Friday 18 September 2015

Spot The Artist



I was recently invited by the St. Ives Rotary Club to submit some art work for the St. Ives  Charity Art Sale, which encouraged me to experiment with smaller scale pieces , A5 in size. The paintings are less figurative than my larger pictures, although they generally refer to specific areas of the Admiralty charts. About 10 were produced , two of which were entered for the exhibition and sale.
The venue was the Porthmeor Studies, viewing on Saturday 19th Sept and sale day Sunday 20th Sept,  2015.









NAPA Annual Exhibition 2015

2015 National Acrylic Painters Association exhibition held at the Crypt Gallery, St. Ives. Saturday, August  29th until Saturday 12th September. The show featured 34 artists and displayed  134 paintings across a wide range of themes and approaches.

 My own contribution consisted of 4 pieces painted on Kevlar sail, again using a backdrop of a  relevant section of Admiralty chart to link in to the subject matter.

 The titles listed were;-

The Breakwater Fort        1060 x    900cms
Tinside Beacon                  1060 x   760cms
The  Lizard                          760  x    605cms
Rame Head                         760  x   605cms

The work  drew a great deal of intrigue from the viewing  public and sufficiently arrested the attention of the adjudicator to award a prize for Highly Commended Contemporary Painting.













The Circus


For as long as I can remember I have been a regular attender of the circus. The childhood experience involved lots of performing animals; lions, tigers, elephants, horses, dogs  and  even  zebras ,  complemented by the clowns and illuminated with trapeze artists and acrobats . Nowadays the animals have been excluded   from   performances   but  there  are still plenty of circus performers of the human variety.

Back in the mid-70s I spent a summer in Paris  staying with RCA student friends  and we regularly visited the circus school ' Nouveau Carre'  Cirque Gruss  at the Square  Emile-Chautemps';  to draw the performers in action.











Since the early 90s I have regularly revisited the travelling circus when they have come to Plymouth Hoe and Central Park,  ostensibly  to introduce my young son to the joys of the 'Big Top' but more truthfully to satisfy my own interest.  This fascination with the circus has continued to pull me back to observe and draw the action and atmosphere of the' Big Top'. Scribbling away in the semi-darkness, often trying to respond to the movement without looking at the pages of the sketchbook  until  the lights came back on and then wondering if the marks I had made conveyed any recognisable meaning.






















Over many years my circus sketchbook has gradually filled up but I was uncertain how to make use of the drawings  until in the summer of 2014 I visited Plymouth Art Gallery  to see a show entitled 'Four Printers' , featuring  Matisse, Dali, Wharhol and Picasso. 


Among Picasso's work I came across two black and white  lino prints, one of a bull fight and one of a circus. It seemed only natural  to follow in the footsteps of the master and transcribe my black/white sketches  into print form.










Experimenting with the lino offered the drawings a new life of their own, dictated by the medium and opened the door to further  possibilities of tonal paintings.