Sunday, October 31, 2021

Age need not rob thee of thy beauty

The Helmet Maker's Wife (August Rodin 1840-1917)

August Rodin's sculpture The Helmet Maker's Wife is testimony to the fact that age need not rob thee of thy beauty. Likewise, age need not rob you of resilience and a zest for life. Testimony to this is 102 year old Veronica Elsina Burton. Last month her own natural immune system enabled her to defy the odds and beat the Covid-19 virus.

My Caribbean island of Dominica holds the world record for centenarians. The score currently stands at twenty. This says a lot for our healthy climate and a generation that worked hard and lived off the fat of the land.

Centenarian Veronica Elsina Burton.

Sunday, October 24, 2021

For crying out loud!

Exhibits at the Dominica Pavilion, Dubai 2020

I began life as an angry young man and I'm ending it as an angry old man. One reason being the pictures that illustrate this post. They were taking at the Dubai Expo and the mannequins are meant to depict Dominicans wearing national dress. This would be all well and good were it not for the fact that 99.9% of Dominicans are of African or Kalinargo descent, therefore black rather than white!

The response from many Dominicans is: "Does it matter"? Well, to my mind it certainly does. Without pride of identity all is lost. 

As I was ranting, raving and crying out load about this to a Dominican friend calmed me with the following massage:

"No need to end life as an angry old man, you've ensured that you left your mark here. Even after your passing you will still exist through your legacy. And this my friend is definitely not a reason to end life angry. As always it’s a pleasure to hear from you. And from the tone of your email I can tell that you’re in good spirits, just disappointed yet again by the foolishness which surrounds you."

Thank you Kamarsha. The painting I made of you some years ago, reassures me that being black and beautiful is something to be proud of.

Kamarsha

Sunday, October 17, 2021

When the world was young

Unveiling of the Dancing Girls at the Allen Gallery, Hampshire.

The opening photograph was taken in the year 2000 at the unveiling of my sculpture Dancing Girls. My daughters Tania and Trina were the models. They can be seen standing besides me; Trina to the left, Tania to the right. 

Fast forward 21 years....Tania's passion for sport has resulted in her working fulltime for the Dominica Olympic Committee and she now has a bouncing son of her own. 

Tania

Trina is now working as a banking computer consultant and busy renovating her house in the UK. In addition to rooting out tree stumps she has learnt to put her hand to carpentry, plastering, plumbing, painting, electrical wiring and brick laying. This is what the "useful arts" are all about.

Trina

Twenty-one
 years ago sculpture dominated my days but now my creative interests cover a broader field. As with my daughters, the pandemic has not slowed me down. Within the confines of my studio, workshops and three acres I happily live the life of a recluse. Hence, I rely on my God-given immune system, regardless of persuasive efforts otherwise. 

The title of today's post is taken from Jonny Mercer's English lyrics to the original French song  "Le chevalier de Paris" composed by Philippe-Gerard and Angele Vannier.

Here is Jonny Mercer's version sung by Earth Kitt

Saturday, October 9, 2021

Musical Chairs

 

My piano restoration has involved dismantling and re-assembling the 1,200 parts that make up the action that transfer the depressed keys to the strings. It's intricate work that can be best done from a stable sitting position. The processes move from one position to another and one workshop to another. In all I found myself shifting between six different stools - all of my own manufacture. Four of the stools, along with work in progress, are shown into today's picture. The brown paper bags contain the various pieces from each section of the action.

If it should happen that I'm reincarnated I've always wished to come back as a jazz pianist. When I once mentioned this to a visiting musician, his response was: stick to your paintings. He bemoaned the fact that some nights he plays his best to the dinner crowd but no one's listening. 

My rare LP collection contained recordings of all the great jazz pianists but alas the termites thought better of it. Fortunately YouTube has enabled me to discover some of their worthy successors. Here is Cecile McLorin Salvant with a trio that features the pianist Aaron Dielhi.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G99FfalLFWQ

Sunday, October 3, 2021

The Useful Arts


Detail from "In the Carpenter's Shop"
A painting by the Swedish artist Carl Larsson (1853-1919)

The term "Useful Arts" went out of fashion over a hundred years ago, along with the skills that it encompassed. Engineering and carpentry are two of those skills, and they are the ones that I practice along with my work as a painter and sculptor.

You will not find a college or art school offering a course in the useful arts. Their remit falls under the titles, Fine Arts, Visual Arts, Applied Arts, Decorative Arts, etc. That's a pity, because only one in a thousand students with a degree in the arts end up actually working as artists. At best they finish up teaching something they cannot do themselves. Had they acquired a skill their lives would have been more productive and rewarding.  

But skills are learnt via apprenticeships and alas they went out of fashion along with the concept of useful arts. It was by virtue of my apprenticeships in engineering and carpentry that yesterday I was able to make a tuning hammer (wrench for the uninitiated) for the piano I'm restoring. I doubt if there's an art student in the world able to fashion the 1/4" square hole in the head of the hammer.