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Porth Moina, oil on canvas, 100 x 73 cm |
Saturday, 7 October 2017
Porth Moina
Labels:
Cliff,
Coastal,
Corwall,
Heather,
Linen,
mines,
Moor,
Oil painting,
Penwith,
rock,
Rocks,
sea,
Southwest Coast Path
Friday, 15 September 2017
Trees with attitude: Altitude and Solicitude
When you are walking through a wood, and you look up, it's then that you realise the sheer magnitude of trees.
Saturday, 27 May 2017
Purbeck Eddies
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Purbeck Eddies, oil on canvas, 40 x 50 cm |
Monday, 22 May 2017
Recorders and Lute: Palisander and Toby Carr (triptych)
It's not over until...
Open Studios West Berkshire and Nort Hampshire has technically finished, but there are a few satellite exhibitions lingering here and there and, of course, there are several studios that are full time affairs and which will often open by appointment.
So yes, you can still visit me. Just get in touch...
[Contact page] [Open Studios Directory entry, includes full contact details]
The outstanding exhibitions that I know about (because I'm involved in them) are:
Art in Music at the Corn Exchange in Newbury - on until 24 May, during performances only;
Cover to Cover (exchange sketchbooks) at the West Berkshire Museum in Newbury - on until 30 May;
North Hampshire Art at the Willis Museum in Basingstoke - on until 3 June.
So yes, you can still visit me. Just get in touch...
[Contact page] [Open Studios Directory entry, includes full contact details]
The outstanding exhibitions that I know about (because I'm involved in them) are:
Art in Music at the Corn Exchange in Newbury - on until 24 May, during performances only;
Cover to Cover (exchange sketchbooks) at the West Berkshire Museum in Newbury - on until 30 May;
North Hampshire Art at the Willis Museum in Basingstoke - on until 3 June.
Sunday, 21 May 2017
The road to Kimmeridge: some in-progress shots
Sometimes I think I might forget how I did something (and the best somethings are often the result of a happy accident) or, more often, I worry that the next bold stroke of the knife will wipe out the best bit of a painting. So I've got into the habit of taking quick photographs of the current work-in-progress in the studio when my hands are clean enough to operate a camera (in the field is different; there's more time pressure and, usually, fewer distractions).
This post contains a sequence of such photographs, with notes, for the painting of Kimmeridge, which was painted on a clear-gessoed linen canvas with the six tube version of my standard palette: burnt umber, ultramarine, phthalo blue, lemon yellow, rose madder quiacridone. Most of the knife work was done with a Winsor and Newton no.27, with a smaller knife (Langnickel LP-1) used later on. I also used a silicone colour shaper for a few details and my signature.
I'm working from a photograph that I took in 2014. I hadn't seen the possibilities of the shot until now (except maybe in the instant that I took it). I remember the day. It was hot, very hot for England, the heat of the sun bouncing off the rocks. My husband and children were in and out of the sea but I felt unable, uncertain of my physicality, uncomfortable in the heat and unsure of my balance - and besides, I wanted to sketch. I made a very bad, overworked and tiny watercolour of the distant Clavell Tower. And I took lots of photographs.
This was one of them.
Nearly three years later, I picked it out for the studio treatment. There was a lot of fiddly detail that would challenge the knife; of course, it wouldn't all go in, but if there was any chance of making the Clavell Tower recognisable in any way, I had to use a fairly large canvas. And I was trying not to think about the seaweed, but its colours anchored the image and justified the long format, so I would need to make them work... somehow.
This post contains a sequence of such photographs, with notes, for the painting of Kimmeridge, which was painted on a clear-gessoed linen canvas with the six tube version of my standard palette: burnt umber, ultramarine, phthalo blue, lemon yellow, rose madder quiacridone. Most of the knife work was done with a Winsor and Newton no.27, with a smaller knife (Langnickel LP-1) used later on. I also used a silicone colour shaper for a few details and my signature.
I'm working from a photograph that I took in 2014. I hadn't seen the possibilities of the shot until now (except maybe in the instant that I took it). I remember the day. It was hot, very hot for England, the heat of the sun bouncing off the rocks. My husband and children were in and out of the sea but I felt unable, uncertain of my physicality, uncomfortable in the heat and unsure of my balance - and besides, I wanted to sketch. I made a very bad, overworked and tiny watercolour of the distant Clavell Tower. And I took lots of photographs.
This was one of them.
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You don't get to see my source photographs very often. |
Nearly three years later, I picked it out for the studio treatment. There was a lot of fiddly detail that would challenge the knife; of course, it wouldn't all go in, but if there was any chance of making the Clavell Tower recognisable in any way, I had to use a fairly large canvas. And I was trying not to think about the seaweed, but its colours anchored the image and justified the long format, so I would need to make them work... somehow.
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Oh, thank goodness for that. There's the sky. And some pink bits. |
Saturday, 20 May 2017
Kimmeridge
Kimmeridge Bay in Purbeck, Dorset is all about the rocks. It lies on the Jurrassic Coast and is a favoured destination for fossil-hunters as well as rock-pool afficianados and snorkellers. It has clear, calm water and a folly on the headland - Clavell Tower, which in 2006-8 was moved away from the crumbling cliff.
So, of course, my painting is all about the rocks. The flat rocks in the centre dominate the image. I spent most of my time on their colours, curves and cracks, their attendant pools and the wet reflections of the summer sun, but it was the seaweed that worried me most. It was a curious colour - a bright mix of yellow, green, red and orange - and it was underwater, right in the foreground. How could I indicate that with my knife, a blunt painting instrument if ever there was one? In the end, it was all a matter of observation and approximation, as is often the case, and allowing the viewer's visual cortex to fill in the gaps.
Kimmeridge
Oil on linen canvas, 50 x 70 cm
£400
Labels:
70 x 50 cm,
Cliffs,
Coastal,
Dorset,
For Sale,
Oil painting,
Rocks,
sea,
Seaweed,
Water
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