dear reader, do you remember my experimental travelling iCons series from 2010 - where will they go, i often do not know...three of these small canvases are currently on display at the lovely cork brick gallery, three small canvases looking forward to travelling somewhere new. they are: maroc, nepal and tsavotsavo, 2010, 13cm x 13cm x 3cm. read more about this small abstract on canvas, tsavo - another journey into colourmaroc, 2010, 13cm x 13cm x 3cm. photographed in natural daylight on a typically cloudy day in great britain. read more about this small abstract canvas, maroc - around the world in one hundred abstractsnepal 2010, in the artist's studio, under the spotlight!nepal 2010, seen on a rare outing to the end of the artist's garden, where rust and algae grows - it seems at home here, despite the weather. read more about this small abstract on canvas, nepal - painting by numberstsavo, pueblo (centre, not in the gallery), and maroc.there are many more small abstracts in the (travelling) iCons series here (with tour guide explanation), and just over there to the right you will see that there are more canvases ready to travel light to new places, in the country or the city.why is it always about the art on show in cities, in new york, london, berlin..? oh wait, i forgot, that's how this virtually travelling project started - seeing the world, taking a virtual holiday, on an internet road trip, a small break from the norm, getting away from it all, on a (not so) grand tour, an escape from the country*...*escape to the country is a BBC daytime TV property series in which prospective house buyers hunt for their perfect home in the countryside. as a nation of people living quite close together on quite a small island, we quite like watching property & travel shows.Tourists don't know where they've been, travellers don't know where they're going.Paul Theroux (travel writer)...
a new year, a new diary
it's a new year and i have a new desk diary, but the year ahead is looking quite empty...the first (graphite) drawing was done on the day after boxing day (it rained most of the day).on the first two days of the diary (28th & 29th december, below) i was trying to visually recall the flooded marshes and meadows, which on a boxing day walk were quite mesmerising to see, sparkling in the sun like mirrored trays, with partially submerged trees and bushes looking like decorative ornaments.my memory of early new year's eve is driving through torrential rain, every now and again through deep puddles which stretched the width of the narrow country road, throwing up sheets of black water, and the momentary sensation of water-blindness, as if under a huge crashing wave.i like this desk diary; it is a page-a-day appointment diary, including saturdays & sundays (which is what i wanted). however, the paper is very thin and it doesn't take paint very well - so i may have to revert to some simple drawing & doodling with a pen. i was intrigued to use a regular diary as a sketchbook after seeing an Edward Bawden diary (which is suitable for use in any given year, having only the days of the week printed in it) at The Fry Art Gallery in Saffron Walden.i still like the conveniently compact nature of my hard-backed A6 notebooks/sketchbooks, but painting & drawing within the pages of a regular day-to-day diary will obviously result in more date-specific references to thoughts & musings on art or related situations and events, over the course of a year. i also want to purge the 'need' to take photographs as a means of memory, and instead write and draw more about things, as and when - but perhaps the pages aren't big enough for pictures and words.having said that, i did take a photograph on new year's day.new year's day at thorpeness beach, photograph taken with an unfashionably old mobile phone - and #nofilter!the north sea was curiously calm that day, like a vast lake, an unusually mild air with no discernible sea breeze, barely any foam fringing to the gently lapping waves breaking on the shore, and the soft pink clouds serenely floated by - it was really rather lovely.on another day, a brisk walk along aldeburgh beach was rewarded by fish & chips in the company of seagulls, and on the drive back, as the bright afternoon light faded into a more sombre and sullen grey, the opportunity to take a quiet stroll at sizewell beach, a place which has a real atmospheric 'buzz' about it..!i found two more 'J' pebbles, and a capital 'A'. days out at the coast are always revitalising, so one new year's resolution might be to make more time to see the sea more often (and maybe take the diary/sketchbook)...