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Friday, April 30th, 2010

Autumn in Amalfi

Final-Amalfi

Autumn had come to the Amalfi coast during my visit a couple of years ago. A light mist hung over the cliffs and ravines that tumble into the sea,  bleaching out colours and blurring distant outlines.  On the hill tops behind and above, snow had put in a first appearance and the streets of Amalfi town were somehow forlorn in their relative emptiness following the hot crush of summer.  A hint of melancholy and ‘end-of-season’ fatigue hung with a tangible chill in the air.

Up in the better-off hill towns, silent german limousines glide across clean genteel squares and down narrow streets with their half-hidden superior hotels- undemonstrative vernacular facades with seriously classy interior refits and at the back, an outlook over fabulous dramatic coastal scenes from the ‘outdoor rooms’ of private terraces.

I’m supposed to be grown up now but I can’t help being fascinated by the kind of wealth and the ease it brings to the clientele of these hotels. The protective sheen, the aura around these people regardless of their ‘fortune’ in the looks and bodies nature actually gave to them. Is it there regardless or because of the ‘history’ to be read in their faces?

Or is that all just me looking for the poor man’s consolation of identifying a ‘price’ that always has to be paid?

Whatever the reality, this is a subject and a location ripe for a bit of romantic if overheated speculation. Having dropped some heavy- duty hints here,  I certainly hope this picture speaks for itself.

If you ‘read’  it then you could buy a limited edition print of it. Just click on the home link and go to  landscapes

Starcross’d Entry

Monday, November 9th, 2009

Here’s my entry to the Observer/Random House/Comica 2009 competition:

3rd-Star-X-pp-13rd-A-StarX-pp-23rd-StarX-pp-33rd StarX pp 4 opt.480 jpg

see previous 2 posts  below for all I have to say about this for now.

To see more of the complete field of entries click here

Observer/RandomHouse/Comica competition 2009

Saturday, November 7th, 2009

A great call for ‘unsuccessful’ entries:

go to brokenkode.com read the post and add your own comments and participate, I certainly am.

see also previous post ‘Starcross’d’

A Painting of Two Halves

Wednesday, October 21st, 2009

St Paul’s Bay, Lindos, Rhodes.

St Paul's Bay adj opt blog

watercolour 428 x 248 mm

This well known location on the island of Rhodes made a strong impression on me a few weeks ago when I attended a close family wedding there. This watercolour painting was made for the happy couple as a souvenir of a highly memorable occasion.

The afternoon of the day before the ceremony I spent some time walking around the bay assessing various views where the small white chapel is the focus.  The obvious angles, already well covered in tourist photos and prints for sale in local shops, didn’t seem to capture the key experience of walking up the steps into the chapel precinct where the weddings actually take place. Only this view, to my eye, contained all the elements that really made the scene- including the bay itself and the Acropolis of Lindos in the background.

So, sitting on the low stone wall flanking the slope down to the water of the bay( with my calves catching the burning sun), I began some exploratory sketches setting up the composition and relative proportions as experienced rather than photographed (see blog entry ‘Award for Excellence’ March 2009)

SPB-sk-bk

Clearly there was an issue of composition to deal with- the scene divides itself all too neatly in half: the foreground chapel and its precinct on the right and the distant Acropolis and bay to the left. How was I going to properly render these disparate elements yet unite them in a single composition?

Only in the act of painting the scene did the solution present itself. I had already decided to radically ‘crop’ the promontory of rocks edging out from the chapel precinct to bring the Acropolis closer in to the centre of the picture. In the colour study rehearsing tone values, the first sky wash went in and I then tentatively added the complex establishing wash for the key foreground shadows making up the steps, trees and chapel. I put this in with the same sky wash, purely out of convenience, and, ay caramba, the solution presented itself – BLUE.  Blue underpainting in concert with the blue sky running across the upper half of the painting would unite the composition.

SPB-col-test

The blue wash layers, deepened in the foreground with red to violet, were balanced with muted neutrals, both warm and cool, for paths, and the volcanic rock outcrops of the Acropolis. Deep greens for the tree next to the chapel and those on the distant horizon added the final colour counterpoint ‘punching up’ the whole effect.

Fine art limited edition prints of this painting are now available please go to the main site via the  ‘home’ link opposite and click on landscapes in the right hand menu.

In the words of the song-

Saturday, August 15th, 2009

‘Every picture tells a story don’t it’ perfect-b-blog-upload‘A Perfect Beach’ watercolour 340mm x 247mm

Some watercolour painters rarely include a human figure in their compositions and then only to provide scale to the real subject- usually a magnificent landscape or a dominating city scene. Others concentrate solely on the figure usually in the form of an ‘alla prima’ type virtuoso study. Here the figure may be a nude or a character- a beauty, an eccentric, someone with their life experiences ‘written’ on their features ready to be set down. Others still paint to demonstrate a facility, a technique, for showing how dramatic light falls across a group or an individual and the depth and intricacy of counter shadow that is formed.

This watercolour, ‘A Perfect Beach’ started as an exercise to extend my painting technique to ‘handle’ a foreground figure. Using a magazine clipping for reference I laid in the main figure in two simple flat washes: one for her basic shape and the second to indicate broadly her areas of shadow.

Wanting something more I laid in the horizontal wash for the sea horizon as some sort of balance against the upright figure of the young woman.

Now I really had a problem. Being an illustrator by inclination I now felt that in order to continue this exercise with any sort of conviction I needed answers to the questions I had unwittingly provoked in my own mind. What was she doing there by the sea? Where actually was she? I needed a story. Or else abandon it.

It seemed that if a story was ever to emerge that would fit this start, then more figures were needed. Interaction was required. So in went the couple at the shoreline and the lapping waters in which they stand. Simple almost ambiguous strokes were the order here. At this stage, these two were only the other half of a pictorial argument I had yet to stir up.

Still without any clear storyline, I switched to developing the ‘where’. To match the lapping blue waters I put in the headland with the hints of rocky shoreline and ‘Aegean’ pines in groups. I lifted out streaks of the sea around the rocks and extended the sea horizon upwards, all to integrate the ‘new’ headland into the composition. Staying with ‘where’, the terrace wall, chair and table went in. The table was nearly a disaster. The combination of lack of paper at the picture perimeter and a deckle edge to the sheet caused the dark wash to bleed ‘inside’ the paper sucking it up towards the main figure. Furious tilting and blotting followed! I’d broken the first rule of watercolour. I’d started without a clear plan.

Nevertheless these moves had been crucial- two key gestures within the story were now evident. The foreground figure was either getting up from the chair, startled, or sitting down horrified. And the beach couple were in dispute. Either she was pulling him back or he was dragging her away.

Using more of the same flesh and shadow tones, deepened and warmed, I laid in more overlapping washes developing the foreground figure and allowing each to dry before continuing.  I lifted out parts of the earlier washes to give her a swimsuit- only partially successfully around the shoulder straps. Fine drawn shadow areas similarly brought out the shore couple together with appropriate splashes of ‘costume’ colour.

I decided to stop- the second golden rule of watercolour. I liked what I now had even though it was still not settled in my head- what was going on!  The title I gave it, which really only works when you say it out loud, reflects this uncertainty. Anyway, which one is the ‘bitch’?

Fine art limited edition prints of this painting are now available. Please go to the main site via the  ‘home’ link opposite and click on ‘landscapes’ in the right-hand menu.