Stephen exhibits his art at
various times of the year in our Gallery in
Shanagarry, Co. Cork, Ireland. His influences
are the changing seasons in Italy and France,
where he spends much of his time. Please contact
our Gallery for a full guide of events taking
place at the Gallery for 2008, or view our Calendar
of Events.
INSPIRATION BY THE ARTIST
All my life I have avoided colour, except for
my socks. I love the peace and calm of white.
When designing objects and spaces I think of
permanence and white as a background colour
for plates which will carry different coloured
foods or for walls which will act as a background
for paintings or tapestries, white seems perfect.
I painted a little with watercolours
about ten years ago. I found it hard to choose
the colours and I yearned for the brilliance
of oils, so I tried one. It was terrible. Last
Autumn I started to psyche myself up for some
painting in Italy. I became entranced firstly
by the sun and the idea of illusion of a horizon,
then I started to look at the moon, then sunrise
and sunset. Finally, in the Caribbean I started
to look at the moon at sunrise and the moon
at sunset. I started to paint furiously.
Later as I looked out on the
Tuscan hills, I began to realise that colour
is largely an opinion. This freed me from the
fear of being wrong, so I started to allow the
colours to choose themselves. I decided to have
another go at oils and went back into a cold
funk for two weeks. Finally I allowed some colours
to choose my canvas and I loved the result.
So I did one every day for three weeks, revelling
in the joy of watching the colours choose my
canvas.
The best I can do as an explanation
is that coming from my sun/moon experiences
and given that there is little intellectual
processes as possible, I just take a piece of
charcoal and freely create two or three lines.
I allow a golden sphere to choose its space
and allow colour to create the illusion of reality,
while the lines, which are reality, may become
obscured.
Of course Lauren taught me how
to paint. It's been great fun producing this
collection, which Lauren insists on keeping.
I truly hope that the colours will be there
waiting for me when I start painting again in
the Autumn.
When I studied pottery in Japan,
my master never worked in the heat of the summer
or the bitter cold of winter. He said: “How
can you access inspiration when you are too
hot or too cold?” Bless him.
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