Wednesday, April 29, 2020

Let there be life

       

The sculpture based on the sketch I posted two days ago has begun to show the first signs of life. By making the figure quarter life-size I can work rapidly. I began work after breakfast and by mid-day the clay was already taking shape. Now that I have created life the challenge will be keep the figure alive. The secret is to suggest rather than define detail. 

My second challenge, due to the current Corona Virus restrictions, will be to complete the figure without reference to a live model. The human figure is the most complex structure in all creation - and the most beautiful. Without the model I cannot second guess the subtle changes that occur from one position to the next.


Below is the aluminium wire armature on which I formed the clay. To give you an idea of scale, the base plate measures 7" x 9".


Tuesday, April 28, 2020

My followers are increasing by leaps and bounds



Up to the advent of the Corona Virus my regular followers were artists and art students. Now my audience has increased dramatically in terms of general interest, indicating that art has therapeutic role to play in these difficult timesSome newcomers are catching up by delving back into the archives of this blog and others are content to follow my daily updates. Whichever way, welcome to my way of seeing and depicting beauty that many never give a second glance to.

Today's opening picture is a case in point. It shows the odds and ends of handmade paper left over from my recent sculptures. These I have now recycled into more paper for more sculptures. With sculpture in mind, rather than drawing or print making, I have left the sheets to dry without restraint and to curl just as leaves do when they fall from the tree.


I started notesforartstudents.blogspot.com years ago specifically for CXC Visual Art students in Dominica. At that time my followers were few and far between. But thanks to the Corona Virus it is also beginning to attract a world-wide audience. Hence, its present resurrection.

Monday, April 27, 2020

My models are in lock-down


Corona Virus restrictions mean that all of my models, whether here in Dominica or elsewhere in the world, are currently in lock-down. However, having spent a lifetime working from the live model and having the results of my labours preserved in thousands of paintings and sketches, I can carry on regardless. 

This painting is one that I made recently as a preliminary sketch for a piece of sculpture. Along with other sketches on a similar theme - some dating back over thirty years - I am now prepared the clay in readiness for putting the idea into practice.

With the nude figure there's nothing new under the sun. The sculptor Auguste Rodin (1840-1917) found inspiration for the nude in dance. Had yoga been more widely practiced in his day I am sure many of the poses, such as the one shown in my sketch, would have featured in his work.

Kneeling Nude. Auguste Rodin

Sunday, April 26, 2020

Take the kinks out of your mind, not your hair!



Take the kinks out of your mind, not your hair. (Marcus Garvey).

Dominica is doing quite well in battling with the Corona Virus and it seems that under our current State of Emergency some restrictions may soon be relaxed. But just when I thought the Afro might make a comeback it seems that we may soon see the re-opening of hair salons, manicure and pedicure parlors and barbershops.

As a reminder to the fashion conscious, the Afro epitomized the 1960's black is beautiful movement. It represented a celebration of black beauty and a repudiation of foreign beauty standards. The style is unique to those of African descent and complements the facial features far better than shaved heads and straightened hair.

As a painter and sculptor, I remain committed to depicting the all-natural God given beauty of the Afro-Caribbean...Afro, Cane/Corn-row, Braids, Bantu knots and all.

Friday, April 24, 2020

The end of one love affair and the beginning of another.




From the 1970's and through the 1980's my love affair was with the islands. But my lover was soon seduced by others who saw her beaches, landscapes and townscapes as Caribbean real estate ripe for development. 

The Virgin Island poet Sheila Hyndman (1958 -1991) expresses the impending change in her poem To Virgin Gorda.

They will come
with tools and machines.
They will bring to light your secret places,
They will demand your mysteries,
They will destroy,
Build up.
They will dilute your treasures
and rob you of your chastity.
They will adorn you like ancient Jezebel. 

In those days my studio was wooden shack alongside an idyllic cove. The above painting was made from the beach below my studio. The ruined house on the headland was my retreat and the painting below was made in its overgrown grounds.



The house is now a palatial residence and I no longer have the freedom to wander through its grounds, nor can my boat lie in the secluded anchorage, for the idyllic cove is now a crowded marina.

But as one love affair ended, another began. 

The hundreds of paintings and scores of sculptures in my series " Daughters of the Caribbean Sun" owe their origin to another of Sheila's poems, which begins:

I am a daughter of the Caribbean Sun
Grown out of the soil of the Virgin Isles.
Molded by the salt of coral filled seas
and smoothed by the touch of the Trade Winds.

Thank you Sheila for being my mentor, muse and true friend. 

   

Wednesday, April 22, 2020

Set me free!


It's not me that's begging to be set free - I accomplished that sixty years ago - but the medium I am working with. The life-size sculptures that I am creating from fiber-rich handmade paper are not meant to imitate those made from bronze, plaster or marble. The material has an identity of its own and it would be pointless trying to make it conform to something it is not. It can best expressive its uniqueness when allowed to be itself.

The opening picture shows the front view of my most recent sculpture. It was molded on the plaster life-cast shown at the end my recent post Growing Old and Working My Way Up From The Bottom


The picture below shows the reverse side of the finished sculpture. This illustrates the possibilities of "two sides to the coin", something that cannot be achieved in other sculptural media.


If we now look in detail at the colours and textures the dramatic possibilities become apparent.



The finished sculpture measures 22" x 12" x 5" and weighs less than two ounces. In places it is almost transparent but its apparent fragility belies its strength and permanence. Remember, the fibers within the stem of a banana plant are also used to reinforce car tires! 

I now need to begin making paper specifically with sculpture in mind. For fine art papers I strive for sheets of an even thickness and for them dry flat. If left alone my handmade paper curls as it dries, just as an autumn leaf curls when it has fallen from the tree.

Perhaps the paper is also begging to be set free. 

Tuesday, April 21, 2020

Yesterdays


This sketch of Alice dates back to the early 1990's and the year that she spent as my model and studio assistant. Good studio assistants are as rare as good models and Alice excelled in both roles. As a model she had classical Afro-Caribbean features and as my assistant she had exceptional eye to hand coordination. The photograph shows her preparing the mold division of the portrait bust that I made of her. She was my very first Daughter of the Caribbean Sun

The chances are that this evocative recording of Yesterdays by Billy Holiday was playing softly in the background when the photograph was taken. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BVKyUJVjZf8




Saturday, April 18, 2020

Mission Accomplished


Perhaps the title of today's post should read "Missions Accomplished" with emphasis on the plural. 

Three years ago when I began my experiments in making handmade paper from Dominica's abundant natural resources my objective was distinctive art papers. I now have hundreds of different papers in all sizes, colours and textures. Using the same paper for sculpture never entered my mind until by chance I used it as the surface finish on a dress maker's mannequin.

The pictures below are taken from my blog and follow the story from there. All the pieces are life-size.


My first attempt at applying different papers to a plaster mold. (2nd February)

Banana paper cast into a silicon rubber mold. (15th February)

A fine textured banana paper built up on a clay mold. (28th February)

Dark banana paper using a plaster life-cast as the mold. (3rd March)

My first attempt at a paper sculpture in the round from a clay mold. (9th April)

My second torso in the round nearing completion. (18th April)

What you are seeing is something very different to paper mache, modeling in paper pulp, collage or cut and paste paper assemblies. The technique come closer to the processes involved in casting a sculpture in plaster and bronze. Similar skills are involved with the advantage that the raw material grows for free just outside my studio door. Furthermore, I am in control of the work in progress, from start to finish. In terms of permanence, the resulting sculpture is as permanent as any other art work on paper - and more so, as the surface can be protected against damp and humidity. The key ingredient is the amazing strength of handmade paper. The banana plant stem contains one of strongest natural fibers known to man. Incidentally, my second life-size torso weighs in at 8 ounces (227 grams). 

The possibilities are endless, so it is not so much mission accomplished but rather a creative process that has only just begun. I now need to give the material full reign to its sculptural possibilities and in doing so to discover new ways of depicting the beauty of the nude figure. 

Thursday, April 16, 2020

Working to within a hair's breadth


Here she is...my second torso ready to be released from its clay form. This time around I have given her the benefit of two different shades of banana paper. I was tempted to add a third but as a painter I have learnt, to add more is to say less. 

My first torso involved piecing together a ten piece jigsaw puzzle. With my second torso I have to reduce the pieces to four and kept the front as one piece. In doing so the clay original is destroyed, just the same as it would be in making a plaster waste mold. The advantage is that once I have carefully removed one section I can then release the remaining segments by excavating the clay. This helps to prevent distortion. It also forces me move on and explore new subjects. 



I am now busy assembling the separate pieces.The fibers within the paper allow me to align one to the other, to within a hair's breadth. As in all art forms, considerable labour and skill goes into achieving what in the end appears to be the work of an inspirational moment.  


Tuesday, April 14, 2020

Growing old and working my way up from the bottom


It has been said that one of the first signs of old age is when you bend down to tie your lace and wonder what else you can do while you're down there.

I am now working on my second attempt of the torso and hoping to overcome the problems I encountered on first version. The clay was left intact after Mk 1 but I have now modified it to accentuate the contours. This time around I am building up the surface with thinner layers. On both torsos I have worked from the bottom up and getting down to work on the lower sections - layer by layer, piece by piece - involves the equivalent of hundreds of exercise squats. As when tying my shoe laces, I cannot think what else I can do while I'm down there.  

On the subject of old age in relation to art, I have recently re-read two of my books on the subject: one by Kenneth Clark and the other by Philip Sohm. Both are titled The Artist Grows Old. What I consider to be the worth of a book can be judged by the sentences I have highlighted and the notes I have made in the margins. Philip Sohm's glossy 222 pages are devoid of both whereas Kenneth Clark's plain 30 pages has them in profusion. 

A quote from Kenneth Clark's book that I can well relate to reads:
I haven't long to wait. I shall say what I like, and as forcefully as possible.

Both authors have taken the great names in art as their subject matter. However, I believe it is often the lesser known artists that battle on and find their feet in old age. 

On the subject of bottoms, here is another from my collection that may lend itself to being translated from plaster to paper.





Sunday, April 12, 2020

How it all began

The "About the Artist" in the right sidebar of this blog doesn't say it all, there's just not the space. 

It all began in 1967 when I gave up the security of the engineer's drawing office and bought the Yorkshire Keel Barge shown in the photographs. After a year spent converting her from carrying cargoes of coal to carrying a family of three, we sailed to the French Canals. 







Having freed myself of a mortgage and nine to five job I declared myself an artist on the pavements of France. My wife Norma and two year old daughter Diana shared those precarious days. For all its hardships, it was an idyllic lifestyle. My sketches were the songs for our supper and when we had exhausted the possibilities of one location, we sailed on to the next.   

As in Luke Kelly's song Thirty-foot Trailer (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9yX6Ci-rZck) the days of the traveler are alas over.

There's a by-law to say you must be on your way and another to say you can't wander.

Below is one of my paintings from those early days that nicely ties in with this theme.



Thursday, April 9, 2020

Lessons learnt in piecing it all together


The three dimensional torso jigsaw puzzle that I left you with ten days ago has now been put together. From the beginning the object was not so much to create a work of art but to see if a paper sculpture could be created in the round from a clay master. It worked but many lessons have been learnt in the process. The key ones being:
  1. To keep all the laminates thin rather than adding heavy laminates. A heavy laminate does not add strength but it does cause distortion.
  2. To keep the overlaps on each layer as narrow as possible so as to keep the final form a constant thickness. 
  3. To keep the joining tapes thin so as not to add noticeable thickness along the seams. Handmade paper depends on fibers for strength.
  4. Use narrow strips for the concave areas and undercuts so as to avoid the paper pulling taught and bridging over the section as it dries.  
The completed torso is extremely strong - you can't break it - and yet it weighs only 1 lb (one pound). In comparison the same torso in plaster would weigh over 120 lbs and in bronze 350 lbs. I will have more to say about comparisons in terms of cost and permanence, etc. in a future post.

The challenge now is to explore the creative potential of handmade paper as a sculptural material: freedom of form, texture and colour, rather then try to make this unique material conform to something it is not.


I have used a slender aluminium rod as a support.


Tuesday, April 7, 2020

Too much green and literary linkages.


Jean Rhys was born in Dominica in 1890. Her literary masterpiece Wild Sargasso Sea is set in Jamaica but the scenes relate directly to the countryside that surrounds my studio.

Too much blue, too much purple, too much green. The flowers too red, the mountains too high, the hills too near.

Jean Rhys's award winning novel was inspired by Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre. As one critic wrote:

Rhys took one of the works of genius of the 19th century and turned it inside-out to create one of the works of genius of the 20th century.

Whereas in recent years, from a painterly point of view, I have been surrounded by too much green, my earlier life was spent in the somber tones of Charlotte Bronte's countryside. 

My painting of Marsh Hall was made on a visit "home" from the Caribbean on a bleak November day in 1992. The hall is located in the village of Northowram. The Bronte's family's home was only a few miles away and Charlotte's sister, Emily Bronte, taught at Law Hill School in the nearby village of Southowram.

Although Charlotte Bronte never visited Dominica, Jean Rhys went to live in England at the age of 16. She began work as a chorus girl for a travelling theater company and one of the towns they played in was Halifax - just two miles away from the scenes of my childhood. 




Friday, April 3, 2020

In memory of Egon Schiele (1890-1918)


A hundred years ago the world was recovering from the Spanish Flue. Like the Corona Virus it was was a deadly pandemic that lasted from January 1918 to December 1920 and infected a quarter of the world's population. One of the victims was the twenty-eight year old Austrian painter Egon Schiele. Since his death no other artist has been able to equal his mastery of colour, brevity and foreshortening. He worked mainly in gouache and watercolour and his powerful female nudes are unashamedly erotic. Full recognition was not accorded to his work until the 1950's.