Saturday, September 30, 2023

To delight the senses, arouse the passion and excite the imagination...

Detail from one of my painting of the nude figure.
 

I get terribly bored viewing most paintings of the nude. Although they may be anatomically correct in every detail, they lack what Sir Walter Scott claimed for the artistry of the 13th century troubadours: 

To delight the senses, arouse the passion and excite the imagination.

If the artist is devoid of passion, there is no way that his work can arouse the senses in others. The painting that illustrates this post was motivated by the passion and presence of my live model. 

Saturday, September 23, 2023

He'll finish it better when he gets home.

 

A page from my book "Caribbean Sketches"

My book "Caribbean Sketches" records a journey I made through the Caribbean thirty-five years ago. It comprises of hundreds of pen and ink sketches that I jotted down in the heat of the moment. To the uninitiated viewer they are hard to fathom. Hence the comment from one onlooker to another: "He'll finish it better when he gets home."

Saturday, September 16, 2023

Flattery will get you nowhere

Alice relaxing after a modelling session.

Today's sketch is of a modelling session from over thirty years ago. The subject is Alice, the very first model in my series "Daughters of the Caribbean Sun". The sketch was accomplished in less than 30 seconds and it captures the mood of the moment. Please note: my crayon hasn't had time to leave the paper.

The sketch came to mind a few days ago when I was glancing through the results of an art group's first session with a live nude model. Their stilted attempts were towards likeness and by extension, flattery. They failed miserably on both counts. My advice would have been: forget the likeness, forget the flattery, but passionately fall in love with the model and powerfully express your love a matter of seconds. 

Maybe I will add this advice to my forthcoming book, "Notes for Life Class Students and Models".

Sunday, September 10, 2023

Times have changed

Milk Churns, Ballygub, Ireland. 1972

In the early 1970's my studio was what once a village school in County Kilkenny, Southern Ireland. We lived in on classroom and I taught art classes in the other. Our land led down to the River Nore and we were surrounded by green fields for miles around. The milk churns were awaiting collection at the gate of the farm next door. 

Out of curiosity I looked up the location a few evenings ago on google earth. It took me a long time to recognise what had once been familiar landmarks. Our next door neighbour's small farm is now a huge commercial undertaking and alongside the path that led down to the river is what appears to be a car-breaker's yard. Times have changed!