History & BackgroundThe year of 1967 (when I was 16) proved to be a significant turning
point in my life; not only did I start at Medway College of Art in
Kent, but on the first day I met Sally who was later to become my
future wife.
Up until that time I had got used to being acknowledged as the ‘arty
one’ from my class mates as I travelled through the educational system
of primary and secondary school; it was with a mixture of excitement
and trepidation that I started my time at Art College. I was finally
there!
 For the next three or four years I totally immersed myself in work
first at Medway and then Walthamstow. Eventually I had enough of
student life and was desperate to start my life as a proper artist, so
I left College before my degree.
Ah! The optimism of youth. Needless to say my parents were none too
pleased in me dropping out of a graduate course - so I had to find a
job!
Thankfully it was around this time I had bumped into my recently
retired head of department at Medway who invited me to teach drawing at
the local adult education centre, this I did for a number of years
whilst I continued to paint and display my work in local galleries. By
1974 I realised that as my classes were becoming more numerous and were
taking up more of my time than painting that I needed to make a
decision about the sort of artist I wanted to be.
Therefore Sally (who was now working as a display artist at Peter
Jones in Sloane Square) and I decided we needed an adventure and a move
away from the humdrum routine that is so necessary to survive in a city.
So, much to our parents consternation at 23 years old we bought an
old 1958 Ford Prefect and travelled to the very tip of the highlands
just a few miles east of Cape Wrath, where on a previous visit we had
managed to rent an old shepherds cottage (without electricity) miles
from anywhere next to a salmon loch.
For 28 years we lived there (the first 10 without electricity) eking
a living off my paintings and summer jobs that Sally and I took on.
After 6 years we had started a family and even though I was showing
regularly at various Scottish galleries like the 369 Gallery in
Edinburgh, I still had to continue my summer job as a gillie during the
deer-stalking season (a pursuit I did for over 30 years) as it was
still difficult financially to bring up a growing family.
So in 1979 just after the birth of the first of our three children I
travelled to London to show my portfolio to David Larkin of Picador
books. Always an avid reader I noticed that book covers were changing,
becoming more arty, and Picador books were in a class of their own, so
“hey!” I thought, “I could do that!”
Without an appointment I ‘blagged’ my way into seeing Mr Larkin and
although he was none too pleased he agreed to see my portfolio.
After I had left, they commissioned me to produce the artwork for
two book covers ‘Imaginary life’ by David Malouf and ‘Wild Nights’ by
Emma Tennant. Little did I know that these two books would start my
illustration career; considering we still didn’t have electricity or a
phone we were amazingly lucky.
Eventually in 1984 we got electricity and a phone, and I went on to
join the prestigious London Agency, Artist
Partners.
Over the years I have illustrated literally hundreds of book covers
for authors such as Kingsley Amis, Beryl Bainbridge, Sue Townsend,
Philip Pullman (Sally Lockhart Quartet’ recently portrayed by Billie
Piper in the BBC adaptation) But also picture books such as ‘The Sand
Children’ by Joyce Dunbar and the ‘Narnia Chronology’ by CS Lewis (
published in May 08)
Also my varied illustration techniques have been analysed, alongside
other leading international illustrators in ‘The New guide to
Illustration’ (Phaidon Press 1990).
But throughout this time as a Fine Artist I have continued to
exhibit my own work, having a one-man exhibition at the Latham Gallery,
Roanoke, Virginia in 1996, alongside various shows in Scotland and
England since. Recently I had a sell out exhibition of my ‘White Wood’
series at the Robin Tallantyre Gallery in Morpeth, Northumberland at
the beginning of September 08.
In 2000, when the last of our children left home, Sally and I moved
a few miles east from our shepherd’s cottage to our local village where
I now have my new studio. Ideas & InspirationsThis ‘White Wood’ series intrigues me as much as it appears to do for others.
Prior to this I had been exhibiting for a number of years at the
Tallantyre Gallery with mixed success. My oil paintings were very
traditional and the subject matter was deer stalking in the highlands,
but although I was building up a reputation especially amongst the
shooting fraternity, I was becoming increasingly disenchanted with its
creative limitations. So one day I showed Robin, the gallery owner some ideas I had been
working on of this emerging white wood, but instead of placing a deer
into the wood I put a couple of figures in instead. He was encouraging
and so I began to delve deeper into who could be in this wood.
I came across a photo of a man in a magazine dressed in a hat and
coat and decided I’d try him out in the wood. Instantly there was
tension, what was he doing in the wood?
As this series of paintings develop, I am increasingly aware that
certain characters or events (like the recent appearance of a steam
train and the shadow of a man with a balloon, not to mention Derek) may
eventually explain what this white wood and its male inhabitants are
all about. I have to be honest though and admit that the more I delve
into this strange alternative world the more absorbed and less certain
I become.
Interestingly, whenever family or friends pop into the studio and
see the work in progress they invariably project their own
interpretation of the scene. Russian ‘John Le Carrier’ spies from the
eastern block seem a regular theme.
But for me it’s far more surreal and intangible…occasionally humorous, sometimes disturbing.
These men in hats and coats dressed from a different era appear
isolated, even when in groups…they inhabit a wood that seems not only
to define them and protect them, but also occasionally threaten.
Whether they are really there or just ghosts of the past, and that the wood is not one wood but many, I’m still unsure.
It would be too grandiose to suggest the paintings are a metaphor
for the isolation we all on occasions feel …….But the ‘White Wood’
appears to promote personal interpretation….and that I find immensely
absorbing.
The bowler-hatted gentlemen may appear ambiguous but somehow I find that I can relate to them. Form Palette to PictureI tend to work on 5/6 paintings at once.
First I have to prepare the canvas so it has a suitable texture;
this is one of various techniques I have developed as an illustrator
over the years, to create a predominately acrylic texture paste. Though
it’s not an exact science so if you’re working on a number of canvases
it’s surprising how varied they can be, which is good because the
decision of what you paint next can be determined by this first step.
The earlier paintings were in oil, but as I use a palette knife and
a great deal of paint to build up texture, it took forever to dry,
especially white.
So I now use acrylic, which has changed the feel of the work, less painterly and more graphic, which I rather like. A day in the Life of ...I like routine. I regard painting as my job, if there are days when
I feel flat, then I will force myself to work through it. I really
don’t believe in inspiration, just hard work. Though if that fails then
I get my camera out and head for the hills.
I arrive at my studio around 9am, if it’s winter I’ll pop down and
turn the heater on before breakfast, so it’s nice and warm (yeah! I’m
getting soft after all those years in a drafty shepherds cottage) I
tend now to do around 8/10 hours a day, 6 days a week, if Sally lets me!
 If I’m illustrating a book and there are deadlines then day runs into night - you do what you have to do.
I always listen to music; either jazz or classical. In fact music is
incredibly important to me. I play clarinet and sax in a jazz band and
over the last 15 years we have built up quite a local reputation, so
over the year we do a lot of travelling to gigs and it’s a great way of
getting out of the studio and spending time with good friends. |