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From Birds, magazine of
the Royal Society for
the Protection of Birds. August - October
2008.
I do most of my bird watching at
work. A s a landscape painter, I cannot really
avoid it. My last two shows were based on a single field in north
Essex. This field is farmed like a factory: barley, rape, wheat,
year on year, so my on-the-job birdwatching is modest, and I can
confirm that fields like this do not support a wealth of birdlife.
Yet there are birds about, and when I see them I am usually mixing
oil paint, trying to paint the place they live in, and I sometimes
paint them in too.
My starting point as a painter is that
I do not know what is there until I have looked.
This goes for everything: colour, shape, texture, scale. But
because my paintings are built up from distinct mixes of colour,
the most important of these is colour. Every last bit of the
landscape has to be converted into a mixof some sort. So, if a bird
flies past and I want to include it, the first thing I do is
identify and mix its colour. If you know your birds, you might
think this should be easy enough. Blackbirds are black,
greenfinches green, and blue tits are blue and yellow with bits of
black and white.
Well, actually, no. A blue tit can look grey, cream, green or
black, or be just
plain invisible. Blackbirds can be violet-grey; greenfinches
almost orange. It is
a point most painters understand, but do all birdwatchers? And, if
you are not
sure about it, is it possible you are missing other things about
colour in nature?
I think we have to look because there really is nothing quite
like xperience. As a painter, I am partisan. I think painting can
help us notice things in a unique way, that can help us see birds,
you might say, in a different light. Landscape painting is a way of
representing a visual environment. If I see a bird, I am very aware
that its colour exists inside the colours of the environment around
it. This might sound an odd way to put it, but consider how colours in a painting are
accumulated.
A colour in a painting is like a note on a
stave. It has no value except in relation
to the other notes. Its character and expression come by
comparison
with all the notes around it. Painters sometimes talk about trying
to paint in
key, so the black of a blackbird on a branch in daylight
might have to be
compared with the colour of oak bark in shadow directly behind it.
This could
mean comparing a violet-grey (the bird) with a black-brown (the
bark). Assess
these colours one against the other, mix them, and they will both
be in key.
They will look right partly because you have taken into account
what are
called effects of simultaneous contrast. The darker tone will have
made the
lighter tone look lighter, and the warmer colour made the cool
colour look
cooler. By capturing this, you will correctly paint a violet
blackbird, and it will
look just right, unlike a black blackbird.
A bird in a landscape is like a note in a piece
of music. The same bird
flying through a different landscape will be part of a different
piece of visual
music. Its colour will be different, and if you are trying to
paint it you will have to
mix a new colour by comparing it with other new colours. Not
surprisingly,
observational painting can make you think about why colour
perception is so
unstable. And it certainly makes you take with a pinch of salt the
idea that a
blackbird is always, at all times, black!
Another reason why colour shifts is that illumination changes. And
there’s
much more to illumination than just the brightness of things in or
out of the
sun. Different kinds of illumination fall on objects: there are
many kinds of
direct light and an incredibly rich array of reflected lights from
every direction,
each with its own distinctive colour. Outdoors, there is direct
moonlight,
reflected light from water and rock, transmitted light through
leaves . . .
Each of these lights will change the appearance of object colours.
For
example, green light under trees makes green leaves look even
greener but
pink bark browner. Direct light passing between leaves introduces
a yellower
light, and there will be reflected lights everywhere. Inside an
oak canopy, it is
quite possible for the yellow on a blue tit to look green, so a
predator with
colour vision would have less chance of seeing it.
The colours we see on a bird, then, carry information about
illumination.
With practice, a painter can paint the colours of objects combined
with the
colour of the light falling upon them. By careful mixing you can
build in
common colour components of the illumination, so the painting will
have
something of the natural light you see. Painters that love the
light of nature
try to do this all the time. It is a challenge. It is a particular
challenge because
you can never predict what the combinations of colour and light in
the natural
world will actually look like.
But, you may be thinking, birdwatchers use images that predict
bird colour
all the time, after all, that is what traditional field guides
are, page after page
of predictive pictures. So it is all very well for a painter to go
on about shifting keys and lights, but if bird colour in the
landscape varies so much, How do field guide
painters select their colours? And why do painted field guides
work?
Since the earliest illustrators, artists whose main interest was
identification
have tried to neutralise effects of illumination by concentrating
on what are
sometimes called local colours. Perhaps the best way to
do this is to work from a dead or stuffed bird in fairly neutral
light, such as you get from daylight
through a north facing window in a traditional studio. It can also
be useful to
have some kind of white sheet in view as a neutral reference.
Colours for the
different parts of the bird are then mixed by comparing each
colour with other
colours on the bird, without looking at anything in the
immediate
environment that could affect the perception, except perhaps the
white. In this way, it is possible to paint groups of colours that
will more or less describe the
pigmentation of an individual bird. It is the way that
Audubon worked, for
example, after he had shot his specimens and taken them
indoors.
Most field guide illustrators are interested in visual
classification by order,
family, genus and species. This means the colours of a bird on the
painters
table may have to be compared with the colours of a very similar
bird, which
at first glance looks identical. For example, is the brown on the
back of a
common sandpiper lighter or darker than the brown on the back of a
spotted
sandpiper? Do artists for such guides have a pile of sandpipers in
all their
plumages (eight) in the studio? Or all the British gulls?
(Sixty-seven if you
count summer, winter, adult and juvenile plumages.)
I asked some specialist bird
artists about this. It turned out that, yes,
many
field guides have been made using the many skins, bird skins
mounted on
a stick and stretched out, that are available. The national
collection is held at
Tring, and there, professional illustrators can compare and paint
sandpipers
and gulls in a way that will minimise effects of context and
lighting by taking
out the coloured illumination, contrast effects and light and
shade of the real
world outside. The birdwatcher using such a guide has a basic
colour chart for his birds, but should be aware that they will be
subject to continually
varying effects.
It is worth realising just how carefully each bird has to be
compared with
the next. Alan Harris, responsible for many excellent pages in my
own more
traditional field guide, gave me an idea of this when told me of a
plate of
sparrows. He had made painted notes for the page from skins in a
museum,
but when he came to use the notes in the studio he made the first
bird slightly
too dark. Correctly comparing one sparrow with the next, by the
time he got
to the darkest one it was so dark it looked like a different
species. He had to
change them all.
This kind of attention is necessary to distinguish different
species, and I
love the kind of illustration it produces. What strikes me about
the colour is its
lack of daylight and its slightly fixed look. But I do not think
this is a bad thing. Quite the opposite. The birds look like what
they are intended to be: sets of
attractive coloured shapes to be read relative to one another in
an ideal world
of pages: family, genus, species. What is more, in spite of their
contrivance, I
usually find the colours perfectly useful.
As readers of Birds will know, identification is rarely made by
colour alone.
Shape, flight, call, behaviour and location all play a part; and
the more
experience you have the more these begin to work together. Because
natures
colour changes all the time, we cannot expect exact matches
between the colour on the page and the bird in the field. For
identification, colours in a field guide
are just another clue. And because the artist has skilfully
removed illumination
and contrast effects, and set them out in ranks on a plain page,
these birds
do not claim to look particularly real. This lets in other
things.
You see small changes as part of a taxonomic scheme, so you see a
big
idea alongside the individual. And there is an important other
side to this.
Because these little pictures do not try to look like experiences,
you could say
that they leave you exposed to experience. They do not confuse the
issue. They complement your thoughts about looking; they do not
claim to look for you.
Of course there is plenty of room for other kinds of bird
illustration, and
very useful too. Photography, in particular, plays a major role in
modern field
guides. Photographs are now probably the commonest form of imagery
on
the planet. So how useful is photographic colour in a field
guide?
Artists such as Stephen Taylor strive to capture
the changing
effects of light and circumstance. Alan Harris, when illustrating
a
field guide or technical publication, tries to eliminate them,
so
that accurate comparisons can be made: in this case (below
right)
between various races and ages of skylarks (from The Skylark,
by
Paul Donald, courtesy of A & C Black). Photographs of
skylarks,
all of the same race, show how such comparisons would be
much more difficult photographically as the intensity of hue
and
pattern can be so strongly influenced by external factors.
 
In everyday English
photographic still suggests accuracy. But
accurate colour may not identify a bird. The
colours captured by modern digital cameras can be very accurate
indeed, but they will show just how variabl colours in the outdoors
are. It can be impossible to make a positive identification from a
single photograph, which is why guide books often show several
images of the same species in different conditions. Some websites
show many shots of a single bird for the same reason. Which brings
us back to violet blackbirds and orange greenfinches. Photographs
incorporate the illlumination effects that traditional illustrators
seek to eliminate. They also show contrast effects with the
environment: a reed warbler against green reeds will look reddish
and in evening light, redder still.
The field guide designer has to find typical images, which can be
very
difficult with a camera. Wildlife artist Robert Gillmor put it to me this
way:
The photographers bird is an individual. It might be seedy
that day. It might be
being blown about. It could be between plumages, or making
odd
movements; and as for the lighting! Two photographers
photographing the
same bird in the same minute will produce two different coloured
birds.
Photographs are clearly a wonderful way to show new aspects of
birdlife.
But I think they should come with a health warning: To be taken
in
moderation. For identification, the more individually perfect the
photograph,
the less it will look like the particular bird you are looking at:
the photographers bird is an individual, as is yours.
And all this super real digital impact is seductive. It can tease
us into
feeling the image is something it can never be: a real experience:
which is
probably the source of the oddity that I find with bird guide
photography.
Those little ersatz patches of reality are so very unlike the
all-surrounding,
shifting, visually messy experience of nature. And I personally
think they can
get in the way.
Do not get me wrong. Used well, photography can reveal things.
It can open
eyes and minds. Photography can be both useful information and
excellent
art. But it is precisely because digital imagery is now so good
that the
production values can mislead. No, it is not a bird, it is pixels.
It’s a mechanical reproduction. The experience of nature cannot
be confined to screen or print. Birdwatchers and landscape painters
spend a lot of time outdoors, and
experience helps. Over the past few years, I have met some expert
birdwatchers, including a few serious twitchers, and in spite of
awesome optics, pagers and
almost publishable notebooks, I have still not met the caricature
tick-list anorak. As a painter, what strikes me about expert
birders is not so much the checklist as their openness to the
natural world, especially their sense of how
everything they see is somehow provisional.
Identification can be a delicate business. Which way is the wind
blowing?
What are the odds in this sort of ground cover? Maybe it is a late
moult? Would you see two together? Is that a blue-green or a
blue-grey? The idea that nature
is changeable and unpredictable is built in to the way expert
birdwatchers see.
It could be this, it could be that. And sometimes you just cannot
tell at all.
Acquired knowledge of appearance and behaviour, of predictability,
is used
outdoors to interpret the unpredictable. And the sheer trickiness
of seeing
nature is surely part of the fascination.
Landscape painting teaches you that
nature is elusive. Possibly only
painters know just how much acquired knowledge and technique goes
into
making a picture out of a few moments of experience. And in my
view, the
best observational painting gives us a sense of having caught
something, so
to speak, on the wing.
To do this you have to have a sense of the painting being made, to
be
reminded that the paint on the surface, though finished, emerged,
and that
the scene, though captured, will change. This is part of the
fascination of
painting, and perhaps it is what draws me to add birds to my own
pictures.
Seen within a landscape, the shifting colours and shapes of birds
seem to me
a perfect metaphor for movement, beauty and not presuming to
know.â-
Editor, Rob Hume.
Alan Harris, illustrations of various races and ages of skylarks
(from The Skylark, by Paul Donald, courtesy of A & C Black.
Copyright, Stephen Taylor, 2009.
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