Sunday, April 12, 2026

A Joyous Refuge Glazing

A huge and joyous contrast of painting experience to yesterday! Awake since about 1am and hardly any sleep, yet the first hour of glazing was almost miraculous, I loved the experience and felt in complete command of the colours and process. How these strange contrasts emerge. I must remember that the glaze should, or at least can happily, appear too intense; but that at the end, that intensity will seem to magically fade away once the entire surface is glazed. Also, that the colour and a compliment (not necessarily an exact compliment, any other hue) should be around to dart between the two at whim, including the raw tube colours.

Occasional highlights in an opposite hue are the key to local drama. I listened to Jean-Michel Jarre's 'Rarities' from his album Essentials & Rarities and noticed a link between these shocks of colour and minor-chord dramatic hits with filter-sweeping sounds.

Here is my updated double-dipper, complete with watch-glass. Already a useful item:

In the night I designed a new jig for my router. I had designed one with two tracks of wood on which the router can slide, but in the night thought it was more efficient to keep the router stationary and slide the wood. This will need lots of little wheels, like drawer wheels, to guide the wood and help it slide, plus some springs to gently hold one train of wheels against the wood (the other is locked into the correct place). The whole thing will only be about 250x500mm, and could support other tools (jigsaw?) for other work on these long lengths.

I'm in the mood to do a lot and make a lot. I'd like to publish all of my remaining old games later in the year, and complete the sheet music to the last three vocal albums, then I can start to work on the electronic instrumental albums.

For now, I can celebrate the signing and end of 'Can There Be A Refuge From The Terror?'. Some of yesterday's elements, the sky, the central eye, were brightened up today, to good effect. It's now certainly better than when merely underpainted.

Saturday, April 11, 2026

Nantwich Open Exhibition, Glazing Can There Be A Refuge Day 1

A tedious and joyless day glazing 'Can There Be A Refuge From The Terror?'. I find it hard to get motivated to glaze. It always improves a painting in smoothness and appearance, brightness of colours, and the tiny details, but it's more like polishing than creating, and there's often little joy of discovery. It can take many hours to make only a few percent of improvement. I was also a little tired after a nice day and evening at the opening event for the Nantwich Open. I'm honoured that 'The Unexpected Return Of Oliver Cromwell In 2020' has been given a prime hanging spot in the middle of a wall.

Yes, I wore my cavalier hat. Of all places and occasions, at Nantwich Museum to see my Oliver Cromwell portrait seems to be the best for a cavalier hat.

Anyway today began with one innovation. I sawed off one dipper of the metal double-dipper I used for solvent. I only ever use one anyway, so thought that in the space of the other I could fit a holder for the 55mm watch-glass I use for oil media. I'll fix this later.

Most of today was glazing the green sky, tiny amounts in viridian, raw umber, transparent yellow ochre; and a delicate blue glow around the angel. Painting the cat and distant eye-sun. Painting the small copper butterfly, and some flesh glazes on the angel, although I'll generally leave her be, as she is smooth enough. All of this still took all day, perhaps at the same speed as the underpainting. The painting is rather dull in colour terms, actually less bright than the underpainting as the amber eye-sun was a little too bright, so I dulled it a little. I may brighten up the sandy parts tomorrow.

Thursday, April 09, 2026

The Blood Of Winter Starts

A general health check yesterday, passed with a slight deterioration which I must aspire to reverse. After that, composition work and main drawing for a painting idea called The Blood Of Winter. Here is the idea sketch:

These ideas are often more of a mnemonic, but here (because it was made so long ago I can't remember the spark of concept) a seed of a feeling. It needed more poetry and linkage. If surrealism is adding 'any old thing', this is not sufficient, it needs links of expectation rewarded or thwarted; a comprehensible structure of its own. Objects build on their relations to each other.

The painting was drawn out at 448mm across and today I'll work on the colours and surfaces. Last night I dreamt of a painting, an image and a title. I think the title was 'The Science of Sleep'. It was a hollow black isosceles triangle with one section on fire, burning into blue sky. The background had no colour. I'll paint this too.

Tuesday, April 07, 2026

Claire Luce Returns

A night of nightmares about my future and anxious insomnia.

A day of painting; the second Claire Luce portrait, underpainted last year more successfully than the other version, yet still today was a struggle and I remain dissatisfied with the results. These paintings are tests, training, for good reason.

The finish is smooth, the colours adequate, although the hair stands out, not natural, this is partly due to the black and white source image where the hair can be hard to locate - a monochrome copy would solve this. The result perhaps looks like a colourised photograph for this reason. The likeness is not good, though on par with, perhaps a little better than, the accuracy of several other similar portraits of the past; annoying, but not a certain step backwards. The colouration is on par with previous works too, perhaps better than average. These works are always difficult, and are thus rewarding as training. The poor quality of the blurry and black and white source image is a key problem, I have less trouble with good source images, several are better and it's best to know the sitter - one can't determine a likeness from one photograph. I strive to add detail and crisp outlines where there are none, so perhaps an exact likeness is impossible in such circumstances. I could easily copy the blur, though this may defeat the object of the exercise.

There are some steps I can take to improve the accuracy. The face shape itself must be the first consideration; the face here is slightly long. The eyes are slightly out of place, but all is relatively close. Contrast could be improved perhaps. The hair is lacking in many details, I don't care so much, this today was a secondary concern.

I will work on it more perhaps.

Monday, April 06, 2026

New Tax Year, Assassinated Strawberry

A new tax year begins today, so spent the morning filing my annual accounts. For years I've stored business income, personal income, investment income (like bank interest) as separate columns, and the same for expenditure. As an artist I am my business, so separating these isn't always easy (last year I had zero 'personal' income, my income is what I can make, sell, do). Personal expenditure however can be things like my internet or phone, which, although important, perhaps vital, for what I do, is personal too... it's mine as much as a business expense. I also divide all income and expenditure based on where it comes from: visual art, performance, books, music, games and sound effects, freelance services, other; then I can calculate the relative strength of each of these bow-strings. It can massively vary each year depending on my whims, the stochastic flows of the economy, how much work I put into each area etc.

From this year I'll have slightly different columns to help make everything easier for future filing, as the government seems keen to make everything digital. I'm far from the threshold to be required to do this, even reaching the basic income tax allowance is a pipe dream, but I should do things correctly to be prepared for future success.

After this, the shredding of the documents from 7 years ago, which for me this involves a lot of memories. I rarely reminisce or ever think of the past, we should always be looking forwards, but I do this once on April 6th, to glimpse 7 years ago. In my accounts I file birthday and Christmas cards, memories of trips, holidays, art exhibitions etc., so this day is one of happy memories.

After all of this, I did a little painting, the 'Assassinated Strawberry' painting. I thought about making this into a sculpture which hangs from a gallows-tree, but I've changed my mind. For now, it can simply be a small painting, complete with hole to hang by.

Sunday, April 05, 2026

Pine Frame Underpainting, Argus v1.66, Paint Brands

A slow day. Painted red over the four pine frames I have. The red, mars violet, caput mortuum, is a base coat for future spraying (or gilding) as spraying into recesses or deep parts can be difficult, so it's good to have a base which is designed to show through these areas. This only took an hour or two. Also, updated Argus to v1.66 a little, mostly cosmetic neatening to thee menu items.

It's hard to focus today as tomorrow is the first day of a new tax year, thus I'm preparing for that full day.

Have been looking at some paint brands new to me, with horror! I knew from testing how Michael Harding paints are outstandingly yellowing. Anyone who proudly grinds delicate ultramarine in linseed oil is committing a crime against art. Some of these so-called rare and artisan oil brands would, I can tell, be hugely inferior to staple brands like Winsor and Newton. Of course, none can touch the subline Blockx, which is by far the best paint I've used, a clean step better than the next best.

Saturday, April 04, 2026

Love and Fragility Underpainting Day 2, Roxy Music and New Frontiers

Underpainting of Love and Fragility complete. During painting yesterday and today I listened to the first five Roxy Music albums, which have a surprising similarity, though each gets a little better. Bryan Ferry's latest album Loose Talk is spoken word over music. Not as good as Fall in Green, so at least here we have leapt over that great artist. I'd like to capture something of early Roxy.

At times I feel at a false artistic peak, in that new things seem harder to discover and become excited about. This feeling lasts only a day or so before I discover some new insight or challenge. Every artist, it seems, stops growing, stops getting better, but I hope, by force of will and careful and constant analysis, by seeking new frontiers with new binoculars, to keep getting better. Now I see my past work as think how bad it is, and how much better I can now do, how much better new work in paint and music can be. My enthusiasm and excitement for these new brilliant things, these new ideas and aesthetics, these new skills, is greater than ever. My primary limit is my health, and of course the eternal angst of money.

I've been gifted lots of chocolate for Easter but I don't want it. I fear its fat. I'd much prefer a luxury gift of olives, or olive oil, or sun dried tomatoes, or cocoa powder, or even sparkling water. There are so many healthy luxuries.

Friday, April 03, 2026

Hope and Death, Love and Fragility Underpainting

A day of painting. Started with a small idea called 'Hope and Death'. It needed a little work as the idea was initially too simple. Some people write any old words, improvised, and call it a poem, but a poem requires more (sorry bad poets, sorry Duchamp!). A poem must have structure, linked rhymes or themes which can subvert or reward expectations, or some special imagery which sets it apart from the prose of ordinary reality. In short it must be crafted, and have the depth and intensity of artistic command. This is the difference between a work of art and just 'any old thing'.

The same is true in visual art, which, after modernism, is now (joyfully) mature as an artform, like poetry. Any painting of a scene or thing which can be seen by a person or photographed is not good enough; this is no different from a poem of 'any old words'. Art must be crafted, given more. It could have repeating visual themes in different areas, such that the thematic copies (shapes, objects) reinforce the ultimate object, the key one which the viewer will ponder (in a poem or piece of music, this is the ending or start - either way, the 'thema'). It could subvert expectations in other ways, with a surprise or unreal element. It could also include bioforms. Humans are very receptive to faces, more than any other pattern, then figures, finally other organic forms such as animals or plants, or biological shapes which look living. Even with a lifeless scene of rocks or mountains, for example, the rocks must have some element of being alive applied to them, the rocks made into a face or figure, or somehow imbued with an organic or biological reality. Lifeless painting of rocks are rare. Most landscapes include figures, or trees, or animals; perhaps for this reason.

I pondered on this philosophy and added more to 'Hope and Death'. Here is the initial idea sketch:

At first I imagined a simple scene; the distant sun, and somewhat misty mountains, rather like my 'Infinite Tiredness of Ageing', but the idea too simple and twee, a first draft needing refinement. More was needed. Here's my underpainting:

The sun is black, but not just black, is has become an eye, the clouds partly a face, the mountains partly a mouth. Expectations subverted, and bioforms included. I also noted the coincidence of painting a crucifix scene on Good Friday.

This took only an hour or two. After this, began the underpainting to the Love and Fragility painting, a painting of sufficient complexity already. Here it is so far: