Some more work on Damascus Rose today, quite a rainy day so I couldn’t paint or photograph much beyond 3pm as it was so overcast (hence blurry photos).
I’ve showed more of the process and details below. A lot of it was painting the blue swathe then making rose patterns in wet paint with my nails, then repeating till it seemed right. I won’t really be able to tell until there’s some natural light tomorrow.
A bit more work on Damascus Rose today, adding more layers. The light was getting very dim when I took this so it doesn’t show colours exactly as they are. Here are previous stages..
Some photos of a painting in progress today, 3×3 feet (36×36″).
This the start of three large paintings I’m planning over the next few months on the theme of Damascus. This first painting in progress loosely follows a map of Damascus from above, which I saved from Google Maps. It shows the River Barada flowing into the centre of the city all the way from the mountains of Lebanon to Umayyad Mosque.
It’s a difficult theme, which will be a challenge but it’s sometimes the paintings I find emotionally difficult that turn out to be most affecting.
This early stage of the painting is reminding me a bit of the work of Cy Twombly, which was not at all intentional. I had intended to make a sort of subtle relief map, then got some paints in my hand and went off in an entirely different direction without really thinking. I think I’ll continue to build up these transparent layers. I’ll also be exploring patterns that echo the colours and Syrian designs of the Damascus rose.
Cy Twombly ‘Hero and Leandro’
Cy Twombly Ferragosto
Watching the unfolding horror of the war in Syria can feel too much to take in. It’s hard to imagine, or want to imagine, how it feels to see the city you were born in destroyed and everything familiar turn to dust.
Sometimes it’s peripheral things that lead you to a place where you can allow yourself to feel or try to empathise with such painful reality. I recently discovered the poems of Bejan Matur, a Kurdish poet from Turkey, whose work often deals with the ravages of war. The following poem is called ‘Being’…
Time of roses And autumn Long ago dust mingled with bones And the universe ceased. Being Beginning in the home and never-ending. New words should have summoned you The pattern of dust should have shown what was to come And you remaining still far off.
Roses are a universal symbol of love, particularly in Middle Eastern culture. I recently ordered a few mls of pure Damascus rose in absolute, because production of Damascus rose oil has recently almost come to a halt for obvious reasons. In years to come, images of death and rubble will come to mind when we think of Syria, but the farmers who tend the roses of Damascus live in hope that peace is in the not too distant future, so they will return to producing the world’s most famous rose (the scent is familiar to us in perfume, rose water and ‘Loukoum’ – known as Turkish Delight in the West). This poem by Matur is called ‘Peaceful Morning’ …
A time before time A morning of peace Of roses And fountains. A welcoming Of the creatures Of the latecomer Rescued from the hand of sleep In the dappled dawn. So arms Moved away from a statue’s body And found a human. Desired. What belonged Far more than words Was love.
While I was reading the work of Matur and researching the Damascus rose, I had a song constantly playing in my head; Kate Bush’s new version of ‘And dream of sheep’, about a woman lost at sea, longing for sleep and oblivion from pain, and at the same time connection and home. She had the song recorded live while she was immersed in water. (video below)
Watching the video it was impossible not to think of refugees lost at sea; to feel connected, also impossible not to decide to attempt this subject, however limited my talent is to tackle such a theme.
This is an upcoming charity art auction and event for which I donated one of my paintings from the ‘Harbours’ series (‘Crail’, below)
It’s organised by Artlink Central who support and promote the use of art for health and well being.
The event starts at 7pm on the 19th November, lots of artworks big and small by many of Scotland’s leading artists . Nice ideas for for Christmas presents maybe?!
At last I finished putting together my small video response to our Hebridean journey (link below).
It’s been a bit delayed as I was waiting for music and poetry, then the tricky aspect of fitting the timing of music and poems together with images, and a few shots of the islands themselves.
(detail) Landscape with the Fall of Icarus, c.1555 (oil on canvas) by Bruegel, Pieter the Elder
I’ll return to this project with new improved equipment in the next few months, and with a clearer idea of how all the elements fit together. Definitely poetry readings by Louise will work best. Though as it is I find certain elements work beautifully. I like the way Lewis poet Ian Stephen’s reading leads into the journey, and Louise Palfreyman’s poems exquisitely capture the atmosphere of Callanish and Liceasto in Harris.
Listened to at a reasonable volume, you can hear me sing in the car after the Callanish section, Atzi mentioned he’d used this as inspiration for the intro music!
It’s the final section that really works for me though, with Louise’s ‘Hebridean Light’ and Atzi Muramatsu’s music soaring and suspenseful – I found it poignant, it made me think of the flight or fall of Icarus (also the painting by Breughel) and I couldn’t get the poem and music out of my head when I went off to bed. Various musical accompaniments suggested themselves; the poems being sung perhaps…
‘Isle of Harris (shoreline)’. Mixed media on 5×5″ wood
Fiskavaig Bay (in progress)
A couple more small paintings today for the series, which I’m adding to an upcoming sale (feel free to email if you’d like details).
The video about our Lewis and Harris trip with paintings and poetry is delayed somewhat but should be edited by the end of this week, then Louise and I will send off our application for An Lanntair in Stornaway.
Whether or not that’s successful we’ll be putting on an exhibition this summer in Edinburgh at Whitespace in Howe Street, for which I’ll create a series of larger paintings based on these recent experiments.
Here they are so far..
Sold. ‘Callanish 1’. Mixed media on 5×5″ wood. Rose Strang 2016
Sold. ‘Callanish 2’. Mixed media on 5×5″ wood. Rose Strang 2016
Sold. ‘Leaving Ullapool 2’. Mixed media on 5×5″ wood. Rose Strang 2016
‘Harris, Sea Loch. Mixed media on 10×10″ wood
‘Harris, Sea Loch 1’. Mixed media on 10×10″ wood
Sold . ‘Harris (Sea Loch 2)’ Mixed media on 10×10″ wood. Rose Strang 2016
‘Isle of Harris (shoreline)’. Mixed media on 5×5″ wood
‘Isle of Harris (Red roof 1)’. Mixed media on 5×5″ wood
‘Isle of Harris (Red roof 2)’. Mixed media on 5×5″ wood
Today’s paintings in progress, of the Isle of Harris.
I was ‘channeling’ Frank Auerbach a bit on the very textured paintings (at least in terms of impasto paint application if not talent!) A camera tends to flatten out texture, so I’ve taken one sideways to show the thick layers –
Most of Auerbach’s works are portraits, but here’s a landscape example below –
I remember gazing in fascination at one of his thickly textured portraits at Inverleith House Art Gallery in Edinburgh’s Botanic Gardens as a teenager.
As with many others I was shocked to hear the recent announcement that the gallery will be closed due to funding cuts. Arts critic Joyce MacMillan began a petition online (link below) which you can sign to show your support for the gallery to remain open. I remain hopeful!
A still of the little video I’m making of our collaborative response to Lewis and Harris, with an excerpt of Louise’s poem – ‘At Liceasto’
I’ve been re-editing this, also meeting with Atzi Muramatsu today to discuss music, then I’ll layer on the final edit with music and it should be finished by Thursday or Friday. It’ll be a taste of a longer video I’ll create later this year.
There will be an online sale of the first series of small paintings on wood – around twenty works at 5×5″. Updates after November 5th. These are the first three:
Sold. ‘Callanish 1’. Mixed media on 5×5″ wood. Rose Strang 2016
Sold. ‘Leaving Ullapool 2’. Mixed media on 5×5″ wood. Rose Strang 2016
Sold. ‘Callanish 2’. Mixed media on 5×5″ wood. Rose Strang 2016
Also having fun with one of my Harris photos today – v retro and 2001 Space Odyssey-esque don’t you think, appropriately – as the Harris landscape was used by Kubrick for the Jupiter scene..
Today’s paintings – a couple of very quick paintings on canvas at 20×16 inches, also two more works on 10×10 inch wood, adding to the Harris and Lewis series. There’s a definite palette and mood emerging – white, green, rust, black and blue…
Sold. ‘Leaving Ullapool 2’. Mixed media on 5×5″ wood. Rose Strang 2016
Sold. ‘Callanish 1’. Mixed media on 5×5″ wood. Rose Strang 2016
Sold. ‘Callanish 2’. Mixed media on 5×5″ wood. Rose Strang 2016
‘Harris, Sea Loch. Mixed media on 10×10″ wood
Sold . ‘Harris (Sea Loch 2)’ Mixed media on 10×10″ wood. Rose Strang 2016
‘Harris, Sea Loch 1’. Mixed media on 10×10″ wood
The diffuse light effect is mostly gesso layers on top of dry paint – it’s usually used as a base, but it’s less opaque than titanium white and I’ve always liked the atmospheric effects, along with thick paint applied with palette knife and salt which gives gritty highlights.
I’m really tempted to publish one of Louise Palfreyman’s poems here to illustrate how well these all work together, but I’ll wait until I’ve edited the video, and Atzi Muramatsu has responded musically (though Louise might publish on her own blog – viewable Here)