October – Elhampark Woods, acrylic on canvas board, 30 x 60 cm, 2021
Last autumn I was staying with friends in the UK just as the second lockdown was introduced. The weather was lovely so we decided to have a day out before the new restrictions started.
Our first port of call was Elhampark Woods. In the low, slanting light of late autumn the trees were glowing and the leaves aflame; it was a quite unremarkable stretch of woodland but everything was looking magical in that sunlight. It was very still, and the sky reflected in the water of a woodland pool looked like a mirror; endless and bottomless, like Cocteau’s mirror-portal to the underworld in Orpheus.
The landscape in winter can be great to draw and paint; bare branches and stems create all kinds of interesting shapes and patterns – but I am ready for the froth of spring again and everything becoming softer.
I wrote recently about how much I enjoyed Tolkien’s copious and varied use of the word ‘queer’ in The Lord of the Rings.
‘But the forest is queer’, said Merry Brandybuck in Chapter 5. He was talking about The Old Forest, just over the border of The Shire to the East. ‘Everything in it is very much more alive, more aware of what is going on, so to speak’. The forest is different to the ordinary world, a mysterious place.
Whilst Tolkien’s use of the word queer is clearly more about describing strangeness or uncanniness than anything else, it’s difficult to read it as a gay man and not muse on the contemporary meanings as well. For me, there’s common ground between both readings of the word; queer can be both curious and, well, queer. The chapter about the Old Forest is a good example. It is magical, and there are forces both good and bad at work in its ancient tangle of roots and branches. And it is also a place I project all kinds of fantasies onto, fantasies of escape, of finding likeminded spirits, of difference and of feeling more at home than in the mundane world.
Whilst gay men have historically coalesced into communities in the big cities (that may well be changing with the arrival of the internet and social media) there is something in wild spaces that also draws them, and all other creates who might not feel they quite fit into mainstream society. It brings to mind Derek Jarman’s writing in his book Modern Nature, where he recalls summer nights up on Hampstead Health, walking through the woodland and finding men gathered in a timeless tableaux round a fire. As well as the bars and clubs of central London, men also went up to the woods, to meet, to not be alone, to make friends, flirt, have sex, fall in love, have a laugh and a drink together or just to enjoy the trees in the moonlight.
Another example is Luke Tuner’s book Out of the Woods. Throughout the book he explores his relationship to Epping Forest during the turbulent time when he was coming to terms with his sexuality. The forest is neither particularly welcoming nor malign, it is a place that is other, unworldly, a place to get lost in and find oneself, a queer sort of place.
Personally, I never really felt at home on the ‘scene’ as it’s known, where I felt just as much a fish out of water as anywhere else, but I DID feel at home out in the woods, or up in the hills, the wild spaces where the skewed values of human civilisation held no sway. These are places where the things that the ignorant and bigoted might use to separate and divide people have no currency at all – no wonder so many feel a sense of peace when then spend time in a wood.
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I painted this glade which I photographed last summer. I liked that late afternoon light falling across the grasses and lighting up the trees in the distance, beckoning one to go further and explore. Now the weather is turning lovely once more, it’s high time to get out into the woods and experience that otherness again. I love how, when you step over the threshold of a wood or even just a small copse, things feel difference instantaneously. Sounds are muffled, the world outside the trees feels cut off, the air feels changed and your senses sharpened. It’s queer, how different it is, but in a good way.
The Green Fuse, acrylic on paper, 14 x 22 cm, 2021
What a perfect phrase to express the life force that pours through the veins of all living things. The title of this post was conjured by Dylan Thomas, of course, in his poem The Force that Through the Green FuseDrives the Flower. His words were on my mind today as I cycled up to the studio with sparkling spring sunshine bouncing around the streets and glowing on the tips of plants and trees growing by the roadside.
I arrived in the studio at the start of a new week with a feeling that I wanted to work in colour again, and in particular, green. Still very small scale monoprints, but adding some spring and summer colour to the mix now.
Looking at the weather forecast for the next ten days or so, I can see that the green fuse is about to go off with a bang, big time. It’s very welcome. Whilst Germany is mulling over tightening Covid restrictions, i’m glad that the growing things around us are getting on with it regardless, they cheer me up!
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 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 🙂
There’s a lake in the southwest of Berlin, just on the outskirts of the city called the Teufelssee, or the Devil’s Lake. I don’t know why it’s called that, it’s a lovely spot in the Grunewald forest, surrounded by grassy slopes and trees. The lake itself is quite deep, and popular for swimming. My favourite time to go is early evening, when the light is rich and golden and there are fewer people; swimming then can be quite magical.
I was there a couple of days ago and although it was bright sunshine when I arrived, about an hour later a sudden thunderstorm blew across and it started to rain. I sheltered under the alder trees the grow around the edge of the lake and sat out the shower in the company of this heron. The air was very warm and the rain was soft and warm too, there were even people who kept swimming during the shower, which was probably a very nice thing to do.
It’s a delightful place to be, whatever the weather 🙂
The Undiscovered, acrylic on panel, 50 x 50 cm, 2020
Life has become a whole lot smaller over the last few months so I’m really looking forward to being able to travel further afield again later this year. Even though we’ve been fortunate in Berlin, where the lockdown has been fairly relaxed, I miss the stimulation of exploring new places and making new discoveries.
But I have lots of memories and lots of photos for source material to work on at the moment. This painting is based on a  walk I took a couple of years ago when I was living in Whitstable. You can walk out of the town and follow the path of an old railway line through wooded hills, all the way to Canterbury.
It was late summer and I remember one particular path was overhung with long trails of climbing plants that gave it a strange atmosphere. The world is feeling very fractured and strained at the moment, which might explain the ambiguous nature of the painting. I notice I’ve obscured any kind of view to the distance, so you don’t know where you’d end up if you pushed past that old tree; it could be somewhere sunny and delightful, or it could be a witch’s cottage!
White Tree Copse, mixed media model, digital photograph, 2020
I’ve made model trees for a table top forest before and I’ve returned to the idea recently as a starting point for making some new paintings.
Over the last few years I’ve made various model trees; 2D trees, 3D trees made from wire and clay, as well as carved wooden trees that I bought from a shop and painted. Sometimes they were for a specific purpose, such as the touring production of Hansel and Gretel I worked on in 2018 (Goldfield Productions, Directed by Clive Hicks-Jenkins) Words by Simon Armitage, Music by Matthew Kaner, puppets by Jan Zalud). And sometimes I just made them for the fun of it; I find there’s something particularly satisfying about making these tiny worlds. There’s definitely a nostalgic tang of childhood fantasy about it, remembering those hours, that seemed endless back then, of creating alien worlds, castles, moon cities, underwater kingdoms, magical realms; places that could be anything I imagined and that could exist outside all the established laws of the mundane world. In a word, I suppose it could be called ‘play’.
Even now, as a 55 year old man, I still get a thrill out of creating these places, and play seems as important as ever in these increasingly fractured, strained and anxious times.
Mixed medial model, digital photograph, 2016
Preparatory work for a touring stage production of Hansel and Gretel, mixed media, digital photograph, 2017
The trees I’ve made this week are 2D, painted in gouache onto thick paper, cut out and arranged in a 3D space with a sky painted onto card placed behind them. The trees and the photos are quite rough and ready as I’m using them to sketch out ideas for paintings but I do like them as objects in their own right too and I really enjoy seeing how they can transform during the process of lighting and photographing them. I use some simple photo-editing apps to adjust the photos but no sophisticated Photoshop stuff (I don’t know how) .
This time around i’m planning to use the resulting photos as jumping off points for some new paintings. I’ve not really done this to any extent before so i’m curious to see what happens. I want to try and avoid simply transferring the photographs into a painted image, I hope I can take things a step and create something more interesting by moving things into a different medium – we’ll see!
The Dark Copse, mixed media model, digital photograph, 2020
We’ve had a plain, clear plastic mask sitting on a shelf here for a while, left over from a photoshoot my husband did a couple of years ago. I’ve always thought to myself that i’d like to decorate it, and this week I finally got round to doing so.
What emerged was a sort of green man mask, with lots of lichen, fungi and moss sprouting from the face. I’ve never made a mask before, but I thoroughly enjoyed doing this, it was just so satisfying making something by hand and making a 3D object.
I feel like i’ve got the bug and that i’ll make some more of these, maybe trying different approaches and techniques.
Here are a few snaps of the process; first covering the thin plastic mask in canvas strips coated in plaster, plus some of the elements to be fixed onto the mask, made from clay and paper:
The next phase, layering paper onto the mask and sticking on the various elements i’d made out of clay, paper and wire:
Then, with the making finished, I started the painting; fairly monochrome at first:
And then, finally adding a bit of extra texture and some colour. I actually liked the monochrome, but I had an idea in my mind of how I wanted it to look so I tried the colour I thought might work:
I’m pleased with the resulting effect, although I think i’d like to distort and change the structure of the face to be more expressive if I make any more. I do like the textures though 🙂
The weather has turned gloomy here in Berlin this week, although it’s very mild for this time of year. It’s more usual to see snow arriving by January, but we’re not even getting any real frost at night. Not sure this is a good sign, although I’m not complaining either as I hate the cold!
I guess this might be why I was drawn to painting some strong sunlight and warmer colours; I Â do find I often paint summery paintings in winter and vice versa!
This scene is based on some photos I took up along the Crab and Winkle Way, a footpath and cycle path that runs from Whitstable to Canterbury along the route of an old disused railway line. As the path winds away out of Whitstable, it climbs steeply up onto some hills and is a lovely place to walk in the late afternoon and early evening as it catches the light beautifully.
The woods are bare and silent now, and, although they have their own unique magic in the winter, i’m looking forward to spring again. The bulbs are pushing up through the soil, the days will start to get longer soon and I can enjoy some of these colours again before not too long I hope!
I’ll tinker a bit more with this painting but it’s more or less done and will go back to Whitstable to Whitstable Framing before it goes up for sale – maybe somebody local who enjoys walking the C&W way will fancy it 😉