Sunday 5 February 2023

The Cut

Oil Study,  oil on panel 8" x 10", 2022
Last year, following my ‘Home Ground’ exhibition, I decided to take my camera to the canal over near West Bromwich, where I grew up, on a sunny Spring Saturday morning to see what I could find. I was hoping I may take some good photos that may serve to generate a few new compositional ideas. I was seeking to develop the formal ideas of 2 large paintings I had exhibited in ‘Home Ground’ which were based on the dynamic landscape beneath Spaghetti Junction. The intersecting lines and planes of the motorway, the canal and the bright winter light in this landscape had been a good vehicle to push some of my interest in creating landscape paintings that incorporated the language of abstract painting more aggressively. Think Richard Diebenkorn meets Ivon Hitchens meets Thomas Shiebitz. That’s what was in my mind at least! In visiting the canals in West Bromwich, I was hoping to find some more of those strong diagonal lines and geometric shapes that had excited me in the first 2 paintings.
'Winter Walk', oil on canvas, 120 x 150cms, 2021
However, the location proved much tamer and more rural this time around (how could I think it would not be compared to the crazy extremities of the landscape beneath Spaghetti Junction?), with the steep, grassy banks, towpaths and old arched bridges, and the fishermen along the bank waiting for the Saturday catch. And with the strong shadows and trees covered in bubbling hawthorn blossom it was all much more picturesque. Still, I enjoyed taking some photographs as I walked along the cut with my son and our dog, Buddy, and left with an open mind as to whether anything I had recorded might make its way into some new paintings.
'The Cut', oil on canvas, 50 x 60cms, 2022
'The Cut II', oil on canvas, 50 x 60cms, 2022
'The Cut III', oil on canvas, 60 x 80cms, 2022
I originally made 3 paintings quite quickly after my trip, not too large, of The Cut. I liked them, particularly the first one I made, where I felt I had captured an essence of the landscape in my paring down of any extraneous details. I was reminded a bit of Morandi’s Italian landscapes which I admire (and wish I could even come close to!), but at the same time I was a bit troubled about how traditional the other paintings looked compared to my original intentions, so I left things for a bit at that. 

During my recent time off work, I returned to the photos and made a small oil study (top of post) based on one of a young guy zipping along the canal towpath on his electric scooter against a glorious background of lush, hawthorn blossomed trees against the blue sky. I was excited by this lovely small study- it had a joy to it I seldom arrive at and there was something defiant and fun about the guy on his scooter that I really liked, so I decided to make a much larger painting based on it. It incorporated more detail, and I tried to capture the spirit of the small study, but I don’t think I did, but I do like it still. It had to become its own thing and ended up with quite a different character, one with a slightly melancholic undertow which is more familiar.  But I still prefer the small one. 

'The Cut IV', oil on canvas, 110 x 150cms, 2022
With both these paintings, however, I am excited to see in a less self-conscious way than other recent attempts, the re-introduction of the figure into some of my work. The figure just appeared without me even thinking about it during the period I spent making lots of small, experimental studies (30 in all). 
'The Cut V', oil on canvas, 50 x 60cms, 2023

As it did in this other new painting (above) of this man fishing on the canal bank with the factories behind him as a backdrop. The juxtaposition of this, the man against the factories, perhaps they are where he once worked but is now replaced by one of the huge transit depots that populate the former industrial sites of Black Country creates a tension and a quiet political dimension I like. 

Bubbling away in the background of my thoughts as I have made these paintings are two books set in the Black Country and written by Black Country authors that I have enjoyed. One, ‘Mercia’s Take’, the debut novel by Daniel Wiles, which I read last summer. It is set in 1879 in a mining town near Walsall, and despite its historical setting it has a very contemporary feel. A key part of the book is a long journey the main character makes on ‘The Cut’ by barge into Dudley. It is so vividly described in an almost, dreamlike, and hallucinatory way that it stayed with me long after I had finished the book. 
Author Daniel Wiles, from Walsall in the Black Country
The other book is ‘The Cut’ by Anthony Cartwright, whose series of novels set in the post-industrial Black Country I have enjoyed. This one is set in the post-Brexit, overwhelmingly leave voting Black Country and is a bleak look at the divisions between communities, towns, and communities that Brexit exacerbated. I don’t think we will ever recover from it as a nation. I would highly recommend both books.
'Winter Morning', oil on canvas, 90 x 120cms, 2022 (a personal fave)
There are a few other canal-based landscapes I’ve made, a large nocturne I’m not entirely sure about, and a winter landscape that I made last year that I love (but no one else comments on!). Slowly, I’m getting a sense of a more serious body of work that could be developing around the theme of, what we call it in the Black Country, the Cut….

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