Archives for posts with tag: Newcastle

Thoroughly enjoying my artist’s residency at Lighthouse Arts in Newcastle! The residency is located at the top of a headland at the entrance to Newcastle Harbour, in one of a number of white-walled heritage cottages clustered around the base of a stone lighthouse. It’s an incredibly peaceful place to work, with something of the feel of an old monastery. You can watch squat little tugs guide huge tankers into port.

Before my residency, I’d planned a series of nice, dreamlike images: ships flying against a cerulean blue sky, delicate flourishes of white wake on the water, the occasional flight of a seagull. All very picturesque. I painted my paper sky blue in anticipation, and looked forward to a nice day of sun sparkling on cobalt blue sea. The kind of day where you pack sunscreen and bottled water…

But nature has a sense of humour…

On the day I arrived, a strong wind blew rain sideways at the headland. Visibility was limited to the next grey cloud, and there was no way even the bravest gull was going to take off. The channel markers swung like metronomes. I watched as a massive tanker literally oscillated its way into port, huge deck lurching first one way and then the other.

So instead of trying to draw something nice, safe and poetic, I thought I’d try to draw an invisible entity instead. I ran around the lighthouse, rain splashing the paper, drawing the wind. Trying to catch the elemental energy and wildness of the place. As soon as I’d finished a sketch, I’d pop the paper inside so it could dry out, grabbed another one and went out again.

And it was an incredible experience! I left the paintings at the lighthouse to dry and came back the next day to finish them off. (For the technically minded, I’m working on a coloured ground – mostly sky blue but some with reddish brown under this, too. The first layer is a pencil drawing, then acrylic paint and finally acrylic pen or decent quality black ink pens).

I enjoyed it so much I’m heading off to another harbour next weekend to draw some yachts.

Last year, thanks to a Seedpod grant from the good people at Octapod, I kicked off ‘Seed’ a series of community art events at Fig Tree Community Garden. Trevor Horsnell and myself hosted a series of events that culminated in the painting of a butterfly mural on the wall of the rock steady Croatian Club, adjacent to the Garden.

Well the good news is that we’re back this year with more butterflies. How exciting is that! For all of you who have a burning desire to paint butterflies, or even just a mild hankering, come along to Fig Tree Community Garden this Sunday, 26th February. From 10am until about midday we’ll be painting on the wall and everyone is welcome to join in. Afterwards there will be a delicious lunch from Fig Tree’s wood fired pizza oven; these are yummo pizzas often topped with fresh produce and herbs from the Garden.

But if you’re thinking ‘nah, butterflies- not hardcore enough for me’ I quite sympathise: I too have wrestled with this vexed conundrum. Initially the prospect of painting multiple butterflies on a wall may seem rather girlish, light hearted, perhaps even effete. This is not what I’d imagined I’d be doing in the leather clad 1980s.

However now I am one of the converted and can reassure you that after the first butterfly, you’ll be gone baby gone. It’s highly likely that you’ll go home after the event and spray paint butterflies on your bedroom walls.

This time around I’ll be joined by the very talented artists Karen Robinson Smith and Tallulah Cunningham. Karen is a sculptor with a natural sense of design, so she’s responsible for butterfly placement. Or, as we like to say in the trade (please assume bad Cockney accent) ‘fly positioning.

The gifted natural history illustrator, and artist, Tallulah Cunningham has kindly offered to draw outlines of butterflies so that people can fill them in.

If you haven’t touched a paint brush for years, and can’t draw to save a stick figure, be reassured that we’ll have some fool proof stencils to get you started.

See you Sunday, come ‘fly with us!