Archives for posts with tag: interior design

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An odd instance of life turning full circle, but lately I’ve been working as a set painter for an amateur theatre company. The last time I did this job I was about eighteen, so more than twenty years ago, and I find I’m enjoying it just as much this time around. I got into it in the first place thinking ‘well, I like painting on large canvases, so the theatre company is really just giving me free art materials’.

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Unfortunately, like many young artists, my first professional gig as a set painter resulted in non payment and a fair bit of angst, so I decided to steer clear of theatre as a profession. I used to joke that ‘they’re actors, and so when they say that the cheque is in the post, you actually believe them…’

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This time around, I’m working for Maitland Repetory Theatre, and like the rest of the cast and crew, it’s all voluntary. Maitland Rep works out of a lovely old church, next to the Maitland Regional Art Gallery, and has a dedicated following of young and old thespians.

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I’ve been painting a set for The Guardsman, written by Ferenc Molnar and directed by Frank Oakes, which opens on the 10th April. So far I’ve been responsible for a not particularly convincing marble fireplace set, some blotchy old plaster on the walls, and faux wooden panelling below the dado rail. In case you’re interested in paint effects, Floetrol is my current weapon of choice, handy for all those 80s classics such as bagging, dragging, marbling, stone finishes, sponging and even the incurably naff rag rolling.

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Now if you’re old enough to remember the 80s, you’ll remember a time when a feature wall would have looked just like some poor unfortunate had run out of paint. Back in the day, interior designers never used to paint any surface without torturing it with some implement afterwards. So paint was scratched, distressed, sanded, waxed, imprinted with a variety of objects, or bulked up with various fillers so it acted like plaster. Why people insisted on making their belongings look old, I’ll never know, but there it is. And for a brief time in the mid 90s, I worked for a London construction company, doing this kind of work.

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I recently decided, largely on the basis of a casual conversation in a paint shop, that 80s paint effects were about to stage a comeback. I’d been considering buying Porter’s French Wash, a nice product that effectively acts as a scumble glaze. (Scumble glaze is sticky stuff you mix with paint so that it becomes more transparent, and you can see the brushstrokes after the paint dries; it’s as the pistachio is to shortbread when it comes to paint effects). I asked the guy behind the counter if he sold much of it, and he said ‘nah, not as much as the rest of their range’. So on the basis of this overwhelming evidence, I’ve thrown myself into a paint effects revival.

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I figure that if I paint my house with these effects, by the time I get around to selling it, some years down the track, faux finishes will be a red hot trend. To this end, young Sophie has ended up with a pink blotchy bedroom (if it was a rash you’d definitely be off to the doctor) and I’m planning to attack the living room walls with a fetching shade of ochre.

Now if the ochre works, it will look like I am living in the pages of a giant foxed book, all creamy spotted and warm looking. Imagine a nice old pub ceiling, stained yellow brown with nicotine and water marks, and you’ve got the picture. However, there is always the risk that it will resemble some kind of giant animal burrow. Stay tuned….

(Incidentally, I promised EH photos of the birdrobe, currently on show at MRAG as part of the Year of the Bird exhibition, and here they are. I must apologise for the quality of the images: flash on means wrong colour, flash off means low exposure and blurry shot. Either way, documenting my work is clearly a task I need to delegate).

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Regular readers of this blog (all six of you!) will know that I recently moved into an old house. How old remains a mystery, but the builder who checked the place out for me, before I brought it, reckons that it’s probably at least an hundred years old, possibly more. He was excited to discover mortise and tennon joints in the ceiling joists, “been in the trade fourty years and never seen that before!”, and I too admit that my heart fluttered at the thought. 

Shortly after moving in, possibly as the result of carrying heavy furniture on a 42 degree day, I thought I saw a ghost. Yes, one shouldn’t fess up to this sort of thing, it puts one squarely in the crazy basket, but it was the strangest visual illusion. I was lying in bed, gazing blankly past my grey bedroom door, through to the front door, and wondering why on earth the previous occupants had felt the need for four dead-locks, when something shifted. It seemed as if a black cloud hovered into the room, making the grey bedroom door look suddenly darker. Most odd. 

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Anyway, for a few days I toyed with the thought that the place might be haunted, then spent a few more musing why anyone would put four deadlocks on a chipboard door frame. I tried to imagine some of the events that might have happened in my house over the years. Finally I decided that if the place was haunted, then I may as well learn to live with this as, after all, the ghost got here first. 

But why just resign yourself to something? Why not celebrate it? I’d been reading about the history of my new town and discovered that British survivors of the Napoleonic Wars were granted riverside land in an area known as Veterans Flats (nice land but it floods). So I decided that if my house was about fifty years older than previously thought, it could have once belonged to one of these sailors. 

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A few more days passed, where I pretended to myself that I was communing with the ghost, and I eventually came up with the person who I think once lived here. I mean, this is completely fictitious, so please bear with me. His name is Captain Frederick Johanssen, he was a French seaman with a Swedish mother, and he settled here after the war, with his adopted daughter and Chinese housekeeper. 

I have been busily inventing stories about the Captain’s daughter (pulled out of the Pacific Ocean, with no signs of shipwreck nearby, or any other survivors, just this little girl swimming alone in the sea, miles from land); his housekeeper (actually his lover and a trusted friend, but propriety and his nature forbade any public acknowledgement); and his Swedish mother (so beautiful that it scarred him for life). 

Captain Johanssen has become something of an obsession, but being a practical person, I’ve decided that this is a useful partnership. I’m currently working out a renovation plan for the house, and having excruciating taste in home furnishings, and an even worse sense of interior design, have solved this by asking one simple question: ‘would the Captain like it?’ If the answer is ‘non’, then the idea is discarded. 

The Captain, it appears, is prone to military straight rows of clipped box hedges; neat white paintwork; black window boxes with red geraniums; chestnut brown Chesterfield chairs with many buttons; polished brass and flooring that, it has to be said, looks a hell of a lot like a ship’s deck. I’m currently pondering how much rope, canvas and nautical paraphenalia one can pack into a house before it starts looking like a Maritime Museum gift shop. 

I’m also thinking that eventually I would like to write the history of the Captain’s life. 

I did get a lot done this year, just not the things I had planned to do. I know this because at the back of my desk diary I keep a list of priorities, goals, daydreams, aspirations and plans. Some of these are the low level bottom feeder kind of tasks, for example ‘learn how to use Excel’, so I don’t have to endure the humiliation of submitting my tax information in a Word document to my accountant. Others are more lofty, vague and ambitious like ‘have a son’.

On a list titled ‘2011 Goals: big and small’ which features twenty-two items, I managed to achieve exactly two things: I didn’t pay for parking at the University where I periodically work (I’m too miserable to buy parking vouchers and prefer a long walk into campus from an outlying car park. Faced with a choice between torrential rain, and paying $3.40 for a car space, I’ll always opt for a drenching). And I brought myself a nice pair of new trainers. Things I failed to achieve included: selling my house, the proper management of paperwork, finishing my crime novel and, something of a perennial favourite, getting rid of my gut!

On a list of thirty-two things I’d planned to do to my house, before selling it, I managed to achieve exactly (drum roll, please) five items. And that’s actually being generous with the point scores. The problem with the house (I like to blame the house) is that it’s one of those little 1960s fisherman’s shacks, originally a one room place, that later had a kitchen and bathroom added. I like rich colours, so when we first moved in, I made the mistake of painting the walls deep reds and greens. Unfortunately, being a small, square box of a house, it ended up looking like a Rubrick’s Cube. I’ve just finished painting everything white.

Then there’s a problem with my interior design sense, which could be kindly described as problematic. I prefer a style of home furnishings that lives comfortably with notions of kitsch, tack and overkill. Merging bordello themes (a penchant for furry blankets and velvety red and shiny gold fabrics) with a love of brightly coloured Indian and Asian Art, I effortlessly manage to create something that looks like the worst kind of Gentleman’s Club. Imagine some kind of colonial era bounder, staggering from one budget opium den to another, pausing for relaxation at a B grade antique shop, and you’ve got the picture.

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I’m currently trying to emiliorate my own lack of taste by re-branding the place as ‘coastal’. This involves painting everything white and sticking stuff in wicker baskets (though why the f**k people do this is beyond me. The baskets are too small to hold anything useful, you can’t see what’s in them, and if you have too many of them you create this creepy Ali Baba and the Fourty Thieves feel). I’m picking up paint charts and going ‘mmnnnn, beige’. However just when the thought of all this beige got too much, I told myself that the house didn’t have to be ‘coastal’ it could be ‘coastal eccentric‘. This, I rationalised, would allow me the freedom to celebrate my own interior design excesses within a soothing cocoon of pale walls and floors.

So far the path to coastal eccentric has not run smoothly. I’ve found that the combination of a hot pink sari, casually thrown over a soft green leather sofa, just looks weird against a white wall. It seems as if the turquoise kitchen tiles that I so lovingly selected will tend to jump out, even against the calming influence of a beige backdrop. Then there’s this irresistable inclination to dot the bare expanses of white walls with LOTS of pictures. Frankly, it looks as if two different people live in the house and couldn’t decide what they liked.

Similarly my Arts career ran this year like it was being managed by a job sharing genius and idiot. For every resounding success there was an equally prattish custard-pie-in-face failure. The days the genius was on board, I managed to win just under $50k worth of grants, published a book and a journal article, participated in ten group art exhibitions, co-curated a successful touring artists’ books exhibition, published an article in an international art mag, and ran a couple of pretty cool community art projects. When the idiot took over, however, I couldn’t do a thing right. The list of knock backs, failed funding applications, refused opportunities, and politely phrased  rejection letters (ranging from the polite ‘oh, we just had so many great applicants’ to a hissy subtext of ‘are you kidding?’) was monumental. Unfortunately as if so often the case, as everyone tries to clear their desk before the holidays, most of these missives arrived just before Christmas, leaving me wondering why on earth the idiot had been rostered on at this important time of year.