Friday, 23 March 2012

'Exile'

'Exile', charcoal on paper, imperial size, 2012

Friday, 16 March 2012

Dan the Man...


I was at Goldalming College in Surrey on Wednesday for a ‘Practical Painting Workshop for A Level Art- a practical guide from Cezanne to the Abstract Expressionists via Cubism’. It was a staff development opportunity that I was keen to participate in and hopefully get some new ideas for teaching painting, which despite it being my specialist field I do find a very difficult subject to teach. It was led by Daniel Fooks, the Head of Art at the College, who is an inspiration. I had previously been to a training session in 2009 led by him in London, ‘How to Get All Your Students a Grade A at A Level’, which he does every year, almost without exception. It is refreshing to hear someone who gets such amazing results say ‘I have no paperwork, just what the students make, no schemes of work, I can’t stand them’. His training day has had quite a profound impact on my approach in the classroom since, although sadly I do still have to do schemes of work despite telling my manager we don’t need them according to Dan.


It was a great day, and I did come away with lots of new ideas, but I thought I would post this to share the inspiration I came away with from Dan’s own paintings. They were in a makeshift studio space he had made in the class, and worked in alongside his students. These included this incredible set of five portraits of actor Peter Capaldi (above) that were selected for the BP Portrait Award last year. It also included a group of very large paintings based on his fascination with the forms and expressive qualities to be found in knotty trees. Although, very much derived from Cezanne’s techniques I found them really exciting. I spent my lunchtime totally absorbed by them in his studio space and having a chat with him about them. They gave me a great deal food for thought as I begin to develop my own forays into the landscape. It was a real privilege...









Tuesday, 13 March 2012

Is There A Place...?


I visited an interesting exhibition at The New Art Gallery Walsall on Saturday that featured lots of ‘Edgelands’ inspired work by different artists, including George Shaw, Paul Winstanley, Barry Thompson, and Birmingham based painter Graham Chorlton.

According to the gallery, ‘‘There Is A Place...’ ...brings together a group of artists who explore our psychic connectivity to landscape. The drawings, paintings and prints within the exhibition reveal 'a sense of place' as seemingly generic urban and suburban views evoke personal and collective memories. The reverie of teenage hideouts, suburban housing estates and motorway junctions, each depicted in painstaking detail, are at once familiar yet unnerving for all’. Mmmm...I think you can probably see why I might find myself interested in this with my own current ‘Edgelands’ interests...

A new artist to me whose work I found really exciting was Laura Oldfield Ford (above). She makes large-scale detailed drawings of the ‘Edgelands’ landscape in biro on top of layers of acrylic splashes and fragments of type which include graffiti, but also dates that reference some of the history of the locations she depicts. She had created some really striking drawings commissioned by the gallery of the underneath of the M6 motorway near Walsall, a stone’s throw to where I have been working in West Brom under the M5. One piece referenced a number plate that had been found in the undergrowth believed to belong to a car belonging to the IRA who had attempted to blow up this stretch of the M6 during the 1997 election campaign. Laura’s blog is a really interesting read: http://lauraoldfieldford.blogspot.com.





Laura seems to be as much of a writer as an artist, and I really enjoyed reading about the bus journeys around The Black Country she made to develop these commissioned pieces. She travelled around areas I know particularly well, the places I grew up, and I found it very grim reading at times. Some of it made me wince, as much as for the truths I recognised in her words, and her descriptions and prose reminded me of Black Country born writer Anthony Cartwright, whose novels, ‘Heartlands’ and ‘The Afterglow’, I have mentioned before.

Laura’s work had a much more politically and socially charged edge than the other artist’s in the show, whose work seemed much more informed by the personal and memory. This of course can be seen in George Shaw’s work but also in the minute and intricate pencil drawings of Barry Thompson. Like Shaw, Thompson’s work references his adolescence and idle hours spent in the town he grew up in. I r particularly liked these pencil drawings of poems written on small scraps of paper. I’ve been thinking of doing something similiar with bits of hand-written things I’ve been collecting for some time now. I felt a bit beaten to it....




In fact, I felt a bit beaten to it by lots of the work in many ways. As I’ve been researching my ‘Edgelands’ theme, I’m aware that it is a very well-trodden path by artists and writers alike. My task is to try and find my own distinctive voice within it all...

Tuesday, 6 March 2012

Thunder Road...

Pastel on Paper, A3 size

‘It’s a town full of losers, and I’m pulling out of here to win’…so sings The Boss on his classic song, 'Thunder Road'. This recent pastel really reminded me of Springsteen and his world of highways, cars, girls, escapism, and those battles to hold onto your dreams against the stark realities of life. He brings his vision so vividly to life across albums like ‘Born To Run’, ‘Darkness On The Edge Of Town’, and ‘The River’ etc. (For me however, that world is evoked so potently and brilliantly on the collection of never previously released songs that makes up the ’18 Tracks’ album). I’d like to think my drawing had something of the bleak beauty and dark heart of ‘Nebraska’, but let’s not get carried away…

Bruce’s new album, ‘Wrecking Ball’ is out this week, and proves that that at 62 he’s more than just a contender, he’s still, without doubt, The Boss, on what is an angry and political record. Many of the songs possess an Irish rebel song flavour that reminded me of ‘The Wire’ and those drunken barroom scenes where all the cops used to hang out…The writers of The Wire were all big fans of Bruce, which may come as no surprise…

Friday, 2 March 2012

A Tree With Roots...

I spent yesterday at Padstone Day Services in Bromsgrove making an oil study of a tree at the back of the centre. Padstone is a Day Centre for people with learning disabilities where my wife, Diane works as a Senior Day Centre Officer.

The centre is due to close in a few weeks due to cuts being made by Worcestershire County Council, and relocated at a much smaller building nearby. The new building is currently being refurbished and has lots of large wall spaces they are keen to fill with some paintings, so I’ve been asked whether I would consider making something. The tree motif was suggested by the staff, as it is a tree that is fondly thought of by service users and staff and is always viewed from many of the rooms in the centre, and could represent memories of Padstone, which will soon be demolished, at the new location. So yesterday I went along for the afternoon to view the tree myself and make some studies to get a feel of it myself as a possible subject.

It was a great tree and a beautiful day to paint outdoors, but I wish I had allowed more time. I painted these two panels in a few hours and was just going to add more on the side for the outward expanding branches when I had to pack up. I was just getting to the point when one starts to lose themselves more in the activity and really start painting after drawing and building things up.

It may seem obvious but David Hockney’s trees (above) were obviously at the forefront of my mind after last week’s exhibition. They did help me, as I’ve not done many things like this, and made me a bit bolder with the colour, particularly in the building behind, which I enjoyed (it also was beginning to develop into a Hockney type ‘joiner’). I’ve also been thinking a lot about ‘portraits’ of trees as a subject in the edgelands, so this was not unrelated, which is why I thought it would be worth exploring. And it was. I enjoyed it. I’m just not sure if this ‘portrait’ of the tree would be the best idea to make a suitable painting for the new centre. It was a good ‘edgelands’ subject though…