• Diptych, acrylic on five sided mirrored panels, 290 x 97.6 x 3.3 cm

    A diptych of two five sided offset mirrored shapes in bold colours reflecting the colours of spring and autumn.

    The second image with myself is to give a sense of scale.

    Spring And Autumn

    This work reflects the colours of the two season Spring and Autumn. The Spring section was inspired when I found between the leaves and stems of an early daffodil a cluster of six ladybirds or ladybugs.

    When I started making Spring at that time was looking at irregular canvas shapes and so eventually ended up with the shape you can see which I liked. The daffodil has six petals and looking into the flower was where the circular shape came from initially. Although the daffodil was the inspiration, I did not want to reflect it realistically I wanted a shape with a more universal appeal. Mankind has been making circles since ancient times with it’s intonation of oneness and mystery.

    Having chosen the circle, I wanted to convey a sense of motion because to me Spring and Autumn have always seemed the more transitory seasons, spring heralds’ summer as autumn heralds’ winter of both signifies the ending of winter and summer, the main events. They truly have their beauty, but they seem like stepping stones.  

    “Spring” Acrylic on Panel 144 x 96.8 x 3.3 cm

    “Autumn” Acrylic on Panel 144 x 96.8 x 3.3 cm

  • I have always been curious about things I knew were there but physically couldn’t touch or feel. One of those influences are stories, history. Tales both real and fictitious that form national and community psyches from which the “blank” canvas of every child learns. Developing their genetic inheritance to create their character and moral outlook as they reconcile lives events to those stories. That influence is something that much of the time informs the art I make. As the world becomes more integrated, stories overlap, and that repository of influence is continually evolving. Humanity records and relates current events into tomorrow’s histories.

    A Fragile Harmony evokes the fragility of an individual existence in the face of death yet tries to show how we all see the human history. How we can only see humanities overarching psyche from our own limited viewpoint missing so much and the impossibility ability to truly stand in another’s shoes and see with their perspective and experiences, we can only bring our own existence to a perceived understanding of their history. That understanding can be a challenge and fear of change can make our own perspective a safe haven which we defend.

    There is also the ongoing development of that repository of stories. Great people have made immense contributions to improve the human condition but there are also darker events in that repository and that is also a fragile harmony, with a plethora of tales both ancient and modern, classical and banal of good versus evil. As the peoples of the world continue to integrate through the internet and social media and we learn of other cultures and ideas which can be illuminating but current events would demonstrate the darker side as some continue to exploit the current media to defend their own perspective with little concern for the ensuing conflict be it physical, verbal or mental.

     The steel ball in the work hints at the overarching Human Psyche, that thing I can’t touch. I can touch the steel ball but the property I liked about it is I don’t really see it, what I see is a reflection or everything around it, it’s shape is defined by the distortion in the reflections. The centre which I cant see contains everything that has historically contributed to todays repository from primitive man through Roman and Greek Classics, the Renaissance to the internet. It has been developing since man could talk and tell stories and I like to think of the centre of the ball as full of lost and forgotten stories that still influence what it projects today.

    It is an opposite quality that drew me to the clear acrylic balls for the heads of the butterflies, they do not reflect the surroundings be by refraction when you look at them you see the colours and vague shapes of what surrounds them on the inside surface. They are like individuals who internalise and develop the ideas, images they come across.  

    So the Steel ball is a representation of all that human history reflects and the acrylic heads our own internalisation of what we experience.

    The whole piece has been developed over about eighteen months, the first piece I acquired was the central piece of wood to which everything is attached, I had it about a year and was still wondering what to do with it when I acquired the second pieces of wood from which the butterflies are shaped, because of a deformity in the trunk they were already almost wing shaped. It then took only about thirty minutes for the idea to develop, the next steps were purely the making and developing the overall visual impact I wanted for the work. That took about three months as I gathered components and worked out ways to combine them that added to the meaning I wanted to place in the work.

  • moirai_web

    Fate: The Three Moirai.

    Oil on Canvas, with found watch dials and sand built into the frame, Image size: 49,5 x 39.5cms., Fame size: 69.5 x 51 x 5cms. Completed January 2020, inscribed bottom left, signed on the land the tangle eft side of the canvas on stretcher frame.

    The Moirai were three ancient Greek Goddesses who embodied the destiny and fate of everyone. They were Klotho, the spinner who spun the thread of life, Lahkesis who allotted the portion and Atropos who cut it short.

    The three ribbons in the work allude to each of these facets of life and the tangle we struggle with daily. The spheres are symbols of life and living, and whilst much of the time I feel in control of my destiny the more I look back the more I see how much chance and circumstances play in our lives. Some choices we make will be successful and seem to be made completely by our will but they are also dictated by the circumstances around us at the time, and at other times it seems we cant achieve or get to where we want to be because of circumstances beyond our control.

    in a few parts of the image the ribbons purposely do not follow the correct visual path and seem to go through what should be the solid vertical stripes of the background.

    On a personal level I have never really had a destination or sacred achievement in mind for my life, just seem to enjoy the journey, but it is extremely important to me in my own way to try to leave the world a slightly better place than when I arrived all be it in a small way, and it will be a small way!  Sometimes when I see what is going on in the world I wonder if making art is a positive contribution, but this world is a wonderful place, so I keep trying. I am aware that for a great many people this is not the case but when I think about the complexity of the natural world with its diversity of species, the ability of man to create history through language and learning, (animals don’t have histories), and to develop the world though politics, this world, this universe never ceases to amaze me, and the very fact that I exist, given the random nature of reproduction over generations never mind the last three or four millennia or many generations is remarkable and able to contemplate this world and universe is something that inspires me. The world I aspire to better is more than just the physical world but the world as imagined by all humanity, how we see and deal with each other, how we see the universe, who decides what we are taught, how : and annotated by humanity. Making sense of this imagined world is what interests me and inspires me to make work.

    These seems like “grand ideals” but they are in fact just life.

    About the Work: The work is oil on canvas in a handmade frame with old pocket watch dials built into the top of the frame, the first of which I found on the beach nearby. Time is a human construct and has to pass for the “Fates” to act so the hands there are no hands the dials, there are four hands on the bottom left of the frame hinting at different timescales as to how and when things occur. In the painted image there are a few parts where the ribbons purposely do not follow the correct visual path and seem to go through what should be the solid vertical stripes of the background.

  •  

    Shells (01-04) in frames

     

    I was collecting these with my grandson when I noticed the small kidney shape that is found in each shell, it is like they all have a very similar start in life but end up completely different because of the circumstances through which they develop. The circumstances may be very similar but the outcome for each individual is so different. It is the nature or nurture argument; I always think it is a good dose of nature followed by a great deal of nurture and that nurture is not always good. I listened to a scientist explaining the forces from which the entire universe developed recently, only four of them apparently, (this is one view only, I suspect there are many more), they are 1. The Strong Nuclear Force, 2. The Weak Nuclear Force, 3. Electromagnetism and 4. Gravity. It amazes me how such a complex place like the universe can develop from only four forces, where do mathematical formulae come from, were they created in the event they call the “Big Bang” or did they exist before, I have so many questions I will never know the answer to but I keep on looking and it is that search that I enjoy and invigorates me.

    It seems there are so many examples of how our own lives develop but the shells one I found close to hand on the local beach, the ridges on the shells mark the passing of each year, the kidney shape the visible starting point and then washed up on a beach to be ground down to sand by the action of the waves. Kandinsky spoke of the “spiritual” in art he writes,” In each picture is a whole lifetime of fears, doubts, hopes and joys. Whither is this lifetime trending? What is the message of the competent artist? …To harmonize the whole is the task of art”.

    This set of four paintings are my humble effort to show my own spirituality, that is not a religious spirituality, but a spirituality born out of experience and being, I cannot nor do I know from whence this comes but it is something I do experience, it is something inside me that art,  objects, places and people amongst other things that inspire me to make art.

    Below are larger images of the individual paintings in their frames:

     

     

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