Falmouth Harbour: Cranes and Masts |
Acrylic and Molotow marker on canvas board, 12 x 10"
I started off by thinking about how we read texture - primarily through our hands. So I drew my hands. Note that it's mostly my left hand... |
This was the last page that I drew, but the second page in sequence. It occurred to me that texture is often used in simile, so I had a bit of fun with some common phrases. |
Carnations en masse, acrylic and Molotow on canvas, |
Side, acrylic on canvas, 7x7cm |
3mm beech-faced plywood, carved, with leather. Held together with nuts and bolts from an I-can't-believe-it's-not-Meccano toy and annotated with Molotow marker pens |
Pine grain (Derwent Drawing), grains of rice and salt (Molotow), wheat (pen and ink, acrylic); sand (Molotow) |
Wooden handle of hand chisel (Molotow), alabaster grain (watercolour and watercolour pencil); pointillist landscape, imaginary (Molotow) |
John Barleycorn, folk song, as sung by Traffic. Molotow and acrylic inks |
De Port's Kitchens, oil on canvas, 40 x 50 cm |
Lino print, 20 x 15 cm |
Passing the Ghost Acrylic on canvas, 30 x 30 cm Location: Joice's Yard, Basingstoke On artikinesis |
Yellow and Blue Acrylic on canvas, 30 x 30 cm Location: Crown Heights (from the Anvil car park), Basingstoke On artikinesis |
"Labyrinth of Commerce", acrylic on canvas, 50 x 70 cm |
But dont think for a moment, dearIt's the last of my 25 pages. The Song Book is done.
That we will ever be through...