'Shoulder To Shoulder' oil on canvas, 100 x 150cms, 2014-15
I’ve found it hard to get much done in the
studio in January, which has been a source of frustration, but I have repainted
this painting, which I originally posted in October, over a few sessions. I
felt like there was something too ‘clean’ about it somehow, and so have thrown
a lot more paint at it in an attempt to mess around with it and open it up. I
applied a lot of the paint with a rag which seemed a good way of painting the
stacks of pallets, which is what they are if you weren’t sure, in a more interesting
way. I’m a bit happier with it now.
It’s the only painting recently I’ve been able
to think of a title. It’s called ‘Shoulder to Shoulder’ in reference not to the
pallets all leaning against each other, stacked high and close, but to
something one of the characters said in ‘Pride’, the film last year about the
time in the Eighties in which the Gay and Lesbian Movement stood up and raised
valuable money and support for the Miner’s Strike. He said about the need for
people to stand ‘shoulder to shoulder’ in solidarity against Thatcher and the
Tories as their policies wreaked destruction on working class community after
working class community across the country.
So, the battered pallets are a metaphor, and
nostalgic, for a time when people did stand together and those values of
solidarity and collectivism counted. Still, with what has happened in Greece in
January, maybe there is still hope; it certainly proves that there is the will,
that those values can find a place again….
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