Thursday, February 26, 2026

A Cottage For Sale

Our cottage after renovation in the village of Higham, Suffolk

The poignant lyrics of the 1930's jazz standard A Cottage for Sale came to my mind today when my daughter Di sent me the above picture of the cottage that we renovated while we built our boat Born Free. The "we" being, my wife Norma, our daughter Di and myself.

                                      
My account of finding the cottage reads as follows:

In a last ditch attempt to buy a boat we rented a camper and toured the boat yards in the South East of England. On our journey through the Suffolk countryside we drove past a cottage displaying a For Sale sign. We were weary of looking at boats and out of curiosity stopped to take a closer look. From the call box in the village I telephoned the estate agent. The asking price was within our means and the agent offered to be there in an hour’s time with the keys. He couldn’t find the keys but brought along a gentleman whose skill at opening locks had earlier earned him the pleasure of serving time at one of Her Majesty’s prisons. After viewing the one room downstairs and the one room upstairs, we agreed to buy and secured the deal there and then with a cash deposit. We didn’t need a survey. Years of renovating boats and houses, told me that all was sound. The agent said it was the fastest sale he’d ever made. 


Friday, February 20, 2026

By chance or nature's changing course untrimmed


This pastel sketch came by chance. It was meant to be no more than a means of testing the suitability of a new batch of handmade paper. I didn't have a model at hand; the suggestive lines came at random. The sketch is relevant to my present task of setting down - not in pastel, but in words - my life's changing course untrimmed.

The quoted line from Shakespeare's sonnets, has made me realise how much chance and life's aging cycle, has contributed to where I am now and what I am attempting now.

Friday, February 13, 2026

She's still a hard act to follow

                              

This is the first painting I made of Denise, my wife and model. The image is from a blurred photograph taken just before a buyer whisked the original away. Thirty-three years later she's still a hard all-round act to follow. 

Today she'll be cutting grass, harvesting and planting, pumping water from the river, milking her goats and working on her latest carpentry project. 



The garden that surrounds the studio has a bronze cast of the first sculpture I made of Denise. 


The title of this post relates back to my blog post A Hard Act To Follow from fifteen years ago.

Wednesday, February 4, 2026

One thing leads to another

 September MornPaul Émile Chabas  (1869 -1937)

An internet search for one thing, very often leads to another. In my post When the natural becomes stilted I questioned an art critic's interpretation of William Stott's painting Wild Flower and his model's credentials. My search for similar misinterpretations led me to this video by the Gammell Lack Institute of American Art. The video delves into the scandal caused by Paul Émile Chabas's innocent painting September Morn and the assumptions made about his model.

It brings me back to what painters of the nude - and their models - are up against, and serves to illustrate the adage: He who thinks evil, sees evil.