Saturday 2 April 2011

SPRING, BLOSSOM, FLORAL PAINTINGS & THE SPACE-INBETWEEN

Well, the weather has been great recently with the advent of Spring, my favourite time of the year. I love the blossom, the emerging buds and the longer, brighter days. I feel like I’ve emerged, too, from a winter hibernation. Wifey loves the winter and the dark nights but for me it’s a bit glum, especially after the Christmas and the New Year festivities.

Anyway, seeing all this new colour has got me inspired to get going on some new floral work.










 SPRING 40cmx30cm


I’ve always loved using flowers as a starting point for a painting. There are so many colours to choose from, so many shapes. I don’t set out to depict a flower in a botanically correct way, after all I’m an artist, not a scientist. I choose my flowers, setting them up in an untraditional arrangement and start with loose, quickly done studies using diluted acrylic and a selection of brushes, palette knives, sponges, bits of card, kitchen roll, anything that’s lying around really. I sometimes put spotlights on the arrangement to cast shadows on the white background, what I call the space in-between. Working like this allows me to try different compositions, colour combinations and techniques and because I use paper I can throw them away if they don’t work. I usually work on about 10 of these at a time moving from one to another in rotation. At the end I might get 5 or 6 that I think are worth saving and mounting.

I don’t really class these paintings as studies. Quite often they contain a freshness and spontaneity that larger, more ‘worked’ paintings can lose.

Here are three examples to finish with.














ON GOLD 40cmx30cm















  
BUNCH 40cmx30cm
















ARRANGEMENT 40cmx30cm 

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