RP contains a broad collection of stylistic and intellectual approaches that continue to make a significant contribution to the ongoing tradition of portraiture in Britain today. The Society looks to uphold the values and practices of its long and distinguished history, but at the same time, it seeks to explore and develop new artistic models and perspectives. (Catalogue)
Given this exhibition is about portraiture, the artwork leans heavily towards realism although a lot does not try to look photographic.
I was very impressed. Some of the artworks were not to my personal taste - but the standards of execution were uniformly high and some portraits were - whether by RP member or open entrant - of the very highest standard
The exhibition includes 241 portraits. Of these:
- members of the RP are showing around about 100 portraits - and I noted not all members are showing an artwork.
- There are 125 artworks selected from the open submission and
- the remaining artworks are by artists who have been invited by a member to exhibit.
One of my tests of how good an exhibition is revolves around how well I can
remember it after I've seen it. I have an excellent visual memory for things I like and with good exhibitions
I can take a tour around and see it again in my head - as attested by those who
have commented on my ability to remember particular artworks and where they were
hung in an exhibition in the past!
Rather than review it the same day - or even the next - I often now review it
a little later to see which artworks are still shouting for attention in my
head.
This review will highlight some of these below
Commissions: the end of the "stuffed shirt"
This is an exhibition which aims to celebrate the best in contemporary
portraiture.
Interestingly it's also an exhibition where I think very high
quality entries from the open submission have influenced members over time.
As I commented last year, the main aspect of the exhibition which immediately struck me is how much it
did NOT look like exhibitions in earlier years which have, on occasions, had rather
too many stuffed shirts relating to formal commissions from
organisations.
While understanding that:
- commissions are a portrait artist's "bread and butter" income
- this exhibition is very much a marketing exercise for members of the RP
-
most commissions tend to come from significant organisations who like to
record the people who've headed them up
however it's interesting how the personality and the profile of the person being
portrayed is now much more evident in portraits. In general, they are now much less
formulaic as in "this is what we normally do..."
Of course, the more you show variation in how you can paint for a commission,
the more you get more interesting commissions as people endeavour to inject their
personality into the painting.
One of the people who has led the charge to become more flexible in how people
are portrayed is
Alastair Adams
who is a Past President of the RP.