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Felicity House, "Almuna Terrace - Andalusia, Spain," 2012, various soft pastels on Art Spectrum, 9 x 12 in. Sold. A fast pastel at the end of a teaching week.

Felicity House – A Spillage From Head, Hand, And Heart

As we know (especially if you’ve read my monthly roundups), pastel can be applied in soooo many ways. One of these methods is applying pastel in a more linear way. And one of the artists I greatly admire who uses this style is Felicity House. I’ve featured her work in previous roundups – Nov 2015 and Feb 2018 – and was eager to have her as a guest blogger. So I’m delighted to introduce you to Felicity House!

Don’t know her work? Here’s a teaser!

 

Felicity House, "Red Peppers in a Bowl," 2018, lots of watercolour + pastels on Art Spectrum paper, 8 x 9 in. It’s in a pile somewhere so available. That's a problem with pastels - storing them safely in paper folders, they become invisible! I’ve quite a collection of ceramic bowls .... we found this chipped Japanese glazed bowl in the market at Sommières. It works really well as a colour contrast with any red/orange fruit or vegetable!
Felicity House, “Red Peppers in a Bowl,” 2018, lots of watercolour + pastels on Art Spectrum paper, 8 x 9 in. It’s in a pile somewhere so available. That’s a problem with pastels – storing them safely in paper folders, they become invisible! I’ve quite a collection of ceramic bowls …. we found this chipped Japanese glazed bowl in the market at Sommières. It works really well as a colour contrast with any red/orange fruit or vegetable!

 

Felicity House Bio

Following a career in Education, Felicity House worked as an illustrator, and as a tutor of life drawing and art courses for adults. Such flexibility gave her the opportunity to paint for herself and to travel and fill numerous sketchbooks. Felicity discovered the versatility and immediacy of pastels. In 2003, she was elected a member of The Pastel Society.

She teaches occasional workshops for The Pastel Society and exhibits in their Annual Exhibition at the Mall Galleries in London. Felicity holds an Exhibition & Open Studio at her home during the biennial Dorset Art Weeks and exhibits regularly in the Royal West of England Annual Exhibition in Bristol, and in London at the Discerning Eye and New English Art Club Exhibitions. You can find out more on her website

Now here’s Felicity House!!

 

~~~~~

I‘ve always been a draw-er, wielding a pencil to enclose mind shapes (i.e. imaginative drawings) was what I loved, endlessly creating visual narratives on book end papers, and until discovered – on the wall behind my bedroom curtains.

I loved art at school – painting and making. Post-war the expressive arts were given big chunks of classroom time …and I was encouraged. I enjoyed looking at pictures …book illustrations and paintings. But art school wasn’t my career route and I trained to become a primary school teacher which really took up my life! Later when my own children were growing up I signed up for some evening classes and got hooked on drawing and painting again.

 

Felicity House, "Nutmeg Reading," 2008, charcoal pencil and pastels on Hannemüle transparent paper 10 x 8 in. Eldest granddaughter immersed in reading ... fast work to capture. I’ve kept this one.
Felicity House, “Nutmeg Reading,” 2008, charcoal pencil and pastels on Hannemuhle transparent paper 10 x 8 in. Eldest granddaughter immersed in reading … fast work to capture. I’ve kept this one.

 

I may not have been to art school but from then on managed my own art training on the hoof accessing classes where I could. Pre www., I wrote to artists who I admired to find out where they were teaching and then signed up for their classes to learn from them.

 One short course I attended on watercolour was with the artist Barry Watkin in Somerset. I noticed his pastel paintings hanging on the walls and these made me look twice as they were coloured drawings but had crossed the drawing boundary into the realms of being paintings.

 

Felicity House, "View to the Solent, Hampshire," 2016, assorted pastels on Art Spectrum paper, 9 x 11 in. Available. Wonderful day spent painting from the garden of a dear friend.
Felicity House, “View to the Solent, Hampshire,” 2016, assorted pastels on Art Spectrum paper, 9 x 11 in. Available. Wonderful day spent painting from the garden of a dear friend.

 

I was intrigued .I wanted to make these coloured drawings. I got myself some pastel kit and also began attending life drawing classes. Ive been smitten with both pastels and figure drawing ever since.

 

Felicity House, "Model with Cats," 2017, conte pencils on Art Spectrum paper 6 x 8 in, Available. 20 minute drawing ... of course there was only one cat!
Felicity House, “Model with Cats,” 2017, conté pencils on Art Spectrum paper 6 x 8 in. Available. 20-minute drawing … of course there was only one cat!

 

In using soft pastels I always liked it that you held the colour in your hand. No brushes to get between you and the surface. Pastel was both the drawing tool and the means of making colour and tone the mark making possibilities were as versatile as a pencil. By pressing hard or light, by soft layering of gentle strokes of colour, you could create instantly in a fresh and vibrant way or you could be subtle and build up colour gradually.

 

Felicity House, "Pomegranates and Plums," 2012, assorted pastels on Art Spectrum paper 6 x 12 in. Sold. My Christmas card design 2012.
Felicity House, “Pomegranates and Plums,” 2012, assorted pastels on Art Spectrum paper 6 x 12 in. Sold. My Christmas card design 2012.

 

Pastel was so immediate and quick. Being a full-time school teacher and mum that was a good thing as free time for art was limited. So I took to pastels and in time boldly entered for the Pastel Society Annual Exhibition in London and had a small drawing of radishes accepted which was encouraging.

 

Felicity House, "Provencal Vegetables," 2003, pastels on Art Spectrum paper, 12 x 12 in. Sold. An early still life work.
Felicity House, “Provencal Vegetables,” 2003, pastels on Art Spectrum paper, 12 x 12 in. Sold. An early still life work.

 

Every now and then I took a day course run by Pastel Society members Victor Ambrus, Claire Spencer, John Tookey, Patrick Cullen, Moira Huntly, John Blockley, Tom Coates. How fortunate to be taught by such inspiring artists. I always took on board what these artists generously shared and my own practice gradually emerged. It was a synthesis of what worked for me.

 

 

Felicity House, "Red Jackets," 2007, assorted pastels + Pitt charcoal pencil, Faber Castell, 24 x 18 in. Sold. Of course there was only one guy in costume ... rather like the Degas ballet girls in different poses.
Felicity House, “Red Jackets,” 2007, assorted pastels + Pitt charcoal pencil, Faber Castell, 24 x 18 in. Sold. Of course there was only one guy in costume … rather like the Degas ballet girls in different poses.

 

All these artists valued sound drawing and I persisted with improving my drawing skills and would make a 15-minute drawing every day before going off to a day of school teaching. That and regular life drawing classes meant I developed a fluency which enabled me to observe accurately but deliver spontaneously.

 

Felicity House, "Figure Back View," 2017, pastels on PastelMat, 9 x 12 in. Sold
Felicity House, “Figure Back View,” 2017, pastels on PastelMat, 9 x 12 in. Sold

 

At that time I was fortunate to be part of a group of friends that met each year to have a week of figure painting with fabulous models. Also, when I left school teaching, I went once a week for several terms to the Royal Drawing School in Shoreditch London. My favourite course was The Clothed Figure‘ with tutor Susan Wilson.

 

Felicity House, "Russian Girl," 2007, assorted pastels on Colourfix paper, 24 x 18 in. Sold. A figure study made at the Royal Drawing School in London. Lovely set up.
Felicity House, “Russian Girl,” 2007, assorted pastels on Colourfix paper, 24 x 18 in. Sold. A figure study made at the Royal Drawing School in London. Lovely set up.

 

So in my own way, I had an intensive, if piecemeal, art training from tutors who I admired and learned from, and worked amongst others who were equally enthusiastic about drawing and painting. Sound drawing has always stood me in good stead; the understanding of tonal values developed gradually over time.

I work with pastels directly from a variety of subjects and edit intuitively. If you only have limited time to respond, you focus and concentrate on what interests you most. The selection becomes intuitive and perhaps is what makes your artwork particular to you.

 

Felicity House, "Dog in the Fish Market, Venice," 2014, pastel pencil drawing + some pastel including Sennelier gold on the flag on Art Spectrum, 7 x 9 in. Sold. Made fast. I loved the red handled knives for gutting the fish & the dog waiting for scraps.
Felicity House, “Dog in the Fish Market, Venice,” 2014, pastel pencil drawing + some pastel including Sennelier gold on the flag on Art Spectrum, 7 x 9 in. Sold. Made fast. I loved the red handled knives for gutting the fish & the dog waiting for scraps.

 

There is nothing like the urgency of knowing you have to leave a location in a short while or a model being due to finish posing, to trigger those well observed but energetically delivered marks.

 

Felicity House, "Blustery Day at Mudeford Quay," 2005, various soft pastels on Art Spectrum, 14 x 17 in. Sold.
Felicity House, “Blustery Day at Mudeford Quay,” 2005, various soft pastels on Art Spectrum, 14 x 17 in. Sold.

 

My Working Method and Materials

I underpaint tonally with a neutral watercolour to plot things in and establish any strong darks. This also conserves the tooth of the paper rather than filling it with too many layers of pastel. Of course, it’s a totally moveable under-structure and may shift once the pastel starts. I begin with gentle strokes of colour gradually building up and I regularly return to correct the drawing – perhaps with a pastel pencil.  I’m quite graphic – I like lines.

 

Felicity House, underpainting in neutral watercolour + pastels for "Greenhouse Nerines," on Art Spectrum, 26 x 19 in. The tap was tough.
Felicity House, underpainting in neutral watercolour + pastels  for “Greenhouse Nerines,” on Art Spectrum, 26 x 19 in. The tap was tough.
Felicity House, Greenhouse Nerines, pastel on Art Spectrum, 26 x 19 in. Sold I think. The pink nerines were fluorescent in the low winter light, marvellous shadows, a race against time.
Felicity House, “Greenhouse Nerines,” pastel on Art Spectrum, 26 x 19 in. Sold I think. The pink nerines were fluorescent in the low winter light, marvellous shadows, a race against time.

 

As to materials, with paper I’ve tried many but always return to Colourfix by Art Spectrum which is card, screen-printed with a mix of acrylic + pumice so it takes an underpainting. It comes in terrific colours. My favourites are soft umber, australian grey, and blue haze. I like Colourfix paper because the texture is there but it’s not coarse, and lines work on it.

I use various brands of pastels: Unison Colour, Daler Rowney, Rembrandt, Schmincke, Sennelier. I also use pastel pencils: Carbothello, Caran D’ache, and Pitt Pastel pencils.

 

Felicity House, "Early Morning Le Croisic, France," 2015, assorted pastels on Art Spectrum paper 9 x 11 in. Available. Something special about these lovely quiet French streets.
Felicity House, “Early Morning Le Croisic, France,” 2015, assorted pastels on Art Spectrum paper 9 x 11 in. Available. Something special about these lovely quiet French streets.

 

Since leaving full-time school teaching where one taught all subjects on the curriculum, Ive taught Life Drawing classes at the Arts University in Bournemouth and short art courses at West Dean College, near Chichester in Sussex. I enjoyed this teaching of art and my school teaching experience helped me think hard about the learning that would take place in each session and the sound processes involved in getting there.

Such was the flexibility of teaching short art courses rather than a full-time school curriculum that it fortuitously gave me the opportunity to travel to paint and fill numerous sketchbooks.

 

Felicity House: making charcoal tonals in a sketchbook. On location at Ahmet Haveli, Udaipur.
Felicity House: making charcoal tonals in a sketchbook. On location at Ahmet Haveli, Udaipur.

 

Felicity House, "Blue Verandah at Ahilya Fort, Madhya Pradesh, India," 2011, various soft pastels on Art Spectrum, 14 x 19 in. Sold. Found a cool spot to work.
Felicity House, “Blue Verandah at Ahilya Fort, Madhya Pradesh, India,” 2011, various soft pastels on Art Spectrum, 14 x 19 in. Sold. Found a cool spot to work.

 

Felicity House, "Temple on Lake Pichola, Udaipur, India," 2008, assorted pastels over watercolour underpainting on Colourfix Art Spectrum paper, 8 x 10 in. Sold.
Felicity House, “Temple on Lake Pichola, Udaipur, India,” 2008, assorted pastels over watercolour underpainting on Colourfix Art Spectrum paper, 8 x 10 in. Sold.

 

My Current Inspirations

In recent years Ive been able to travel to some amazing locations with painting specifically in mind: France, Italy, Portugal, and India. I love seeing new places with a fresh eye and allocating time to paint away from the distractions of domesticity has always been a real treat. The spillage of work from these trips has been great.

 

Felicity House, "Boys Fishing - Lake Nagin, Kashmir," 2013, assorted pastels on Art Spectrum paper 9 x 11 in. Available. One of my favourite pieces.
Felicity House, “Boys Fishing – Lake Nagin, Kashmir,” 2013, assorted pastels on Art Spectrum paper 9 x 11 in. Available. One of my favourite pieces.

 

Felicity House, "Ceremonial Entrance Gwalior Fort, India," 2014, assorted pastels + watercolour underpainting on Art Spectrum paper, 19 x 15 in. Available.
Felicity House, “Ceremonial Entrance Gwalior Fort, India,” 2014, assorted pastels + watercolour underpainting on Art Spectrum paper, 19 x 15 in. Available.

 

Felicity House painting this colourful Sadhu (holy man) in Orchha, India, 2014.
Felicity House painting this colourful Sadhu (holy man) in Orchha, India, 2014.

 

Ive refined a neat kit for travelling and working with pastels on the hoof.

 

Felicity House: portable kit - pastels + pastel pencils as explained in text.
Felicity House: portable kit – pastels + pastel pencils as explained in text.
Felicity House: kit for travelling to paint away ... it’s all packed in main suitcase, then on arrival goes in the red canvas holdall for carrying to painting places.
Felicity House: kit for travelling to paint away … it’s all packed in main suitcase, then on arrival goes in the red canvas holdall for carrying to painting places.

 

Back at home, I take the opportunity of working on complex interior scenes when I can – always other peoples – so I have to finish at the end of day There is a fascination about the arrangements of furniture and collected objects that belong to others. I enjoy the challenge of relating one item to another and absorbing the sense of place.

 

Felicity House, "Two Rooms," 2014, assorted pastels + charcoal pencil on watercolour painted Mountboard, 20 x 25 in. Sold. Standing in the hallway between kitchen and dining room - at a friend’s house.
Felicity House, “Two Rooms,” 2014, assorted pastels + charcoal pencil on watercolour painted Mountboard, 20 x 25 in. Sold. Standing in the hallway between kitchen and dining room – at a friend’s house.

 

Felicity House, "Winter Table," 2011, assorted pastels + charcoal pencil on watercolour painted Mountboard, 20 x 25 in. Sold. Friend’s dining room. Crossword puzzle being done at the table.
Felicity House, “Winter Table,” 2011, assorted pastels + charcoal pencil on watercolour painted Mountboard, 20 x 25 in. Sold. Friend’s dining room. Crossword puzzle being done at the table.

 

Wet days and winter months might mean a still life set up in the studio: I enjoy making arrangements with meaningful objects Ive collected – together with patterned fabrics and thinking about shapes, colour harmonies, and contrasts.

 

Felicity House, tonal watercolour underpainting for "Flowers in the Celery Jar," on Art Spectrum paper ‘Sand ‘ colour, 20 x 16 in. Watercolours: Indigo + Permanent Rose.
Felicity House, tonal watercolour underpainting for “Flowers in the Celery Jar,” on Art Spectrum paper ‘Sand ‘ colour, 20 x 16 in. Watercolours: Indigo + Permanent Rose.
Felicity House, "Flowers in the Celery Jar," assorted pastels on Art Spectrum paper - sand colour, 20 x 16 in. In a Gallery Exhibition. Love finding haphazard objects to place in the composition.
Felicity House, “Flowers in the Celery Jar,” assorted pastels on Art Spectrum paper – sand colour, 20 x 16 in. In a Gallery Exhibition. Love finding haphazard objects to place in the composition.

 

Food subjects are another favourite. As a keen cook who makes marmalade each January I always work on a pastel version of making marmalade with the ingredients and jars and the wonderful Seville oranges which brighten a winter’s day.

I wrote down a recipe from the cookbook, The Bangala Table, compiled by The Bangala, a hotel famous for authentic local food, where we stayed in Chettinad, Tamil Nadu, India. The chutney was absolutely delicious and the ingredients made a wonderful picture in my mind so on my return home I gathered the ingredients together – visiting an Indian shop for the special spices, curry leaves and ripe mangoes. They’re arranged on a piece of Indian hand-dyed cloth. Good memories of great Indian flavours.

 

Felicity House, "Making Mango Chutney," 2015, assorted pastels on Art Spectrum paper, 18 x 24 in. Available.
Felicity House, “Making Mango Chutney,” 2015, assorted pastels on Art Spectrum paper, 18 x 24 in. Available.

 

The vegetable paintings are always spontaneous …. things I’ve bought that I can see need painting however swiftly. So many lovely things to paint.

 

Felicity House, "Podding Peas for Dinner," 2017, assorted pastels on Art Spectrum, 8 x 11 in. In a gallery. I don't think it's sold.
Felicity House, “Podding Peas for Dinner,” 2017, assorted pastels on Art Spectrum, 8 x 11 in. In a gallery. I don’t think it’s sold.

 

Fish are lovely to paint and then cook for supper. I always enjoy responding to their beautiful shapes and colours. If the working might take a few hours I place them on a plate over a dish of ice.

 

Felicity House, "Sea Bass for Supper," 2015, assorted pastels on Art Spectrum paper. 7 x 10 in. Sold. Ready to cook.
Felicity House, “Sea Bass for Supper,” 2015, assorted pastels on Art Spectrum paper. 7 x 10 in. Sold. Ready to cook.

 

Last year I was fortunate to spend time on location responding to the walled gardens at West Dean in Sussex.

 

Felicity House, underpainting for Walled Garden at Edmondsham. Plotting the composition, blocking in, establishing some tonal contrasts.
Felicity House, underpainting for Walled Garden at Edmondsham. Plotting the composition, blocking in, establishing some tonal contrasts.
Felicity House, first steps with the pastel, Walled Garden Edmondsham. Here is the tray that fits on to the Frank Herring lightweight easel with my four tubs of pastels in ground rice: Lights, Mid-tones (Warm . Cool), Darks.
Felicity House, first steps with the pastel, “Walled Garden Edmondsham.” Here is the tray that fits on to the Frank Herring lightweight easel with my four tubs of pastels in ground rice: Lights, Mid-tones (Warm . Cool), Darks.
Felicity House, "Walled Garden at Edmondsham," 2018, various pastels on Art Spectrum paper, 21 x 17 in. Currently in studio. One of our hottest summer days and I was glad of my sunshade, heavenly garden to spend time in.
Felicity House, “Walled Garden at Edmondsham,” 2018, various pastels on Art Spectrum paper, 21 x 17 in. Currently in studio. One of our hottest summer days and I was glad of my sunshade, heavenly garden to spend time in.

 

Currently responding to this combination of subject matter works for me – the occasional travel opportunity, still life and interiors, and the pleasure of working in beautiful gardens.

 

Felicity House, "Lavender’s Blue," 2017, assorted pastels on Art Spectrum paper 11 x 14 in. Sold. Hot summer day last year at a lovely English country house with topiary in the garden. The light was lovely on the topiary shapes.
Felicity House, “Lavender’s Blue,” 2017, assorted pastels on Art Spectrum paper 11 x 14 in. Sold. Hot summer day last year at a lovely English country house with topiary in the garden. The light was lovely on the topiary shapes.

 

And of course returning regularly to the important discipline and ultimate challenge of figures and portraits.

 

Felicity House, "Young Girl with Folded Arms," 2002, various pastels on Canson Mi-Teintes paper, 12 x 12 in. Quite an early portrait done at an afternoon portrait class.
Felicity House, “Young Girl with Folded Arms,” 2002, various pastels on Canson Mi-Teintes paper, 12 x 12 in. Quite an early portrait done at an afternoon portrait class.

 

When the weather is good I paint on location. I go to life class and draw from the figure regularly. If the weather’s awful I might set up a still life in my studio.

My recent open studio meant I probably didn’t work for three months with all the preparation etc. I get lots of work done when I’m away from home. Same as most people, we all have to do chores, admin, and domestic stuff. So doing the artwork has to fit in.

I work from life. I honestly believe looking, noticing, selecting, and responding are what making art is all about, and why not learn by making drawings and paintings from the wonderful things there are about us.

 

Felicity House, "Cordon Apples," 2013, assorted pastels on Art Spectrum paper, 9 x 18 in. Sold at my recent Open Studio.
Felicity House, “Cordon Apples,” 2013, assorted pastels on Art Spectrum paper, 9 x 18 in. Sold at my recent Open Studio.

 

Felicity House, "Waterlilies from the Shade," 2018, assorted pastels on Pastelmat, 12 x 15 in. I only had the right colour paper in Pastelmat for this picture, a paper which doesn't do what I really like with the pastel ... you can’t move it too freely. Anyway it came out as it did an impression of branches and reflections.
Felicity House, “Waterlilies from the Shade,” 2018, assorted pastels on Pastelmat, 12 x 15 in. I only had the right colour paper in Pastelmat for this picture, a paper which doesn’t do what I really like with the pastel … you can’t move it too freely. Anyway it came out as it did an impression of branches and reflections.

 

Perhaps people want instant everything these days and are not prepared to put in the donkey working hours needed to learn and improve. I’m sad about that as working from photos just isn’t the same as being present.

I need and like to be present, to absorb everything in the time I’ve got – an inhalation and then a spillage from the head, hand, and heart.

 

Felicity House, "Campo Santa Maria Formosa, Venice," 2015, assorted pastels on Art Spectrum paper 9 x 11 in. Sold. My favourite square to paint in Venice - lovely vistas, always interesting.
Felicity House, “Campo Santa Maria Formosa, Venice,” 2015, assorted pastels on Art Spectrum paper 9 x 11 in. Sold. My favourite square to paint in Venice – lovely vistas, always interesting.

 

I do enjoy taking photographs but for me, that’s a different art form altogether. Perhaps I’ll make use of reference photos in the future but I’m not rushing.

If I want to develop ideas or make further paintings later in the studio then I’ve plenty of sketchbooks full of drawings and fast paintings made firsthand to work from.

 

Felicity House, "Pomegranates at Las Figures," 2016, assorted pastels on Colourfix Art Spectrum paper, 11 x 9 in. Available.
Felicity House, “Pomegranates at Las Figures,” 2016, assorted pastels on Colourfix Art Spectrum paper, 11 x 9 in. Available.

 

~~~~~

 

In awe. That’s me.

What about you? What are your thoughts and feelings after seeing this work by Felicity House? We would LOVE to hear from you. So please leave a comment.

Also, do feel free to ask Felicity House any questions you may have.

Until next time!

~ Gail

 

Here is the recipe book Felicity House mentions above:

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Comments

95 thoughts on “Felicity House – A Spillage From Head, Hand, And Heart”

  1. What a way to close out the day! The work by Felicity is stunning with such a range. I am so grateful to have the opportunity to savor and be inspired by her work. Got the “juices” flowing!!

    1. Just makes my heart sing.
      Her work is that of a true artist,so heartfelt and inspiring.I have followed her for a number of years but lovely seeing all that work together along with the blog…Big thankyou Gail.
      Gwendolin Lewis

      1. Ahhh Gwendolin, a woman after my own heart. Yes yes yes!!
        And you are so welcome. It is my honour to showcase Felicity’s work!

  2. Hi Felicity…I enjoyed the variety of your work with various styles and I think your set up for working outside is especially good. What is the pole called that holds up your drawing board? Is there a special name for it or is it something you created?

    Thanks.
    Sheryl

    1. Thank you so much Sheryl , so glad you enjoyed the article.
      The easel equipment is from Frank Herring & Sons a nice old fashioned family firm in UK quite near me in Dorset.
      The main easel is called the Herring Versatile Easel + Metal Tray for Versatile
      then the travelling one is called the Herring Stick Easel
      …. when it’s best to sit out of the way or in a boat, then that Stick Easel is the best thing!

  3. Wow is right! This was wonderful and Felicity was so generous in her descriptions and sharing her thoughts on her work. There is so much life and emotion in her work! They are absolutely delightful and this was so inspiring to read. Thank you!

    1. So glad you found Felicity’s post inspiring Helen. And I agree about the life and emotion. You feel like you’re there don’t you? I could hardly wait to publish it!

  4. What a treat, beautiful colours and line. Fish, walled garden and lavender probably favourites but so many more delights. Seeing the few colours in those tins to choose from to get such satisfying results is awesome. Elipse on top of celery jar a bit distracting. Thank you for sharing such a joy.

  5. This was a wonderful article by Felicity Post. Her introduction to pastels, her learning journey and the stunning examples of her work made it a sheer pleasure to read. Thank you for posting this, Gail.

  6. The main thing that interested me was the quality of drawing that remains on view, integrated with the softer pastel….it gives the pictures a delightful casual, sketchy feel….but they are of course beautifully observed and totally complete in themselves. That one of Mudeford Quay….being in England, I know it well, and it really is just like that on a windy day! I did catch on to one of her statements in particular…”observed accurately and delivered spontaneously”….now there’s a real challenge, to not record every last detail! Please thank Felicity for mentioning that tray with a Frank Herring easel…I have the easel but didn’t know you could get a tray for it! Lots of wonderful work, thank you for sharing.

    1. Yes Chris! You describe her work beautifully. And thank you for bringing that phrase to our attention as it also describes Felicity’s method so well. As you say, a challenge for us all 🙂
      Love too that you shared your own experience of Mudeford Quay.

  7. OH MY GRACIOUS GOD!! I just sign in this morning and looked at this email first (as I usually do!) and this truly is the first artist that so completely overwhelmed me! I just kept scrolling thru to see the next one. Tonite I’m gonna go back and read it all and study the paintings more….probably have more questions then.
    So unique, so different, so gorgeous! Thank you thank you thank you for sharing this one!

    1. LOL Charlotte!! And a huge, you’re welcome!! I feel the same way about Felicity House’s work and so you can imagine my joy when she agreed to guest post!!! Delighted you were bowled over. Look forward to questions….

  8. Breathtaking! I love this combination of drawing and painting – at the same time these paintings make me painfully aware of the fact that I am still at the beginning!
    Thank you Gail for introducing so many wonderful painters in your blog, also August’s favourite ten like Jan Munro. It’s always a highlight when I get mail from you! 😀

    1. Gabriela yes, I too love that combination of drawing and painting – using the pastel to it’s fullest potential! And yes, I know what you mean about feeling like you are the beginning!
      So happy to hear my emails are a highlight. Always GREAT motivation for me!

    2. Gabriela yes, I too love that combination of drawing and painting – using the pastel to its fullest potential! And yes, I know what you mean about feeling like you are the beginning!
      So happy to hear my emails are a highlight. Always GREAT motivation for me!

  9. Lovely work, Felicity! I really enjoy your figures and still lifes and plein air pieces. So inspiring! Thanks for featuring her on your blog, Gail. Such hard working artists make me want to run back to my own easel and paint. Good stuff.

    1. Yay Marie!! Especially the part about running to your own easel to start painting! We all need this kind of inspiration once in a while to get us back to our creating.

    2. Thank you Marie, that’s appreciated. We all need inspiration, I guess my subject matter is a realistic choice for many. Keep on with the pastels!

  10. I am one of many fans of Felicity’s work and I am delighted to have this wonderful insight into her method and training. I will treasure this, as I do my own FH original painting, bought earlier in the summer.

    1. I’m so glad Felicity’s post enlarged your enjoyment of her work Paula. And lucky you to have an original – I’m working on being in that position myself!! Self-reward lol!

  11. Dear Felicity, thank you for sharing your wonderful work in this blog. I am currently struggling to find the way I want to use pastel (the style of mark making and control) and I find your vibrant and dynamic approach really engaging. I always end up putting too much pastel on the paper, and while I had played a little with watercolour underpainting I must admit to not being sure how to make it useful. Again, your tips and examples have shown me a way forward. Thanks again, and I love the way you name and describe your paintings … your blog made me smile 😄👍❤️

    1. Kerrie, it warms my heart to hear that Felicity’s work and words have helped you find a path forward in your own work. That is my reward. I’m sure Felicity will will feel similarly when she reads your comment.

    1. Thanks Susan!! It was such a treat to have Felicity House as a guest on HowToPastel and I feel rewarded by the enthusiasm of comments such as yours!

  12. Oh my. I have spent quite awhile longer than I usually do with this blog. Her work has such a freshness and captures so much with such spare strokes. I will look again and again. I’m wondering how can someone learn that? My own art journey has been similar with lots of workshops, but probably more of a hodgepodge of styles and genre so I’ve struggled with finding my own vision. I admire the linear aspects as I love to draw as well which is why I work with pastels— hate brushes. Love the immediacy of color. Such a beautiful body of work which should be put into a book sometime so we could admire again.
    Thank you, Gail, for your ongoing searches for such inspiration and the variety you find which can touch the hearts of our pastel world.

    1. Sally love your idea of a book and hope Felicity will act upon that idea one day – I know she’d have a lot of purchasers! In the meantime, we have this wonderful guest blog.
      I understand your struggle with finding your own vision and way of expressing it. So much of that develops from doing the work day in and day out. Be inspired, experiment, and put pastel to paper. Since you enjoy the linear quality of pastel and since you connect so much with Felicity’s work, why not focus on incorporating more of that linear quality in your work? Also, if you don’t already, try working from life! You see more of what’s there and express more spontaneously when you work this way.
      Thanks for commenting 🙂

  13. I am familiar with the Felicity House’s work but the breadth shown here is amazing. I particularly love the interiors and the cooking scenes, close to my own heart. And a cookbook recommendation, too! A wonderful and wide-ranging post, thank you; makes me think I really should give Colorfix another try!

    1. Yes, the breadth!! I had the most difficult time choosing pieces for this post and really, I gave up very few! I admire and find such pleasure in Felicity’s work that I wanted to create a storehouse of them together with her words here on HowToPastel.
      Like you Jane, I’m now considering giving Colourfix another try….

  14. This post was most inspiring! I was not familiar with Felicity House’s work but will be a follower from now on. It was wonderful to learn about her process and thoughts about working from life as well as her belief in the importance of a good base in drawing skills. Thank you Gail for inviting her to be a guest blogger. I will print this and refer to it often, I’m sure.

    1. Susan, LOVE that I’ve been able to introduce you to the work of Felicity House! I’m so pleased to have her as a guest blogger and to have this opportunity to share her vision both in image and words.

  15. Wonderful!! What a unique style Felicity has. Her paintings are done so loosely and yet very detailed in many of them. Another inspiring artist!! Thanks Gail!

    1. You are welcome Ruth! And yes, you’re right about Felicity House’s style – I think I could recognise it anywhere! It’s a great combo, as you say, of loose and detail. Such observation and then expressing it in such a fresh, spontaneous way!

  16. Beautiful work.

    Thank you so much Gail for doing this.

    You are inspiring – with your work, energy and enthusiasm.

    Your blog is something I always look forward to – in depth coverage and comment.

  17. I really love the honesty, spontaneity, and varied subject matter of Felicity House’s art! The combination of painting and drawing in her paintings brings to mind the experience that many have when viewing sketches or “unfinished” works at a museum and the enjoyment at seeing the “hand of the artist”. Felicity House allows the viewer to experience both in her work! Wonderful post!

    1. Mary, love your comment and your relating Felicity’s work to sketches and unfinished work in museums. Those ‘hand of the artist’ pieces are always my favourites! (In fact, if I had gone on with my academic studies, that would have been my field of research.) And like you, I delight in the way Felicity combines painting and drawing with such immediacy.

  18. I really like Felicity’s ability to catch the sense of place and atmosphere. She is right on about being able to draw and how important that is to any painter. I recently saw a movie about Van Gogh and how he was obsessed with getting the perspective correct. He had to teach himself how to draw and worked at it his whole “short” life.

    1. You got that right Betty, about Felicity House’s ability to capture a sense of place in her work!
      Thank you too for your reference to Van Gogh and his drawing experience.

  19. Your illustrative skills are so evident here. Leaving sketch lines and the watercolor underpainting make your work unique. I have experimented with PH. Martin inks for underpainting but they are very strong colors. For more delicate work, it looks like I should break out the watercolors again. Many thanks for this very comprehensive post.

    1. Love that you remind us to look more closely at how Felicity House uses watercolour underpaintings, with a subtlety that is seen and yet unseen in the final piece. Look forward to seeing your experimentations with watercolour Andrea!

  20. How inspirational!! Love all the lines. But I’m confused. Does Felicity do the charcoal drawing first and let the lines show through the pastel? Or does she do the pastel and add the lines at the end? If the lines are charcoal I would think they would smear if done first. Love the looseness of her paintings! Thank you for taking the time to share.

    1. Tami – thanks for your question. There are one or two works in that collection where I’ve used a charcoal pencil first then touches of pastel colour (as with the child reading) but I’d say mostly I start with broad strokes of pastel colour and build up, then I might check the drawing and correct it, possibly with charcoal pencil but more often a pastel pencil – see the tap on the Greenhouse Nerines.

  21. Gorgeous works, I really like her style, particularly what someone else referred to as the “sketchy” feel. I tend to think I ought to reproduce scenes/items in meticulously rendered detail (getting really bogged down as a result and ending – if I finish it at all – with a laboriously created and essentially dull end piece) but I can see here that that’s not required in order to produce a finished item which is both true and oozing with life. An inspirational blog as ever.

    1. Jan, I think so many of us have the tendency you describe, especially if we work from photos. Working from life does bring an urgency that helps keep work fresh. Thank you so much for sharing your own artistic frustrations with us with such honesty. Love your words – “oozing with life!”

  22. OMG! I’m in love with line all over again! This encourages me to pursue that which is more natural to me: the lines of sketching mixed with a hint of color. Thank you, Felicity. I’ll be watching you more closely.

    1. LOL Amy!! I think of your work as essentially linear – so part of your style. So it’s interesting (and curious) that you would need encouragement to do more of what I see IS your way of working. Happy that you found support and inspiration in Felicity’s work 🙂

  23. Thanks for this presentation of Felicity House’s works. Each painting is a potpourri of lines, marks and colors that come together to delight the eye. In some of interiors I couldn’t leave the painting for a while as I wanted to see everything in the scene.
    The watercolor underpaintings merge so well with the pastels. I am so inspired by these works and love the almost “old world” feel as when the impressionists sketched and painted so many scenes. The colors are wonderful.
    My new favorite artist.

    1. Sandi I so know what you mean, especially about the interiors. One just wants to sit and absorb every line, every object, every feeling. LOVE that Felicity House is now your new favourite artist 😀

  24. Stunning and deceptively simple! They look like sketched pastel pieces without much thinking, yet once you look closely you notice how complex they are. I love how, in many of them, she makes at least one color go zing! You’re automatically drawn to it and go from there to notice everything else, and how it just goes hand in hand with that zing.

    I would love to try this style, but I realize I can’t draw well enough to even consider it. Felicity is a masterpiece artist!

    1. Maria thanks for your close observations of Felicity House’s work and noticing that ‘zing’ and what it does for each painting. And yes, ‘deceptively simple’!

  25. Mary Davis sent me your Blog Felicity. It is absolutely wonderful and very inspiring!
    I do a drawing class every week, usually just using charcoal, but maybe I can try experimenting with pastels! I love the work that you did in India especially, maybe because I attempted to paint some of those places myself using gouache. Wonderful, wonderful that you have captured so many places in your travels and that there is so much inspiration for creativity in every day life too. I am also in awe too! Amazing!

    1. Patricia, thanks for your comment (and a thank you to Mary too for sharing this post with you)! Love that you go to a drawing class every day. How exciting that you are thinking of adding pastels to your drawing tools! Do let us know how that goes.
      And love hearing about your own paintings in gouache while travelling!

  26. What a WOW blog! Felicity, your work is enchanting! I love the paintings that have very subtle color except for a few vibrant splashes. The line work is delightful. Thank you Gail for posting this, and thank you, Felicity, for sharing such an amazing variety of subjects and styles.

  27. Such an inspiring post! I really was on the brink of giving up on pastels as a medium, having problems with the way to handle them and always seeming to end up with way too solid pictures. Felicity’s drawings give me new hope, thank you both!

    1. Oh oh oh, Felicity to the rescue!! Martine, I am unhappy to hear you are thinking of giving up pastels but delighted that seeing Felicity’s work has convinced you to give them a second chance. Perhaps trying a more ‘drawing’ method will help. Note all of Felicity’s pastel pencils along with her soft pastels.

  28. Ahh, how wonderful these all are! My impressions have already been captured by the other commenters. The only thing I might add is that the freshness of these paintings (the way they capture the “essence”) reminds me of Japanese paintings (Zen-like?). I, too, love the proliferation of lines, and the somewhat unfinished look that leads to such an impression of freshness. They remind me of a Degas print that I have called Violinist, Seated, Study. I’m not well versed in art history but have always loved this one because it shows the artist’s grid of lines that he was working from. I guess that’s what adds to the feeling of immediacy.

    Wonderful selection, Gail, and wonderful presentation, Felicity. I’m just a beginner, and I’m amazed by the spontaneity captured here.

    1. Ruth thanks so much for adding your thoughts. LOVE that piece by Degas and yes, definitely a similarity. Like you, I love seeing the remains of the initial drawing including any grid lines. You can see the hand and process of the artist. Way more intimate than a finished piece! Glad you liked all the selections.
      It sure was difficult to choose the images to include and how to arrange them in the post. I did go way overboard….but just couldn’t help myself!! Glad you enjoyed them 🙂

  29. This is a blog I will keep returning to – Like Martine above, I am too heavy-handed with pastels and Felicity’s pictures are effortlessly light and atmospheric. The paintings are inspirational and Felicity’s guidelines really helpful – I so enjoyed the descriptions and helpful advice alongside the paintings.
    Thank you!

    1. Great to hear Ginette! I think many of us start off in pastels with a heavy hand. It’s only later that we understand the value of being able to adjust pressure. I’m glad you found Felicity’s post so inspirational and helpful!

  30. Pingback: Still life – part 2 | Raluca @ OCA

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Gail Sibley

Artist. Blogger. Teacher.

My love of pastel and the enjoyment I receive from teaching about pastel inspired the creation of this blog. It has tips, reviews, some opinions:), and all manner of information regarding their use through the years – old and new. Please enjoy!

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