Sunday, 23 November 2008

Plus ca change - 2 "Moving On"


The old Works : the  new apartments .... with smart inner courtyard... 

Saturday, 22 November 2008

Plus ca change!



Images of the old iron works by the Canal, 2005.  By 2008, svelt commuter apartment blocks have replaced it.   

Saturday, 27 September 2008

Autumn Garden




After a wet summer, the gardens in autumn are glowing emerald. And the violas are fed up... 

Thursday, 18 September 2008

Upwardly Mobile...




Trend-setting Mice are leaving the sports  ground and assorted garden sheds as the new developments become fashionable.  Your upwardly mobile professional mouse takes his journey in 2 stages: 
1.  By "Jaws Train", a sleek vehicle which arrives sometimes with little warning, its two bright  headlamps glowing in the darkness
2.  After a short stop-over in the booklined station, or beside the tiled fireplace, by hovering space-ship.  This second mode of transport is far the more comforting and comfortable, and you have an excellent view all round.  But, it does fly rather high...
Stage three: arrival, makes the whole thing worthwhile.  Fresh green grass and leaves, the earth beneath, plenty of cover, the wide sky above, and best of all, a colony of like-minded individuals who have shared that harrowing journey to the Land of the Free: Canalside!

 

Thursday, 4 September 2008

Threadneedle Prize results

Have just read about the winning pieces.  Just a few thoughts...
No jealousy - after all, I'm pretty amateur and I didn't qualify to be one of the potential 71 from whom the prizewinner would be picked.  
But I have questions.
This was a "figurative prize" yet the winner was the nearest possible to an abstract...Nie study of light, but really, not a lot going on there.  Could be a derelict corner of anywhere!
What does it say about our society at this time that the other prize was for one of the military-based pieces?  Was that glorifying or condemning war - or just saying "we are at war"?
If it represented today's world, then "Golden Girl, Jenny" fits equally - but she is beautiful, young, full of potential.  Also almost palpably vulnerable.  
Will the soldier in the tank protect the girl?  Ensure her a happy life?
No.
Jenny demonstrates the sadness of life today: with all the beauty, material goods, the education, the technology, human beings will always remain vulnerable, life is precious, innocence can be damaged...
So far the war we're in has claimed many many lives - including those killed in terrorist incidents in this country, and civilians in Iraq/Afghanistan.
I want to know what the artist had in mind, and what the award-givers saw in the piece.



Wednesday, 3 September 2008

The Way we Were (two): Sisters

My Grandmother and her sister: c. mid 1930s (?)

How much was hidden from us in childhood, and how much more we understand when it is revealed!    Do photos show us the character behind the eyes?   

Tuesday, 2 September 2008

Threadneedle Prize, Art Teacher's Art, & More

Back in July, I submitted (along with approx 2700 other figurative artist hopefuls) 2 paintings for the Threadneedle Prize show at the Mall Galleries.       
Mine, Mobile Nation (above) and Golden Girl: a Portrait
(below) weren't among the 71 
chosen for the exhibition.  





Today, I've  had a look at the 7 works to be voted on for the Prize.

At least 5 are by men!  One by a woman and the other - I'm not sure as the name is unfamilier to me - maybe Eloiza Mills is a second woman?  Whatever, 5 out of 7 are men... What does this reflect, if anything?

The art is good.  It is thoughtful.  It is in the case of the men's art also very male (!): military dictators, a burning tank, a male self-portrait, a visual reflection on society's loss of compassion which somehow said to me "a woman would've probably done this differently".  Am I right or am I  stereotyping?

The portrait of a woman is appealing, beguilingly simple.  I like it best.  It is by the person who may or not be another woman.  But that is not why I like it best.... Maybe I like it because it's the least urban, the least aggressive, the most celebratory of nature, of  non-technology, and of life.  It's simply itself.  It appears to have no agenda.

Also today, dropped in on an exhibition of art by school art teachers.  Lovely stuff: beautifully done.  Optimistic exploration, felt most of these teachers would inspire the kids.  Apparently this was a course of continuing professional development, a chance for art teachers to do art.

The art teacher, like the music teacher & the RE teacher, has a "cinderella subject"  ... which can be depressingly isolating in the world of school league tables and targets.

But Cinderella was the one who was chosen by the prince...

Art, music and spiritual awareness, the necessary balance to science & technology...??



 






Thursday, 28 August 2008

Nature-Study...

(1)
The scientific investigator (domestic short-hair, b/w)



... the object of the investigation in more detail (common frog, rufus, least common colouring)

















(2)    Is this a slug I see before me????

(look carefully - what do you see?)


























(3)

My mouse, hiding beneath the OED?

Monday, 25 August 2008

Paintings...



a photo captures a moment in time, a painting entraps an artist for hours...

Bank Holiday


Distance.... close-up... evening at the beach

Friday, 22 August 2008

Pencils without Barcodes....

Pencils without barcodes are on sale at the art shop today, 8 for £1.00.  This includes the normally expensive, coloured, water-colour variety.  What innocent fun for impecunious artists to select from the big tub of assorted pencils!

If pencils now come with bar codes, without these, they are obviously difficult to sell from the shop's point of view...  

Question is, What's next in line for compulsory bar coding?

Cars?  Holidays?  Maybe, if we're lucky, even houses?  Will there  be a sale of those without?  Where's it going to be held?


Pencils without Barcodes

Thursday, 21 August 2008

More later...

I don't hang glide but I do love skies and beaches ... more pictures later...

The Way We Are photo 2

The Way we Are - photos

The Way we Were ...












A couple of family photos from 50 and 100 years ago... note the family in 1907: when I came to really study this photo I could see how carefully the photographer had designed the composition of the figures.  It's a painting done by technology, a portrait.  Each figure plays its part, and note how the children are totally fed-up with posing!

Even the tea party in 1951 are trying to pose - some of them (the aunt with the tea-cup and the wonderful hat) - this was taken with a time-release and the photographer is also in the picture.

Wednesday, 20 August 2008


Clarestory

Date 20 August 2008

Title "Clarestory" sounds like "clerestory", which is a kind of little high-up window, found in old buildings (esp cathedrals, churches etc) ... and also in old railway carriages!

Make of that what you will.

And a pun on the name, Clare, of the writer, who is a painter & a writer.... 

It's a small window on the world through my eyes.