Showing posts with label lower brockhampton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lower brockhampton. Show all posts

Sunday, 11 March 2012

Sleepy and busy bees

It's been a lovely spring like day today and G & I drove to Lower Brockampton, a beautiful NT property in Herefordshire. It was really quiet, I took lots of photographs and my shoulder, which has been causing me problems since last autumn, felt a little easier at last.

It's so difficult to get away from the din of traffic, even on NT properties. But there were moments today where the traffic dimmed to a distant drone. Even busy bees could get some sleep, like this one I noticed curled up fast asleep in a daffodil.


Yellow really was the colour of the day.


I'm progressing on May Gate at last. I hope to finish it this week.


Monday, 11 April 2011

11.4.11

What a nice symmetrical date for today.

I've just got back through sunshine and showers from delivering my picture to a courier (Picture Post) to enter in another Open. Don't know how lucky I'll be this time.

Yesterday was a beautiful day, more like July than April. I spent most of it walking through the woods at Lower Brockhampton with G, taking photographs, marvelling at how everything has suddenly burst into life. The woods were a carpet of starry white wood anenomes, but there were also a few early bluebells too

I woke very early yesterday morning, determined to get a little work done. I masked off my current work in progress and flicked a little black acrylic paint on the unmasked areas.


Later this evening and tommorow I'll work some more into the darkly shaded areas, keeping the mask on for a while, because I want these areas to be more intense than the rest of the piece.


I began a new piece based on a photograph I took a couple of years ago. I've dithered for ages over begining this piece making experimental sketches since last summer really. The shape of the tree is so suggestive I've decided to call this picture Secret Dancer. I began with a clean wash of pink and blue, and began drawing into this with my usual dip pen and ink. However, I wanted to give it a quick shot of shade, to define the areas of darkness in the tangled undergrowth (the skirt of the dancer). So again, I made a mask by tracing the drawing through greaseproof paper and shading in the areas I wanted to be dark. Then I cut these areas out...

...then sprayed red acrylic ink and diluted black acrylic paint onto the piece...

...removed the greaseproof paper (when it was dry) and now I have a more solidly defined area of light and shade to work into. I wanted to do this as I was feeling a bit lost and frustrated seeing and knowing the rhythms I wanted to build in the picture but struggling to construct anything. Now, hopefully, I can begin to build those rythms of shade and shape a little more confidently.

It struck me as I was cutting out the areas I wanted shaded in my mask, that the dancing tree is shaped a little like the UK. And when looked at from side on, the splattered greaseproof paper looked a little like a beach pitted with rockpools.

Islands of paper floating on a cutting mat.