Monday, 30 March 2020

The House Book II

      I know I'm repeating myself here but the strength of the interiors shown in The House Book is their confidence.  Their creators may sometimes miss the mark but they are not afraid of failure. Colourful, bold, experimental they are expressions of the personality, and perhaps even the subconscious, of the owner.  And for that they are to be applauded.
      Today - what a sorry contrast - we are timid. Bland. I may have used this analogy before but Goodhart Rendell, writing about the Late Gothic Revival followers of G F Bodley coined the phrase 'The wages of good taste is death' (cf Romans 6. 23) to describe their attenuated churches. (A little harsh, perhaps) The same could be applied to too much of today's interiors. It is all too reasonable. What are we so scared of? Are we so characterless? Unformed?
     I suppose that some of the blame can be placed with property programmes on tv as though we all should live permanently in blank canvas mode in case we should suddenly want to sell up and move. All far too corporate for me. The whole thing exemplified by C4's 'Grand Designs', where houses look like public buildings rather than homes; Dolly Parton once said, "It takes a lot of money to look this cheap," and 'Grand Designs' shows it certainly takes a lot of money to look that bland, that characterless. Happily I think things really are beginning to change for the better. Colour, at least, is returning.
     Anyway here is a second selection of interiors and/or images that caught my eye; the first image is actually the Conran's kitchen from when they lived in one of those spectacularly theatrical terraces that fringe Regent's Park in London.








Friday, 20 March 2020

Own work: 'Llech Gronw'

     My latest pen and ink drawing, based on the slaying of Gronw Pibyr in 'Math fab Mathonwy' the fourth of the Four Branches of the Mabinogi, the 'Pedair Cainc y Mabinogi'. At the end of the tale the usurping Gronw is confronted by the hero Lleu Llaw Gyffes hot for revenge. Although accepting Lleu's challenge Gronw, in an act both duplicitous and cowardly, hides behind a standing stone, but undeterred Lleu throws his spear at stone and coward piercing both.

Saturday, 14 March 2020

Own work: 'Stones in a Mythic Landscape'

     My latest pen and ink drawing 'Stones in a Mythic Landscape' approx 19 x 17cms on 220 gsm cartridge paper.


Thursday, 12 March 2020

Own work: The Sardis Independent Chapel

     Another new work for you.  The Sardis Independent Chapel, Ystradgynlais, Breconshire. Ystradgynlais, which is visually nearly all Victorian and later, is oddly enough situated south of the Brecon Beacons towards the head of the Tawe valley. So sort of industrial South Wales, really. Not the sort of place one would automatically associate with deeply rural Breconshire. The chapel, perhaps the grandest in the town, dates from the 1860s and is a far more dominant presence in the streetscape than the retiring parish church. As you can see from the collage it is a rather odd building with a number of mannerisms to the classical façade: the bases and capitals of the eight Doric pilasters, (which are missing both their pads, or orli, and abaci), are continuous between adjoining pilasters, and the entablature is missing most of its cornice.
     It is now closed. Anyway, this is a mixed-media collage roughly 30 x 37cms on watercolour board.