Went to see my “Pub Cat” in the Harley Gallery Open Exhibition.
Then fish and chips at the Big Fish, Ollerton Roundabout.
All text, pros, poetry, photos & artwork, copyright Ian Gordon Craig.
Went to see my “Pub Cat” in the Harley Gallery Open Exhibition.
Then fish and chips at the Big Fish, Ollerton Roundabout.
All text, pros, poetry, photos & artwork, copyright Ian Gordon Craig.
As viewed from my bedroom window. Same view at sunrise and sunset.
All text, pros, poetry, photos & artwork, copyright Ian Gordon Craig.
I don’t think I’ve had anything accepted for exhibition since June, 2014, although there’s certainly been a year or two since then that I haven’t bothered trying. This particular one (a digital print from the original drawing) was even rejected in May 2018 by the Patchings Gallery, and was originally drawn way back in 2012. The Harley Gallery is new territory for me.
Update: Sold! I expected no prize for my little sketch but had a sneaking suspicion that if it did get accepted it stood a good chance of being sold. Which it has! Only £70, which means I get my money back on the framing and printing rather than any profit (let alone my time). But it’s good to get a public sale.
All text, pros, poetry, photos & artwork, copyright Ian Gordon Craig.
Suffice to say, it took a toll...
All text, pros, poetry, photos & artwork, copyright Ian Gordon Craig.
Above: Both Nottingham Arboretum and the pubs along Mansfield Road seem far less inviting to me than they did a few years ago.
Above: On the day I collected resources for these works the Market Square was filled with people staring fixedly at their smart phones, as profuse in number as the pigeons.All artworks copyright Ian G Craig.
Top: I started by cutting up a road map showing the directions to Clumber Park from my house. Nine sections. Then painted over it quite freely.
Below: Following the same nine sections rule, then placing objects we' taken there.
Video can be seen on THIS LINK.
All text, pros, poetry & artwork, copyright Ian Gordon Craig.
I got a request today which had a familiar tone. They are not uncommon:
I usually plan on a painting taking two or three weeks to complete; a time scale born of necessity during the years I was a full-time teacher relying on the school holidays in which to concentrate on my own art. Started in the late 90s, Thoresby Hall was probably one canvas too many of my Thoresby Estate themed paintings, obviously inspired by my childhood there. As the painting progressed my enthusiasm diminished and, never sure of what to do with the bottom right-hand corner, it was soon abandoned.
The rectangles in the composition were a probable result of my video making with a group of students in the 90's. It was all about what was in the viewfinder. Those rectangles also provided a way of putting a sense of time-lapse into the picture, something I’d been doing years previous when depicting the Primary School on Thoresby Estate.
During these recent weeks of January 2018, strolling around Thoresby Park, I noticed for the very first time how profuse the growth of mistletoe is on the uppermost branches of those trees nearest the Hall and the River Meden. There was my solution as to how to fill that right-hand corner! After c.18 years I finished the painting.
All text, pros, poetry, photos & artwork, copyright Ian Gordon Craig.
A few sketch book pieces as we reach the end of another year.
All text, pros, photos, poetry & artwork, copyright Ian Gordon Craig.