Staithes

3SATW
Staithes, Across The Water. oil on canvas, 40x120cm (approx 16×47″)
This is what I’ve been painting during the last month. Colours of summer. Meanwhile, winter finally arrived in North Yorkshire. I look forward to seeing that blue again.

Detail of "Staithes Across the Water".

Detail of “Staithes Across the Water”.

2MW
Maybeck window. oil on canvas, 50x50cm, 4cm deep (20×20″)
I started this painting in 2012, but didn’t get it finished til now. I love Maybeck, and that house. It is a quiet place. It has no mains electricity, so I painted one of my candlesticks. I also put in one of the roses from a bouquet I was given for my birthday, for friendship, and a strange old little box made of horn, for memories of the past.

sold2015
2015 was a strange year for me, the first half being traumatic, stressful and sad, but there were also lots of good things and good people. I had more commissions, and sold more paintings, old and new, than in any previous year. Thank you. Thanks to the galleries which exhibit my work and thanks to those who bought my paintings (and prints, and cards, it all helps!), I was able to be with my mother when she needed me, without getting into debt. I couldn’t have done it without you.

44NAF
New year, new finishing touches. Now I think it’s finished at last…
PS 8 January. Reserved for Mr E.B.
PPS. 17 January. Now in the private collection of Mr E.B.

Solstice

I’ve been busy painting and forgetting to update this website… so here’s some of what I’ve been doing, a series of small watercolours.

Angel, watercolours, 20x20cm

Angel, watercolours, 20x20cm

November roses, ink & watercolour, 13x21cm

November roses, ink & watercolour, 13x21cm

Chanterelle fairies, watercolour, 13x21cm

Chanterelle fairies, watercolour, 13x21cm

Amethyst Deceiver, watercolour, 9x15cm

Amethyst Deceiver, watercolour, 9x15cm

Clitherbeck, watercolour and pastel, 25x36cm

Clitherbeck, watercolour and pastel, 25x36cm

Hummersea

Hummersea is very close to my home on the North Yorkshire coast. At the foot of Boulby cliffs (amonst the highest cliffs in England), Hummersea is a pebble beach and its walls retain signs of its industrial past. Time and weather have carved its stones, and our propensity for anthropomorphism leads us to perceive faces, appropriately enough, in the rock face.

35BCT

Boulby Cliff Top I. oil on linen, 30x90cm, 2cm deep (12″x36″). £425.

Faces on the cliffs
Memories of lovers lost
Looking out to sea.

 

Boulby Cliff Top II. oil on canvas, 50x100cm, 4.5cm deep. £725

Boulby Cliff Top II. oil on canvas, 50x100cm, 4.5cm deep. £725.

From further back, the faces disappear, and the headland is reminiscent of a giant whale. The whaling coast. At the beginning of the 19th century, many ships left this coast to catch whales. Now, fortunately, whales can still be seen near the coast, to be captured by cameras and not by harpoons.

Hummersea Beach. mixed media on linen, 30x40cm (2cm deep). £175.

Hummersea Beach Study.
mixed media on linen, 30x40cm (2cm deep). £175.

There is a steep path to the beach, ending in a metal ladder anchored to the cliff. There the rock face shows signs of its industrial past, with remnants of alum mines.

 

Hummersea Beach. mixed media on canvas. 40x100cm, depth 4.5cm. £675.

Hummersea Beach. mixed media on canvas. 40x100cm, depth 4.5cm. £675.

Farm on Boulby Cliff Top. ink & watercolour on paper, 12.5 x 17cm. £125.

Farm on Boulby Cliff Top. ink & watercolour on paper, 12.5 x 17cm. £125.

I’ve been busy since Staithes Art Festival, working on a commission. It’s a special place near Goathland on the North Yorkshire Moors. Thank you to D&R, it was great to revisit that space.

32GV2