Archives for posts with tag: strange tales

Deep South

I thought I’d post a few images from my recent show, Strange Tales, at Despard Gallery, Tasmania. The exhibition was opened by Danielle Wood, who stood in front of this painting and spoke about the odd interplay of the nest of eggs, a symbol of hope, surrounded by writhing worm creatures.

Earlier we’d spoken about this symbol, the nest surrounded by worms, death of hope writ large. I used to breed poultry and one fateful day, after heavy rains, a broody hen abandoned her nest of hatching chicks. The wet and the humidity quickly set in and so did the flies: you can imagine the rest. It turned out that Danielle had seen a similar thing and had been so struck by the image that she turned it into a short story.

Cloud Atlas

This one’s titled Cloud Atlas, after David Mitchell’s book of the same name. No obvious links with the narratives, but I loved the title and the various associations with dreaming: head in the clouds, on cloud nine, clouds with silver lining; also this idea of trying to map something that is constantly in a state of flux.

The painting shows my cousin Rachel and I, as early teenagers, dream-thinking our future lives. In the clouds are small cameos of various desires and fears.

The Secret (on left hand side) and Pleasure Garten 1

The Secret, on the left, is actually an older painting from my last show at Despard back in 2009. Pleasure Garten 1 is a more recent work, inspired by a book about the history of zoological gardens and, more generally, Indian miniature painting. People are doing rude things in the house.

 

I greatly enjoyed making these Sirena drawings, which are a simple, very simple, watercolour wash and then a small amount of detailing with black ink and white gouache. The images show a slow transition of a fish, with a woman’s profile, into something more complex. The final fishes have internal organs that are more human than animal.

After the hyperbolic treatment and intensity of the paintings, I loved the zen moment of just letting paint flow off a brush and bleed onto rag paper.

Sirena drawings

And here’s some more Sirena drawings. I’ve recently become a bit obsessive about the moment in fairy tales where a human turns into an animal, or vice versa, that precise piece of enchantment. The moment where the creature hovers between the two states…

Tiger Bride study

This is a study based on a short story I wrote and folded into my re-telling of the Arabian Nights: 1001 nights: being an Erotic Memoir, and Private Journal, of the Virgin Scheherazade- a gripping tale of love, death, identity, transformation and metamorphosis. There was a funny episode on Sesame Street about a newt that experiences a transformation into a salamander. Anyway, the newt had a Southern American accent and Big Hair, so by the time I get to the end of my title I’m already doing a kind of old style revival: met-a-mooorph-o-sis!

Exhibition in situ

Nice placement of Deep South in an elegant arched recess.

Pleasure Garten 1

A closer view of Pleasure Garten 1. The original idea was to paint a garden full of extinct species, but they turned out more mythological.

Sirena drawing close up

Another Sirena image, this time with human foetus.

Tiger Bride

Another shot of a painting I’ve previously blogged about, Tiger Bride. 

Zoo Garten 1

Like Pleasure Garten 1, Zoo Garten 1 was supposed to be stocked with extinct species, but this didn’t work out. The animals are quietly contained, in too small enclosures. The composition reminds me of a Victorian board game.

 

 

 

Strange Tales, my solo exhibition at Despard Gallery is coming up on the 10th May. It’s a weird blend of painting and literary references, with fairy tale and Tasmanian Gothic iconography, peculiar narratives, unsettling characters and haunting landscapes.

Any creative act is a little like a conjuring trick, you’re never entirely sure if it’s going to come off, and I’m probably too close to this body of work to see it clearly. However I can say that I’ve loved making this work, it’s been a blast and I’m really looking forward to the show. Oddly enough, these paintings are saturated with Tasmanian references: I find myself pawing over photographs of the island’s rugged coastline, early Colonial art, peculiar wildlife, literature, local Museum collections.

I’m also extremely pleased to announce that Danielle Wood, winner of the Australian/Vogel Literary Prize, will be opening the show. If you’re in Tasmania hopefully I’ll see you at the opening: 6pm Thursday 10th May. After the show I’m planning to take a month off and spend part of it traveling around the island. The aim is to visit and document all the lighthouses: can’t wait!

The Marriage Plot, 5 x 4, oil on canvas 2012

I’ve got a solo exhibition coming up at Despard Gallery, Hobart, and have been spending lots of time in the studio trying to get the paintings done. Strange Tales opens on the 10th May and will be on show until the 29th. The painting pictured above is ‘The Marriage Plot’ oil on canvas, about 5′ x 4′ (I haven’t measured them exactly yet so these number are a bit iffy), 2012. It’s named after Jeffrey Eugenides new novel of the same name.

This one has already featured on this blog, I documented the stages of its creation; it’s ‘Tiger Bride’, again oil on canvas, 2012 and about the same dimensions as The Marriage Plot, but obviously landscape format instead of portrait. It owes debts to Australian colonial art, as well as Indian miniature painting and early religious art.

Another new painting created for Strange Tales. This is ‘Cloud Altas’, named after David Mitchell’s novel, if you look closely there are small cities and boats in the clouds. This is an image that continues to haunt, two girls side by side in a boat, sky overhead, sea underneath, the occasional shadow as a shark passes underneath, joy when a fish is caught. As children my cousin Rachel and I used to take to the seas around Dover in a leaking huon pine dinghy; it leaked so much that frequently the fish we caught would swim around our legs when we pulled them into the boat.

More soon…

The good news is that my latest painting, the Tiger Bride, is almost finished. The bad news is that the human propensity to fiddle is potentially endless. And so it is that I have been hovering over the canvas with a tiny brush, making minute changes that no-one is likely to notice. Or even if they did notice, it’s doubtful whether it would make any difference to their reading of the image. Still, one is compelled to fiddle, even though there has to be a point where you say ‘enough! the bloody thing is finished’.

So why all the last minute angsting over trivial details of virtually nil visual impact? A good question! It’s partly a desire to make the painting as whole as it can be. When I get to this point in a painting, the big decisions are no longer clear (such as where the large forms go and what they look like). It’s just thousands of tiny little decisions that could go one way or the other. For example, does the veil need some ribbons blowing around it to increase the sense of dynamism? It’s essentially quite a static image, painted with small, tight brushstrokes, and the ribbons could help add movement. Or flow.

And if I add more detail to the Cape Barren Geese, will this help jump them forward into the foreground? At the moment they’re hovering tonally on the same plane as the stone wall. If I do add detail, what do I add? I had this idea of dressing them in natty little green velvet capes with lace bonnets. But if I do this, will it look incorrigibly naff? More specifically, will it take the image too far down the road towards children’s book illustration, bringing a kind of Wind in the Willows tendency into something that is supposed to be pretty but also ambiguous and hopefully potent.

As you can see, the green velvet capes, complete with frilly neck-lines, made the cut. Their colour (chromium oxide) is too buzzy, much too high a key for the rest of the painting, so next time I’m in the studio I’ll calm them down with a pale tint.

The other reason why it’s sometimes hard to finish paintings is more oblique. One gets so fond of them, they dominate your thoughts for a period of time, and it’s hard to let go. I’m visually monogamous: I like working intensely on just one image at a time. I find that flicking between images, though productive, dilutes the intensity required to make anything good. But this is just me, everyone works differently.

I am however fine with working up the underpainting layers of other canvases while I’m concentrating on one main image. This is a shot of a painting, I’ve nicknamed it church, that will eventually show a small, squat colonial era church with two children at the front, possibly holding animals. I return to this image, again and again, which is odd as I don’t even particularly like American Gothic. 

In a moment of clarity in the studio yesterday, I worked out that most of my images talk about female power. I was musing about the church image, and thinking that I may try painting a 3/4 view of the building, showing some nice sandstone details along the side. But for some reason I couldn’t break away from the image of the church, with a centrally placed door, and a curving path leading up to the entrance. Eventually I decided that the door acts as a kind of female phallic symbol, both a literal and a metaphorical gateway.

This is the photograph, of a Tasmanian church, that I’m using as reference. There’s something terribly mawish about this door.

In other news, I’ve repainted the background to the Dodo with children in snowstorm image (it will probably have a better title eventually, but that’s its working name). I wanted the three figures to form a triangle, and visually operate as a pieta, with the human figures a descending series of forms curved over the dodo, the solid base of the triangle. Anyway, the whole group was off centre, and it wasn’t working.

I also abandoned my plan to paint a mountain, Hobart’s Mount Wellington, in the background. Firstly because I didn’t have decent reference material (despite my many trips to Tasmania to gather reference material, I had somehow forgotten to photograph the mountain that looms over the small city). And secondly because it would have closed in the pictorial space at a time when I’m trying to open it up and play with depth.

Here’s the underpainting of another image, it will eventually depict two girls standing on a beach, wearing colonial era ball gowns and animal masks. One will have her hands raised, pushing the mask off her face (perceiving the history of the place), a pose that dates back, at least in my imagination, to Les Demoiselles d’Avignon. I’m looking forward to this painting, imagining it as gelato coloured, all light pink, olive green, white and pale grey.

Surprisingly, one of my favourite parts of Tiger Bride was painting the lace. If you get up close, there’s some quite odd symbols and patterns woven into the pattern, including Pacific tribal motifs and things that look like crop circles. In retrospect, the lace looked better when parts of it were left sheer, as opposed to covered with ’embroidery’, but I went a bit OCD and didn’t notice this until I’d finished. At this stage I thinking that I can use lace as the visual motif that ties this exhibition together: I like the way it both obscures and consolidates forms. Incidentally the exhibition that these paintings are for, Strange Tales, has been moved back a couple of months. It will now open at Despard Gallery, Tasmania, in late April 2012.

 

 

 

Day two and three in the studio (not consecutive) involve more layers of acrylic paint and fiddling with the drawing…

It’s about this stage that I started missing oil paint, its sticky richness and intensity of colour. The acylic is fine for the underpainting, helps seal the canvas and means that you’re not waiting around for ages until it dries. It’s nice to handle, non toxic, ideal for mucking around with image and composition, but it just doesn’t have that…. thing.

I think it’s about this point that I started using oil paint over the top of the dry acrylic underpainting.

Me!

Reference material: the poor, doomed thylacines (Tasmanian Tiger).

What the painting looked like at the end of day three.

Came into the studio on day four and decided that I was creating major compositional, not to mention aesthetic, problems for myself. The mountain range behind the figures was originally planned to open up, on the right, into a wide bowl shaped valley. This would have given the painting some depth, a sense of space. However with the mountain rapidly turning into a one dimensional granite escarpment, and the low stone wall acting as another visual barrier, the whole thing was getting visually claustrophic. I dragged out some of my holiday snaps from Tasmania and decided to repaint the background using an actual mountain view as reference.

Nothing beats the real

The first stage involved repainting the sky with pale greys.

The next phase involved working out the tonal gradations and colours of the mountain ranges in the background. Using various mixes of warm grey at this point, mixed with some burnt umber, a bit of paynes grey, some black, titanium white, yellow, chromium green oxide and a couple of miscellaneous tubes of grey paint that my Aunty Pam gave me.

The final stage of day four, which was a short day in the studio. It still looks like a mess, but I’m much happier with the composition. Next step is to work on the rock wall in the foreground, using the following image as reference (it’s outside a country church in Tasmania).

More reference material…

After this I’ll go hunting for figure reference material for the children (probably involves photographing Sophie and one of her mates) and costume reference.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Another well intentioned attempt to follow a painting from ‘cradle to grave’, or rather from the first sketches through to the end product. The painting I have chosen is about 4′ x 5′ (must get into metric one day) and I have a special affection for it, although currently it remains untitled. It’s part of a series I’m working on for Despard Gallery, Tasmania, in preparation for my next solo exhibition with them in early 2012.

Strange Tales will include about six large paintings like this one, a number of smaller bird canvases, and perhaps some large scale charcoal drawings. I’ve found that I’m missing drawing, particularly drawing from life, the immediacy and the fluency of drawing media. Although I’m still working it out, most of these paintings will be specifically about Tasmania, the island’s history and its colonial art, this constant sense of the past and the present colliding.

This is the canvas with its first coat of acrylic paint. While trying to replicate something of the style of either colonial or naive art, I’m sticking to some of the more traditional painting methods, like starting from a pinkish ground (usually closer to a red/brown or pale terracotta, but I want these images to be sickly sweet, right from the beginning). The image is of a small girl, wearing colonial era garb, riding a Tasmanian Tiger. A young boy holds the reins.

The initial sketch, executed with willow charcoal. At this point I’m referring quite constantly to the smaller sketch in my journal (pictured above).

Wrote the words ‘delicate subjugation’ on the top right of the canvas.

Introduce washes of acrylic paint to start picking out the tones.

White acrylic paint goes on…

End of the first day!