Home  Works Galleries  Biography  Publications  Contact Jonathan
Publications

"In Wild Places"
- Essay by Robin Capon

"Sublime Wilderness" - Essay by Kevin Dagg

"Jonathan Shearer - New Paintings"- Essay by Georgina Coburn
   
In Wild Places - "Artist" Magazine, May 2009

Jonathan Shearer’s powerful oil landscapes portray remote wildernesses.  Robin Capon discovers what drives his urge to paint.


Landscape Painting has an impressive history and tradition in Britain and it is encouraging to find there are still artists who feel an affinity with a particular type of landscape and are able to communicate this in an original and interesting way. For Jonathan Shearer, it is the awesome power and poetry of wild, unspoilt landscapes that is his inspiration and, as with Turner, McCulloch and McTaggart (artists whom he particularly admires), his work skillfully combines perception, emotion and expression with a sensitive concern for painterly qualities.

The connection with the landscape, its history and special sense of place, are aspects that are fundamental to Jonathan’s work,such that every painting originates from oil sketches and drawings made on site. For him, the advantages of working on site lie as much in the physical and emotional experience of being there as in the opportunity to capture an expression of those experiences in paint.

Remote, and invariably shaped by the drama of light and weather, his landscapes belong to an undisturbed, sublime wilderness. They are landscapes dominated by natural forces and, in turn, in his large canvases he works with a similar sense of urgency and energy to convey the distinctive mood and atmosphere of each scene. With their ‘ebb and flow’ of paint, these are evocative, engaging landscapes, but more than this, they are paintings charged with a strong spiritual quality.

‘Speed is essential when working outside–if you spend too much time on a sketch or painting, you lose the sense of what is happening,’ Jonathan explains. ‘I like each painting to be readily identifiable to the particular location, yet equally it must be true to my feelings and response, which I think gives it an integrity. Consequently the result won’t necessarily be an exact representation of what I saw. And although my aim is to capture the moment, conversely I also think there is a timeless quality about such scenes.

‘Generally my subjects are wild places, away from the obvious tourist spots. Ideally, I look for landscapes unaffected by man, although with forestry and other activities that sort of primeval landscape is increasingly difficult to find. Occasionally I do include man-made elements–perhaps the remains of a stone wall, a croft or some farm buildings–and these create a telling sense of scale within the vastness of the landscape. But what I prefer is that feeling of isolation; of being submerged in a landscape that has a resonance of history, although perhaps no visual evidence of mankind.’
.
In the last few years Jonathan’s paintings have been inspired mostly by locations in the Highlands and west coast of Scotland, including sites on Mull and Iona. He travels all over Scotland, usually concentrating on a different area at a time and so building up a body of work for each solo exhibition. Other favourite locations include the Crianlarich Hills, Rannoch Moor and Glen Coe, all of which are not far from his studio in Perthshire.

‘I need to get to know a place before I can paint it,’ Jonathan says, ‘and initially I spend a lot of time walking, looking and contemplating. Also, I like to revisit locations at different times of the year and in different weather conditions. The weather is a major influence in my work and usually I am looking for something dramatic. If it is a calm, sunny day I tend to find it a bit bland! I have also painted in other remote areas of the country, including the Yorkshire Moors, as well as in Andalucía, Spain.

The choice of subject is an instinctive thing. when I am in the landscape I know where I want to paint–it just feels right. I take all the necessary equipment with me, including a portable easel, small canvas boards and a sketchbook. Sometimes I walk for long distances, at other times, particularly if the weather is bad, I workfrom the side of the road or from the back of my van. The van is fitted out as a sort of travelling studio, with racks to hold paintings and other equipment.’

On site Jonathan works on small canvas covered boards or canvases, often just 5 x 7 inches (13 x 18 cm) in size but sometimes slightly larger and proportionately more horizontal in format. As in the studio, essentially he uses a wet-into-wet technique, painting onto a surface that is initially brushed all over with a mixture of linseed oil and Zest-it (an environmentally-friendly alternative to turpentine). The wet surface gives him the freedom to apply paint and move it about very quickly; to draw with the paint and respond sensitively to the unfolding mood of the subject before him.

‘A small oil study of this type will normally take about ten minutes,’ he explains. ‘The biggest hurdle for me to overcome is the temptation to start adding detail, so I limit myself to a certain amount of time. The studies will be related, but not necessarily made at the same location. Like the weather, I am fairly restless, and if I exhaust the potential at one site, I move on elsewhere. From a day’s work I usually produce between ten and thirty oil sketches, and as additional reference I take a lot of digital photographs.

Vigour and Expression
From the groups of studies made on site Jonathan selects the ones that will be useful in the studio to develop as larger paintings which, as with Loch Gairloch for example, can measure up to 7 feet or more in size. For these paintings he uses stretched linen canvas which, as explained, is wetted all over with a mixture of linseed oil and Zest-it. To suit the scale and vigour of the work he uses very large brushes, including hogs,rounds, household and glazing brushes (he has around 200 brushes in his studio), as well as rags and his hands and fingers. His palette normally includes 16 colours, although this can vary, depending on the particular subject matter. The sequence of colours (anti-clockwise, from the bottom left of the palette) is: titanium white, lemon yellow, yellow ochre, raw sienna, burnt umber, raw umber, burnt sienna, vermilion red, cadmium red, ultramarine blue, cobalt blue, cerulean blue, viridian green, terra verte and, sometimes, alizarin crimson.

‘Attempting to copy the oil sketch on a much larger scale simply would not work,’ Jonathan comments. ‘The painting would lose its vitality. Instead, I use the sketch as a reference and combine this with my feelings and recollections of the subject, which leads to a much more exciting and interesting result. ‘Again, I work frantically and energetically; I can block in the basics of the large canvas within a couple of hours. Generally the brushwork is bold and gestural. Sometimes the paint runs and drips, but I am quite open to accept accidental effects of that kind if they contribute to the painting.

‘Finished or not, there comes a point when it is necessary to put the painting aside for a while and work on something else. I may leave it for a week or perhaps as long as two months. when I will reassess it and decide whether any further work is required. If so, the likelihood is that the painting will completely change. But I avoid further work if the momentum is lost, because in my view painting must always be an emotional, vigorously expressive process.’

Jonathan Shearer studied at Gray’s School of Art, graduating with a BA (Hons) Painting and Drawing in 1993, and also at Cyprus College of Art, for the post-graduate Diploma in Painting and Drawing, from 1995–1996.Over the past decade his work has been exhibited regularly in selected and solo shows at a wide variety of well-known galleries, including MacLean Fine Art, London; Strathearn Gallery, Crieff; and Castle Gallery, Inverness. Jonathan has won a number of awards for his work, including two Royal Scottish Academy awards and the Fundacíon Valparaiso Residency, Spain. His paintings can be found in many private collections in the UK,US, Cyprus and South Korea, as well as in corporate and public collections such as those of British Midland Airways, Royal Scottish Academy, Royal Cornhill Hospital and Highland Council.

All text and pictures © Jonathan Shearer 2010