….a 42nd Birthday commission for a serious Douglas Adams fan!
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Batterwhip Reverence
Lovely to have been sent this photograph of ‘Batterwhip’ looking marvellous on the wall…
Paintings at the Viaduct Gallery, Dean Clough this weekend
Hoping to help raise some funds for Ravenscliffe High School at Dean Clough this weekend with ‘Tool Rack’, ‘Turmeric’ and ‘Marbles’…..
Affordable Art Fair on Hampstead Heath
Most excited to be exhibiting at the AFFORDABLE ART FAIR on Hampstead Heath
with Nicholas Bowlby Gallery open Wednesday 10th to Sunday 14th May………
The Friendly Fork
The Friendly Fork is looking very at home in its new owner’s new kitchen 🙂
Shelf Portraits have a trip out to Battersea Park AAF
Six of my Shelf Portraits were on display at the Affordable Art Fair Battersea Spring last weekend with the Nicholas Bowlby Gallery, and were much admired 🙂
Heading down to London…
Heading down to London in a minute to set up for Parallax Art Fair this weekend…
Get free tickets online at:
or just turn up and queue….http://parallaxaf.co/tickets.html
I’ll be at Gallery 17. See you there!!
Living Room Literature
Dr Wah is a superb teacher, someone who can bring literary works alive for her students and who has the knack of passing onto them much of her own enthusiasm and close engagement with a wide variety of texts. Her love for literature is matched by her ability to ease you into understanding and appreciating the language, the structure, the meaning – everything, that is, that adds up to the beauty of the finest writing. She has a patience and a preciseness that keeps opening up new possibilities for her students.
Professor Gordon McMullan | Director, London Shakespeare Centre
New 'Shelf-Portraits' for Parallax Art Fair…
‘How to Build a Girl’ rsw2017 oil on canvas 12×24″
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‘Simple Cookery’ rsw2017 oil on canvas
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Colour
About ten years ago Mary Loney shut me in a small room with a still life set up and some acrylic paint. I had avoided painting entirely up to that point in my life, mostly due to the fact that I was terrified of colour, or more specifically, trying to replicate colours.
When I started painting with oils I limited myself to four tubes of paint: alizarin crimson; prussian blue; naples yellow and white, mixing all colours from these, starting with single object compositions – suiting my restricted palette.
I have spent ten years in my comfort zone of artefacts and possessions – they have a general tendency to remain the same colour between sittings, unlike nature – whilst expanding my palatte to two reds; two blues; three yellows; two browns and white.
Maybe one day soon I will feel brave enough to attempt to use nature and the great outdoors as my subject matter and imagine that I might be able to do it some justice.
Until that day…..there is photography….