Rave party

Abstract painting of a rave party
Dancing wildly the drugged out young people are oblivious to all but the music, lights and themselves. Yes it’s an abstract painting of a rave party. Can’t you see it.

Cows in a paddock at Yarra Glen

Chromacolour acrylic on MDF board. 20x26cm. Completed 30th June 2009. Time taken – 18 hours.

Cows in a paddock at Yarra Glen

I moved to Yarra Glen in late 2007, and stayed for two years. I was constantly delighted with the beauty of my surroundings. I decided to make a series of contemporary, realist, landscape paintings. As a teenager the school I attended had a subject called ‘art appreciation’. At the time I thought I could be learning something more important, but now when I look back I realise it provided me with a lot of insight into art and has had a profound effect on me as a contemporary artist..

Early Australian landscape painters struggled to communicate the unique flora and fauna, as well as getting the harsh Australian sunlight correct. It took artists like Tom Roberts, Frederick McCubbin and Arthur Streeton (who were the main painters of what is known as the Heidelberg school) to get an Australian landscape down on canvas correctly. Our sunlight is distinctly different to that of the northern hemisphere.

In creating ‘cows in a paddock’ I used a source photo that was taken at the height of a long drought. The grass was quite dry and yellow. I was wanting to make a ‘happier’ looking painting, so I deliberately made the coloring more greenish than yellow and therefore making the painting appear to from a more ‘lush’ time of the year.

I lived just up the road from this vantage point and if you are familiar with Yarra Glen you will realise that this landscape features parts of the local cemetery.

INTERFET

Acrylic on MDF board. 44x67cm. Completed – 15th January 2004.

Soldiers in East Timor - INTERFET

Photorealism can be used to not only convey beautiful shiny reflective things but communicate an idea. As a keen observer of the politics of the world I was strongly in favor of the Australian military deploying to East Timor in order to stop the horrific violence being enacted upon the local Timorese population after a successful vote for independence. Immensely proud when they did deploy, I have shown a sunburnt Australian soldier on top of a vehicle manning a machine-gun. Another soldier stands further back as they patrol the streets of Dili, the capitol.

This piece is about an idea – of war and aggression and right and wrong.

It was difficult to paint the flesh tones of the sunburnt soldier in the very bright sunlight and the creases in the uniform – it ended taking 166 hours all up. When it was done I sold it to the lady who lived in the front unit who bought it for her boyfriend. They broke up, she left for another state in a hurry and he was left with the packing of her things for the removal van. He packed it in a way that when it arrived it was badly scratched. As I paint with a system of very thin layers of paint and then use very find wet and dry sandpaper to keep the paint surface totally smooth it was returned to me months later to be repainted. This took 18 hours! However when I tried to contact the owner she had moved on again and I took ownership again I guess. I decided that I would never sell a painting to anyone again unless it was framed behind glass due to the very easily damaged surfaces.

This (and Fast, Beautiful, Dangerous which was done at the same time) were difficult pictures to do as I had to have surgery to my left hand due to being assaulted by three young men. The surgery was botched very badly and I had to undergo constant, painful hand therapy which yielded next to no results and made my life very hard. The depression of not being able to work, and no action from the doctor who’d operated on me, was immense. This was the lowest period of my life and I really struggled but my art helped me get through it. Later I had the finger completely amputated.

Railway trestle bridge near Yarra Glen

Chromacolour acrylic on MDF board. 15x30cm. Completed – 6th September 2009.

Railway trestle bridge near Yarra Glen

I’ve painted another beautiful part of the town I live in – Yarra Glen. As you come into Yarra Glen from Lilydale there are a few of these trestle bridges left from the old railway line. This one thankfully wasn’t burnt down in the recent bushfires that devastated the area.

Old Yarra Glen railway station

Chromacolour acrylic on MDF board. 15x30cm. Completed – 14th July 2009.

Old Yarra Glen railway station

Photorealism empowers an artist with a limitless array of potential paintings. I decided early in 2009 to paint some of the scenery of the town I lived in – Yarra Glen. This is a painting of some the old Yarra Glen railway station, which is now long abandoned. I walked past this beautiful scene every day. I like these rural scenes because they are a counterpoint to the more conceptual pieces. Living in a rural town on the outskirts of Melbourne, Australia is an inspiration that the world can be a nice place.

Neda Soltan

Chromacolour acrylic on MDF board. Completed 30th June 2009.

Neda Soltan

Photorealism enables me to paint people I have never met. This is Neda Agha Soltan the young woman who was murdered in the streets of Tehran. She has become the symbol of the Iranian revolution and hopefully that revolution will bring about a less brutal regime. The image I started with wasn’t very high resolution so areas like the eyelashes aren’t at the standard I’d usually work with, but there’s little I can do. I have searched high and low on the internet for a better image but with no luck. I also believe that Neda should have been awarded the 2009 Nobel peace prize instead of the war criminal Barack Obama.

 

Gildemeister DMC 160 FD duoBLOCK

Chromacolour acrylic on MDF board. 80x59cm. Completed 21st November 2010. For Sale.

Gildemeister DMC 160 FD duoBlock

As a contemporary painter I get to deal with the idea (conceptual art) and the visual (realist art). Most people, whether from the general public or from the ‘art world’ what be perplexed by my paintings of technology. Their primary purpose is to communicate the ideas of power, wealth, consumerism and cutting edge technology. The machine tool shown here is powerful, expensive and used in manufacturing large, expensive objects. It is quite literally the ultimate sculpting tool for the most successful breed of artists of modern society – the industrial designer.

I love painting the surface of objects, as it is always a technical challenge. This particular painting is not quite perfect, it’s hue is slightly more towards the green side of blue than what I would have liked. I am not too fussed however as I found the original was too much towards purple for my liking. My paintings are also becoming more painterly as well, and this is a deliberate move. They are still very photorealistic, it’s just that when you take a good look, up close you can see evidence of the brushstrokes that created the work.

This work is for sale. It is offered at $1000 Aus.  Serious enquiries only by contacting the artist.

C is for champion

Acrylic on MDF board. 90x132cm. Completed 28th September 2009. Time taken – 598 hours.

C is for champion

This is one of the hardest paintings of photorealism I have ever attempted. This work is not modified from the original (Autosport magazine) and includes the headings of the original article. The foreground with the pebbles, the C-type Jaguar car, Tony Rolt’s parka, the building with its old bricks says – photorealist painting technique taken to the extreme! The ‘C is for champion’ image when I first discovered it was too tempting to resist because it would be so difficult to paint – it just had to be tackled. It was an incredible challenge as every square centimetre was complex and the title ‘C is for champion’ was a great metaphor for my boastful accomplishments. The work was begun in January of 2005, and was finished in 2009.

The car is in front of Tony Rolt’s home and the car is owned by Adrian Hamilton. Sadly Tony Rolt passed away recently and he, with Duncan Hamilton, made this particular car one of the most famous Jaguar’s of all time by winning Le Mans in 1953. Tony acheived much in his life, he was a soldier in the second world war, and later went on to have a huge part in British motor racing both as a driver and was among the unsung backroom heroes of British racing development.

I hope this artwork, more than any would come to stand for my theme in art – to strive for perfection. Perfection being, in my eyes, the ability to recreate just that – what my eyes saw. It is hoped that this work will be marveled at in centuries to come. Link to Tony Rolt’s obituary.

Looking back

When I started this painting my primary concern was with the depiction of the ‘surface of things’. It was the challenge of the techniques that was the initial inspiration. That is, and always will be, an important part of my makeup as an artist, but it became more and more about the subject. I had gone online to find about Tony Rolt because I was spending an inordinate amount of time on creating this painting. I spent an incredible number of hours on the drawing and painting. It took 12 hours alone on drawing the parka Tony wears!

I soon came to realise that the subject was going to be as important, (or even more important), as the artists skillful depiction of the car or the vinery etc. to the viewer. The admiration and respect that the writer of the heading and text has for Tony Rolt and his achievments is quite apparent. When I decided to paint this image, I scanned the two a4 pages into my computer and then joined them into one file. I considered using the clonestamp tool to remove the lettering, but in the end thought – ‘no it will be ultra contemporary photorealism’ if I leave it in. There is the fact that it’s source, that is it has been taken directly from a magazine, left to create an implicit link to the magazine. It also becomes about the value we place on images in our society. It is my belief that photography is being judged by the worldwide community at large to be some of the most regarded art of our time and definately surpassing that of contemporary painting. It doesn’t have to be this way, as an independant, contemporary artist I can use any visual source to create visual beauty and talk about a specific subject.

This work is for sale. It is offered at $2000 Aus.  Serious enquiries only by contacting the artist.

Jesus

Chromacolour acrylic on MDF board. 30x17cm. Completed 25th April 2009. Private collection.

Jesus

On Saturday 25th April 2009 I painted a portrait of Jesus for my friend Rebecca in a single day! It took 12 hours and at 17cm x 30cm this painting is quite small. She has since decided that she doesn’t want the artwork. Photorealism? Well maybe not. It shows the first communist – in vividly colored robes. I think the work is very beautiful and isn’t anything but a portrait of a man who changed much of the world. Painters have depicted Jesus Christ many times before. Rembrandt painted him numerous times, picturing him in many historical scenes from the bible. I gave this to a friend of mine who is a devout Christian and he loves the portrait.

  • RSS
  • Facebook
  • Google+
  • Twitter