Archives for posts with tag: #painter

Heading off to Dangar Island soon to draw some more boats, so I thought I’d post some of the last images from Gosford Sailing Club.

Found I enjoyed drawing boats being prepared for launch just as much as ones already in the water. There’s the drama of the situation – a crew standing around watching their precious boat being slowly winched down into the water – and ample opportunity to explore the shape of keels and rudders. Thinking of getting myself invited to a boatyard as an artist-in-residence, as I’d enjoying drawing the organic shape of hulls against the more rigid horizontal and verticals of cranes, cradles and scaffolding.

This one was drawn from the club’s bar…

One of the things that I’m interested in doing is continuing to work on a coloured ground. Many of these images started with a quite traditional reddish-brown ground. Kind of nice to give the coolness of the blues and greens something to kick against.

For the technically minded, most of these are on watercolour paper or paper that is suitable for acrylic paints. The ground is gesso tinted with acrylic paint, sometimes reddish-brown and then blue-grey, sometimes just blue-grey.

They’re drawn with a soft pencil, painted with acrylic and left to dry. If I’m not happy with the forms, I’ll draw back into them with pencil, then add black lines with acrylic paint markers of various widths. Occasionally, I’ll add some highlights or re-paint and re-draw areas that need it (I re-worked the relative size and position of the keel and rudder on some of these images).

Looking forward to my excursion to Dangar Island!

Last day of my residency at Lighthouse Arts in Newcastle yesterday. One of those days when you try to finish things, in this case some drawings I’d begun at Gosford Sailing Club the weekend before.

Normally it’s a bit of a chore trying to finish stuff in an environment that’s different to where you begun it (I once heard a painter talk about how she’d finished paintings started during her artist’s residency in Antarctica at home in the Northern Territory, and felt a mild sense of amazement: they were detailed images of ice layers).

Anyway, the Lighthouse residency made it easy. Whenever I needed to mix a particular shade of blue, I just needed to look out the window! And fortunately, just like the weekend beside the water at Gosford, yesterday was a lovely bright day.

One of the nifty things about working quickly is that it forces you to trust your instincts and commit to a mark. Just like a jazz musician improvising, there’s the exhilarating experience of a creative free fall. And, just like the musician, sometimes you play a wrong note.

Then, of course, when you look at the image afterwards it’s a question of whether you change the thing that you’re not happy with or just live with it. For example, yesterday I forgot to pack any yellow paint and I needed to mix a warm honey-coloured sandstone colour for some rocks. Stuffed around mixing some burnt umber, blues, whites and a naples yellow (reddish tint) but couldn’t get what I wanted. And one of the yachts had a lovely aqua coloured hull that I forgot to paint. So whenever I look at these images, I’m seeing some rocks that are too fleshy and a boat that would be that much better if it were green…

One of the nice things I’ve found about being an older painter is that I’ve learned to live with my mistakes. I used to destroy a lot of work – some of it quite good – in the interests of the illusive, slippery eel of perfection. Nowadays, I let the paintings have their own way.