Meconopsis

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Meconopsis (working title), Acrylic on panel, 60 x 70 cm, 2020

This painting started as a commission from a dear friend in London. My pal Mark had been to the Chelsea flower show and seen an amazing display of Meconopsis from a Scottish nursery. Mark himself is Scottish and he spoke to me about a painting including these flowers for his home in London.

Mark’s living room is a lovely, big light room, with a wide, south facing bay window and lots of wonderful art and furnishings. The walls are painting very dark so the painting needed to keep all that in mind. This is actually the third attempt at the piece, as the first versions floundered once I started painting in the blue of the poppies. I learnt quickly that the blue was difficult to match, and when I mentioned this to one or two gardener friends they told me that it was also difficult to include in a  planting scheme for the same reason!  But they were an essential part of the panting so I had to press on.

After the second attempt failed I started looking at Cedric Morris, an artist famous for painting flowers and, in particular, irises. I noticed he often used a warm background so I tried this and things started to work out. The warm background then suggested other plants to go with the poppies; pale yellow and black irises, lilies and trollius.

As the painting developed, some flowers grew, bloomed and then died as they got painted out, and others emerged and took centre stage. I learned a lot doing this painting and I’m keen to do more flower paintings like this, I find flowers endlessly fascinating, I could get lost in them!

 

 

Heatwave!

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Rivière de Sorède, acrylic on panel, 50 x 50cm, 2020

We’re having a heck of a heatwave here at the moment and our main relief is to get out to one of the lakes in and around Berlin and have a swim. So this week I’ve been painting images of cool woodland streams, bubbling over smooth stones in dappled shade; it’s what I’m craving right now!

This image is not local, though, but set in France; the river Sorède, that runs through a little valley with the wonderful name of Valley of the Tortoises, near the Spanish border. The water in these rivers runs off the foothills of the Pyranees and can be surprisingly fresh, but that would be very welcome right now! We’ve been on holiday to this region several times and it’s always delightful.

Oh, the other thing that brings relief in the heat of course is ice cream, and i’m eating gallons of it at the moment 🙂

 

 

Forest floor

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Forest Floor 1 – Brambles and Moss, acrylic on panel, 40 x 50 cm, 2020

There are lots of woods and forests around Berlin, including some very old Beech forests with enormous trees and dark, mysterious shadows. But the small things on the forest floor also catch my eye sometimes.

I remember once when I was on holiday on the island of Harris in the Hebrides and we were walking through an area of Machair, or low lying grassland along the coast. As I walked, I noticed there were several layers of vegetation, and that below each layer was another, smaller layer of finer, more delicate plants. I couldn’t believe the diversity of plant life there, in what seemed to me, quite a tough environment, it was a wonderful place.

So I like to paint what’s on the ground, it’s full of life, seething away, rotting down the old to replenish the soil and generate new growth.

As we’re not going away on holiday this summer, well at least not till later in the summer, depending on how things go with travel restrictions etc., I’m getting out and about more locally and discovering the woods and lakes around Berlin. You can’t beat the British countryside, in my opinion, but there are some wonderful places within an hour of the city here, with lots of inspiration for painting 🙂