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Norfolk
16th Jun 2010After taking part in a series of exhibitions over the last few months, my time tightly packed with painting, organisation, admin, dealing with many personalities and lugging work about, it was a relief to retreat to Norfolk and let that fall away and clear my head. Here are a few impressions sent as text postcards to friends;
Pushing a fork into Powdery Norfolk soil, velvet soft after London clay.
A robin’s wing beats in my Mother’s face and she chides him to hurry up perched on the edge cutter’s blade she is trying to use.
He cranes beady over her work, picks a grub pausing for a ride on the spinning bird scarer.
Shimmering black poplars imitate rushing water with wind, reflected in still dykes. Fold up chairs and flasks. Coconut scented gorse, vivid yellow as the Golden Oriel no one can find.
Lying in the reeds watching swans push their necks onto clouds on the ruffled surface of a curvatious river.
The sky is so
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Magic in the everyday
16th Jun 2010I am interested in poetic juxtapositions of objects, which are imbued with both their practical uses and their symbolic evocation. The magic in the seemingly mundane or everyday.
I am concerned with paradoxes of light and dark, peace and unease. Also relationships between man made objects or interventions in natural situations.
I never go anywhere without a camera looking for photographs in their own right but mainly for material for paintings. Objects in context but slightly out of place. I am interested in what happens in the golden 20 minutes in the evening when the light is low and transformative giving glimpses of something other. When objects glow out of dark spaces or as with glasshouses, become beacons filled with mystery and seemingly inner light.
My work is a visual diary of observations that chime with internal states or life phases. Last summer I completed a small series of chair paintings that reflect a singular state, made to seat one, suggestive of a recent but departed presence. The chairs were abandoned in the street, battered and worn but wonderfully patinated with their history, in a new context that frame their tired beauty.
My winter series was inspired by photographs taken on my allotment which embrace the seemingly cold, barren but necessarily dormant earth, darkly framing glowing glasshouses symbolic of the growth and potential to come.
Mirror Boat II has sprung a leak and is over shadowed but this enables it to carry bright reflections of the sky from the safety of its dark little harbour.
‘Waiting for the thaw’ depicts a fragile white chair glowing in the yellowy light of dormant energy encased in an icy glasshouse below a deadening slate sky. I aspire to work with things that seem difficult but if embraced prove necessary and helpful such as the hibernation of winter in the spirit of optimism.
2 Responses
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Hello Sue,
I was first drawn to your words, and then to the work.
Both are equally inspiring. I particularly love your use of black, so confident, as are your poems. -
24th Jun 20102thank you Helen, very much appreciated!
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17th Jun 2010