Friday, 23 January 2015

Painting Tim Page

Friday 23 January 2015, 6pm

Finished Tim’s portrait today. I thought it might have been finished yesterday, but it was a bit subdued and I thought if I had the guts to push it a bit further, I could bring it to life.

I changed the title. It only became apparent to me in the last few hours what it was all about….Alfie.

At Billy’s request, I kept a track of all the layers. This is how I arrived at the finished work. I’ll start with the charcoal again –


The first coat was laying down the ‘dead’ colour. This is a layer of cold colours, mainly cobalt blue, lemon yellow, ultramarine and indigo. The cold colours neutralise the warm colours in the next layer. I wiped away some of the pigment after laying it down. It looked a bit straight. All transparent pigments –


Next a layer of mainly warm colours, all transparent again. Once again, wiped some of the colour off to let a bit of the underpainting through –


The third coat stated to introduce some realistic colours and push the lariness back a bit. Some opacity (zinc white) introduced at this stage –


At this stage the portrait was still a bit fractured by the abstraction and I next pulled it into a more realistic realm –


It wasn’t a bad portrait at this stage and I was 50/50 about leaving it, but I knew it wasn’t jumping and could benefit by being dragged back into abstraction a tad. What it needed was a touch of primaries and secondaries to lift all the tertiaries. Five hours of struggle in the wilderness, adding highlights and taking some of them off when I went too far, produced this result –


“Memories of Schrapnel - A Portrait of Tim Page”


As I said, I didn’t realise until the lines emerged in the last few hours what it was all about, namely his frequent interactions with schrapnel in Vietnam, and that gave me the title. Tim was badly wounded on four occasions, once by friendly fire. He’s died twice. When I was drawing him, he said ‘Death is like being burnt in a fire and drowned at the same time’.

Friday, 16 January 2015

Tim Page Time

Saturday 17 January 2015, 10am

Spent a pleasant evening with Tim Page on Thursday, chatting, drinking and drawing long into the night.

My initial intention was to portray him sitting at the table writing in his journal, cameras, papers and ashtray scattered in front of him and another portrait of him (painted in 1972 in Los Angeles) in the background. I soon realised setting up a formal pose was going to be hard to control. And control isn’t something that appeals to me in a sitting. After the first beer I realised the light was right where he sat as we chatted, so I abandoned any attempts at planning, got the board out and set to work.

He was a very naughty boy and made no attempt to sit still and I had to fix a feature from time to time as his head fleetingly passed through the right orientation. This became even more difficult when Kel and Billy turned up and he spent most of the time with his head sideways, talking to them. In the end I spent the last couple of hours largely ignoring him and working from memory. I think I got a pretty good likeness in the end, but the formal iconic composition is going to be difficult to energise. It may all come down to the paintwork in the end.


“Page After Popsicle”

Tim was born in England, but now lives in Brisbane. Tim is best known as a Vietnam War and Rolling Stone photojournalist. Such a narrow job description discounts all the other adventures he’s crammed into his long and interesting life. He was the inspiration for the crazed Dennis Hopper character in 'Apocalypse Now' and several other incidents in the movie.

He was a close friend of Sean Flynn, son of Errol, who was also photographing the war when he disappeared on the Cambodian border. Tim has made it his life mission to find and repatriate the remains of the 35 journalists still missing from the conflict.

Tim has written several books and is best known for “Page After Page” and “Derailed in Uncle Ho’s Victory Garden”. A selection of his photographs can be found at http://www.timpage.com.au/ and a more detailed biography can be found at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tim_Page_%28photographer%29

Saturday, 15 November 2014

Mix Bak Opening


Sunday 6 November 2014, 4.30pm

The opening on Friday night in Warwick was huge fun for us all, with maybe 100 people turning up for the festivities. The team at the gallery had done a great job with the installation and I’d managed to get 81 of the 84 works on the walls. Three just didn’t seem to fit in anywhere.

I was a little nervous about speaking, but did pretty well (so I’m told) after a couple of light beers. Sarah helped out by talking about the environmental narratives in my work.

Saw lots of people that I hadn’t seen for a while and really enjoyed catching up and circulating in the crowd.

The feedback was very positive and did wonders for my ego. Sales were a bit thin on the ground, but a few weeks to go yet.

Thanks to Chris Freeman for taking the pix.
















Monday, 10 November 2014

Glazed Wetlands

Tuesday 11 November 2014, 5.30pm

Finished a month in the studio painting the work I did at the Macquarie Marshes. I’m pretty happy with the results, though the Coolibah Shadows are stubbornly refusing to turn into anything interesting at this stage.


“Tiger Bay Wetlands #1”


“Tiger Bay Wetlands #2”


“Raby”


“Bent”


“Jack's Bridge from Brian's Weir”


“Willie Woodlands”


“2 Annie's, 3 Gloria's”


“Big Terrigal Ck”


“Halls Block - Main Channel”


“Halls Block Regrowth”


“Willie Retreat Nocturne”


“One for Bronwen”



“Swamp Buttercups”

Off to Warwick in the morning to hang my exhibition, the back of the ute is stuffed full. See you there on Friday.

Thursday, 16 October 2014

Exhibition Invitation - Mix Bak

Friday 17 October, 2014, 10am

This is an open invite to any readers of my blog to the opening of my exhibition at Warwick in November.

Over 80 works will be on display (if they all fit). The nibbles at Warwick are legendary, can’t make any promises about the wine.



Interested to see if Bonneau Laurent and Mike Cervantes can make it.

Friday, 10 October 2014

A Week in the Wetlands

Saturday, 11 October 2014, 10 am


Came home a couple of days ago from an expedition to the Macquarie Marshes and Warren in central NSW – 2000 km round trip.

It was organised by Bill Phillips and his organization RiverSmart to raise the profile of the wetlands in that area. Several artists and students were involved, mainly the Australian Plein Air Group, a group of traditional plein air oil painters. Works were exhibited in an ancient building in town as they were finished.

I adopted the strategy of getting up when aroused by the galah alarm to capture the pre-dawn and early raking light, then lazing under a tree for the rest of the day to avoid the heat in the high 30’s. The others got up a bit later and worked through the worst of it. Mad dogs, Englishmen and plein air painters……

My first work was started at 5.30 am in the Tiger Bay Wetlands, a small patch of artificially maintained wetland on the outskirts of Warren. Lots of birds.



“Tiger Bay Wetlands #1”



“Tiger Bay Wetlands #2”

After this, I did some exploring to find suitable subjects for the next day. Dawn found me at Raby horse stud, about 20 km north of Warren. Love a bit of signage.



“Raby”


Then back towards town a few kilometres, to the Quinines Reserve to have a go at a bend in the Macquarie River. Quite a tangle of debris and it took a couple of hours to resolve its structure into something comprehensible.



“Bent”

Then back to Warren to have a go at the bridge below the downstream town weir. It was warming up and I wanted to get this one finished before I melted.

Struck me as funny how all these gubbas love to name structures after themselves, hence the title. Kind of like dogs marking their territory.



“Jack's Bridge from Brian's Weir”

Next day I was up before 5 and off to the Marshes and Willie Retreat, where I arrived about 7. There was no one about apart from an emu, who rifled through the back of my ute, and a couple of goats who showed me around. The goats took the lead and the emu followed.

After finding Myra, a sprightly host in her mid eighties, I found a spot to camp and a shady tree to do this –



” Willie Woodlands”

Stylisation creeping in. That night I did the scene around the campfire. Annie and Gloria moved around a bit and were drawn in several positions.



“2 Annie's, 3 Gloria's”

Dawn the next day found me 20 km east of Willie at the bird observation platform on the Quambone road. Lots of birds, including a mob of spoonbills in the distance. A fair bit of water around, unlike the last time I’d been at this spot eight years ago. The rest of the artists turned up when I was half way through this one.



“Big Terrigal Ck.”

I drove on another 10 km to Wilgara, a property owned by Eric and Carollyn Fisher. I’d drawn Eric’s portrait for the ‘Dying Darling’ project and wanted to catch up with him while I was in the area. Turns out Eric had sold the property and was moving out before Christmas.

Carollyn fed and watered me while we waited for Eric, who turned up eventually and directed me to a small creek behind the house. It was hot and I was looking for some shade, and that’s exactly what I drew. I was taken by the tree shadow on the milky tea-coloured pool and when I set my panel down noticed that the shadow fell on to it, so I traced that instead. So this is literally a rendition of the shade of a coolibah tree on my panel –



“The Shade of a Coolibah Tree”


That was enough sweating for one day.

Dragged the pastels out and had a crack at the dawn next morning –



“Willie Sunrise”


Then it was off to an appointment with National Parks at Halls Block in the Macquarie Marshes proper. I was directed to an area along the banks of the main channel. It was a bit wet and spectacularly colourful, with red azoller weed (native) on the water, rich green verbage and bright yellow swamp buttercups. Some big redgums, too.



“Halls Block - Main Channel”



“Halls Block Regrowth”


That night did a quick nocturne of the Willie Retreat building (for paying guests) itself. Couldn’t interest anyone else in joining in. Most artists don’t think that night-time scenes are a suitable source of inspiration. What I like about them (apart from the depths and subtleties of night light) is the way detail disappears and the composition simplifies.



“Willie Retreat Nocturne”


Next morning caught the Telstra tower in the pre-dawn light. Bronwen had pointed it out to me the day before as the sort of thing I’d draw and I’d told her I’d already noticed it. Wanted to capture it before dawn, when its lights were still on.

I had an alternative title, ‘Facebook Friend’, prompted by all the Facebook activity around the campfire the previous evening (‘I’ll friend you, will you friend me?’). Figured there wouldn’t be any of that Facebook friending without the tower, but decided to go with Bronwen in the end.



“One for Bronwen”


I moved on from the profane to the sacred, returning to Hall’s Block. I decided to draw a patch of swamp buttercups with my last large panel, being a bit bored with redgums.

I sketched in the darks first and did the drawing with a kneadable erasor. Does it for me. A few bits of nardoo in there as well.



“Swamp Buttercups”

I headed back to Warren and waited for the closing exhibition the next day. I went over to the relocated church, which was to become the new Wetlands Centre, with Bronwen, the next morning.



“The Church of St. Bill the Innocent, with Blue Gum, Warren”

As a postscript, came across this bloke on the way home, on the outskirts of Glen Innes. He was leading his horse (trotter/drafthorse cross) home, after a day working cattle.






What a portrait subject! Note his working dog curled up at his feet.

Mother's Day Reskinned

Saturday, 11 October 2014, 7.30 am


Put another coat on Mandy, she was looking a bit like a cooked lobster. I think that’s six coats all up.


“Mother’s Day”