Wednesday, August 13, 2025

Portrait Award 2025: The 10 portraits I liked the most

This is a post about the ten portraits I like the best in the Herbert Smith Freehills Kramer Portrait Award 2025 at the National Portrait Gallery. 

I've been reviewing the Portrait Award at the NPG since 2008 (see end)
  • I generally walk out of the Awards Night Viewing knowing which portraits have made a big impression on me - and they are not necessarily the winners. (see Moira Cameron wins the £35K HSF Kramer Portrait Award at the National Portrait Gallery)
  • It's then interesting to go back the next morning for the Press View morning to see whether I still think the same
  • I then get to think about the portraits again when I'm writing Portrait Award 2025 - Artists with their paintings - but of course that, in part, depends on whether the artist was there and could be spotted (some artists have not yet worked out yet that the buttons they are given to wear can generate them publicity!)
  • I visited again earlier this month to see whether I still felt the same. This time to also make sure that I looked at every single portrait properly - because sometimes the impression you get depends on size and where they are hung - and my list changed!
I think it very likely that one of the ten portrait paintings you can see below will be the winner of the Visitor's Choice Award.

I'm also still waiting to hear which artist, from last year's exhibition and this one, has won the award of a commission by the NPG......

The Ten Portrait Paintings I liked the best


A strong "blokey" corner of the exhibition

I've got two lists. The one I wrote down after the Press View and the one I wrote when I visited the exhibition again at the beginning of this month. Nine are the same - I changed just one (and I'm not going to say which!). 

You will find bios for most of these artists in my last post about artists with their paintings.

So that says something for my taste I guess and/or the impact of the paintings listed below.

I need to emphasise that my personal view is that, in general, you need to know the person to want to hang a portrait (as opposed to a figurative painting) in your own home. It's very rare to create a portrait of a person which you would hang as art as opposed to a painting. Which is not to say portraits are not good art - but does serve to explain why portrait commissions are the life blood of most portrait painters.

It's a challenge to make people really interested in a portrait......
Those entering this competition must ponder long and hard about what makes a difference....

Do not read anything in to the order of the portraits presented below. There is nothing significant about the way they are listed, however I have decided to group them by size.
  • Big
  • Small
  • Large Medium
  • Small Medium
At this point I will comment that I think the National Portrait Gallery does all of the artists a major disservice by failing to state on the website or the label in the gallery what the dimensions of the portrait are. It essentially means online viewers have no idea whatsoever which are large and which are small.

It's one of the reasons I feel the need to do my post about artists with their portraits. That's because there is a HUMONGOUS DIFFERENCE in the size of different selected portraits - but you'd never ever know it if all you had to go on was the images on the website!

It was also impossible to buy the catalogue (which, from recollection, had the dimensions) when I went back - because they'd run out! How can you run out of a catalogue which is on exhibition for another 11 WEEKS?!! 

(PS Same thing had happened with the Jenny Saville Catalogue. I think somebody in NPG catalogue ordering needs a performance review and/or retraining!)

The Big Portraits I liked

Friday, August 08, 2025

Ever thought of using AI to help with your artwork?

This is a bit of a weird one.

You may have realised by now that I'm very much against AI as a substitute for artists making art using their own hands and eyes.

However it occurred to me earlier this week that maybe there is some scope for AI in art.

I first wrote about AI and painting back in May 2023 in this post - which is still a recommended read (see more at the end of this post)

RECOMMENDED: Duane Keiser on AI and Painting
Duane Keiser has been writing recently on his blog about the advent of AI and whether it is a serious rival to painting 'for real'.

Would you use AI to help with your "hand and eye" art? 

Anyway, first here's what I said on Facebook - by way of this query......

Ever thought of using AI to help with your artwork?

This was my explanation for the post

So…… Would you be interested to give it a try?
Or is this a complete anathema for you?

The question is a thought which occurred to me while listening to “The Rest is Entertainment” podcast (very educational surprisingly!) - and they were discussing how the first AI model has now appeared in Vogue!!

Or as Conde Nast put it “NOT in the editorial content” (i.e. it was an advert)

They then went on to discuss how much time and budget eg retailers would save commissioning AI models….

Who remembers the Taylor Wessing Photographic Portrait Prize in 2017 when one of the portraits selected was 100% computer generated i.e. android!!!
Read Breach of rules - Taylor Wessing Photographic Portrait Prize 2017

This is the question which appeared on the YouTube version of Q&A Edition of The Rest is Entertainment "Was Vogue Wrong To Publish A Fake Model?"

and this is the video followed by the questions asked.

Monday, August 04, 2025

Call for Entries: Society of Wildlife Artists - Annual Exhibition 2025

If you want to enter the 62nd Annual Exhibition by the Society of Wildlife Artists the deadline for entries is 12 noon on Friday 22nd August 2025. (Apologies for this being rather later than usual)

In my opinion, one of the best annual art society exhibitions at the Mall Galleries every year is that by The Society of Wildlife Artists. 

That's because 

  • it's uncompromising about favouring artwork which has been created after studying your creature from life (i.e. it is very much NOT a fan of the type of hyperrealist artwork done from a photo without ever seeing the animal or studying it in the wild)
The Society of Wildlife Artists seeks to generate appreciation and delight in the natural world through all forms of fine art inspired by the world’s wildlife.
  • displays artwork in a wide range of art media (paintings, prints, drawings, sketches, sculpture, ceramics and other 3D artwork)
  • highlights a wide range of styles and colour palettes
  • includes artwork developed from projects undertaken by the society and its artists during the year
It is emphatically not boring!

Plus it also has that huge asset known as a solid set of followers and collectors who are both faithful to their preferred artists and are also very interested in new art by new artists.

"The Natural Eye" Annual Exhibition 2024 by the Society of Wildlife Artists
West Gallery at the Mall Galleries

Call for Entries: 'The Natural Eye'


It's worth remembering that it's not coincidental that the name of this annual exhibition is "The Natural Eye". This connects to the emphasis which the SWLA places on artwork conceived, started and sometimes developed to completion while observing wildlife "in the field / sea / air" (past CFE post on this blog)
You can find detail of the Open Call for Entries for the SWLA Exhibition on the Mall Galleries website.

Below this post covers:
  • what sort of artwork the SWLA want to see submitted by open artists
  • images needed
  • online submission only
  • who can enter
  • what you can enter
  • how to submit
Plus pics of the last exhibition and links (at the end) to my blog posts about previous exhibitions and the type of artwork hung.

Key Dates are as follows
  • Submissions open: Friday 23 May 2025, 12 noon
  • Submissions close: Friday 22 August, 12 noon
  • Notification of selection: Friday 5 September, 12 noon (log in to OESS)
  • Receiving Day (if selected): Saturday 4 October, 10am to 5pm
  • Private View (invite only): Wednesday 15 October, 2pm to 8pm, official opening at 3pm
  • Exhibition opens: Thursday 16 October, 10am to 5pm daily
  • Exhibition closes: Saturday 25 October, 5pm
  • Collection of unsold work: Thursday 30 October, 10am to 5pm

"The Natural Eye" Annual Exhibition 2024 by the Society of Wildlife Artists
End wall of the West Gallery at the Mall Galleries

What kind of image should you submit

The Society is seeking works that depict wildlife subjects and evoke the spirit of the natural world.
The Selection Committee welcomes:
  • All forms of two and three-dimensional artwork based on representing the world’s wildlife
  • Artists with fresh visions that show imagination, artistic ability, originality and creativity
  • Artworks that reveal a personal experience or true understanding of the subject
READ the "Exhibit with us" page on the SWLA website which provides excellent advice
 

Who can submit

Any artist aged 18 or over may enter, from anywhere in the world.

(If you are an international artist, you need to read the section on VAT)

What type of artwork can you submit - and what will get rejected

Sunday, August 03, 2025

CORRECTION: Landscape Artist of the Year 2025

Recently I received an enquiry from somebody in Canada who was trying to read through all my blog posts about Landscape Artist of the Year which was broadcast earlier this year.

I’m having a problem with the LAOTY 2025 episode reviews, as the links don’t seem to be working. All the review links just go back to episode number one. Hoping you can do a fix? I enjoy reading your reviews after watching the episodes. I’m starting to despair about the judges, and appreciate your reasonable critiques!
Ben McGregor with his Commission Painting

Yesterday I sat down and fixed them all - on all the posts. 

I've tracked all the correct links down and reinserted them in the post about the Final https://makingamark.blogspot.com/2025/03/ben-macgregor-wins-landscape-artist-of-year-2025.html - and republished it

So here is the full set of links to episodes and my posts about LAOTY 2025 
Plus 
Here's the video of Ben MacGregor with his commission at the Courtauld


Not quite sure how the mishap with the links happened - but it did - and it certainly explains why these posts got rather less readers than users. I always include the links at the end to help read through the previous ones! Hence this correction!

Thursday, July 31, 2025

Winding down for summer - and what I've been up to

You may have noticed I'm posting less.  This is why and what else I've been doing.

It's very much a response to 

  • a remarkable run of good weather - and a marked preference for being out and about and visiting places we love (mainly gardens!) rather than indoors writing!
  • an extremely busy time between May and now with various important exhibitions that I love and meeting up with lots and lots of artists I tend to only see once a year
  • getting older - as very busy times - with lots of photography and lots of writing - leave me rather more tired than I'd like
  • a need sometimes to take "a breather" - time out from a regular routine for more "head space"
Plus as the school holidays come along, you all disappear on your holidays! So fewer people reading and responding (via Facebook to what I post).

So this is by way of saying I'm going to continue to post through August - but it will continue to be infrequent - before September revs back into action!

Anyway, here's a few photos of what I've been getting up to since May

I've also uploaded a phenomenal amount of photos I've been taking in exhibitions to albums on my Facebook Pages since May. - see Making A Mark (FB) and Botanical Art and Artists (FB)

With three of my fellow Judges of the SBA Fellow Art Grant Award
at the Society of Botanical Art (SBA) Annual Exhibition Plantae 2025
at a special PV on 27 May

This week, I've been drafting revised guidelines and application form - for review - for the next SBA Fellow Art Grant Award which opens for applications in September - when, as Head Judge, I give an online talk about it. Which I've yet to write!

With Sarah Gardner SBAF - and her painting which was a joint winner of
the CPGFS Botanical Art Award - at the PV for Plantae 2025

August is also my month off from being Treasurer of the Chelsea Physic Garden Florilegium Society!
The Society of Botanical Artists' 40th Anniversary exhibition Plantae 2025 is probably the biggest and best botanical art exhibition by an art society that I have seen in years.
See