dimanche 26 juin 2016
Thick and fast
mercredi 22 juin 2016
A late nod to Constable and Freud.
And a host of others too since one of the many is Diebenkorn, but what is the problem to be addressed? The tree is not the problem: the tree is the armature upon which to build the painting and I think this holds true for me when, for example, I make a self-portrait and my face serves as the hook upon which I hang the paint. Sometimes it looks the way I look: sometimes the paint becomes a tree.
Colour sometimes works to confound recessional space so when I look at part of the tree (the trunk) and the space surrounding it,painting that can result in three flat sections, each with its own presence. This morning the trunk was a grey blue red but this afternoon it may be a pale green.
jeudi 16 juin 2016
Further studies. The trunk of a tree.
mercredi 8 juin 2016
Not yet.....
But if ever I became an art thief, this would be high on my list. A wall in Naples. Thomas Jones, c.1782.
lundi 30 mai 2016
Three studies for another conversation.
In painting the space outside my window, a space which shifts backwards and forwards as my perspective changes, I am aware of how limited my focus can be. We think of the grand sweep, the eyes scanning the view left and right, up and down, backwards and forwards but my view is often limited to that moment before the sweep and before my brain brings all that a-priori knowledge into play. I have commented before upon how flat (like stage flats) the view can seem and it is especially so at this time of year with such bright light on the land.
Liberals Are Killing Art
How the Left became obsessed with ideology over beauty.
I must thank my friend Sharon Knettle for pointing me to this article in The New Republic by Jed Pearl. it was an interesting adjunct to Seeing Through Berger by the late Peter Fuller which I read following on from reading a lot of Berger myself over the years. Peter Fuller edited Modern Painters which was eagerly awaited in our household once upon a time.
dimanche 8 mai 2016
Emerging and not emerging
mardi 3 mai 2016
A continued conversation with the little bush.
Most of the business of painting is doggedness, a determination to see what more can come of repeated looking, whether it be the ongoing dialogue with the object observed or with the object being made. One can never have too much information or else one would have to invent it but that does not prevent changes being made: I'm thinking of how John Constable would move a willow or change the scale of something to further the composition. Editing becomes necessary often: the painting requires it. The bush is the focus of these paintings and to make it so requires suppressing a lot of information but extracting a lot too.
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