To the beach

Back on the island, I headed for ‘my’ beach. Sometimes I walk there with a specific intention, and this time it was to attend to curves. I’m working on a large painting that is composed of curving gestures and that reminds me of being on the beach, looking down on strangely shaped jelly fish and seaweed. Here’s a preview of a part of the large canvas.

 

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untitled, unfinished work in progress. Lynne Cameron

On a bright sunny day, curving shapes in the sand were sharply defined.  Curves varied in scale from tiny worm casts through water-carved edges to the shape of the bay itself. Organic, water-sculpted gestures made in time. I returned to the studio with my visual memory refreshed.

Scalpsie Bay, Isle of Bute. February 2018. Photos, Lynne Cameron

 

It was the cat’s neck that did it

Rose Wylie’s paintings were ‘fun’, in a way. Fun to see her particular take on a film or television programme. And I wanted more than fun from an artist who’s spent her life painting.

I overheard a comment, “It looks naive but you can tell she’s been trained”. How, I wondered, could you tell?  There was a some use of tone to create light and shade.. in the end, what persuaded me was the cat’s neck.

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Though the painting, Wylie shows a cat that has just turned its head to look at the woman. We can feel the lack of interest in the cat’s gaze; that cat-stare...

London days

Stratford International station seems to be waiting for art, or something...

I was pleased to catch Rose Wylie's "Quack, quack" exhibition at the Serpentine Gallery - missed it on my last visit because I was sick.

Thank you, Simone de Beauvoir

From the travelling studio today: 

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Thank you, Simone de Beauvoir. Acrylic on paper, 12” x 12”, Lynne Cameron, 2018

I started a new series of small paintings while I was travelling over Christmas. Travelling paintings have to be small and I love it when inspiration strikes on the road. In Wellington, New Zealand I paid a visit to my favourite French Art Shop and found this superb thick watercolour paper by Senellier.

the Thank You Letter idea came from one of Flora Bowley ‘s programmes that I worked through around the same time. She had us write a thank you letter to our inner critic (hallo, Huntley!) and then paint over in layers. There were other people I wanted to ‘write’ to in a similar way. Having found the right paper, I started.

 

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It seems to be continuing. And Simone is on my mind. 

A decision

We discussed the exhibition title today in my group at Morley Collège, London. And Scarlet and Simone was the winner. I am happy that it made sense to people. Now to find ways to incorporate a little more of de Beauvoir’s words into the work...

 

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Looking out. Acrylic on paper, lynne Cameron, 2017.

 

What to call it?

When I read Simone de Beauvoir’s The Second Sex, my world shifted a little on its axis. I was 62 years old, not 18 - how I wish I had read it as a teenager! I might have understood my being-a-woman so much more clearly. Anyway, I didn’t - I worked on making sense of my life as it happened, in my journals and, later, in art. Now, having read it, the influence of de Beauvoir’s thinking keeps me company, prodding me every now and then to question what I am choosing to do.

 

 

Film collage: Jezebel. 30 x 30 cm. Lynne Cameron, 2016

Film collage: Jezebel. 30 x 30 cm. Lynne Cameron, 2016

The most recent prod reminded me that I put together the book of painting~poem artworks because they mattered to me as art, and that it matters to share this work through exhibitions. So I’ve started drafting an exhibition proposal, and will blog here about the process.

At the moment there are two titles: 

Scarlet and Simone

Disturbing the Silence

Scarlet is the red-haired woman who appeared in some of the paintings. I love the idea of her in dialogue with the spirit of Simone de B. 

But which title to choose? 

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Who’s making me up?  acrylic on paper, 41 x 63 cm, Lynne Cameron, 2015.

Images gathered en route

Silks in Mumbai

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texture in Tottenham Court Road

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sand and shadows in Scotland

And out of these, sometimes a painting

untitled, acrylic on paper, 61 x 83 cm, Lynne Cameron, 2017

untitled, acrylic on paper, 61 x 83 cm, Lynne Cameron, 2017

Charlotte Salomon - news of an inspiration

Once, in Berlin I picked up the biography of Charlotte Salomon in a second-hand bookshop. I found an artist who inspired me to keep painting my life, and whose technique pointed my work in new directions. This year is the centenary of her birth and I found this article from the New Yorker with news of a film and other events coming up, and a shocking revelation.

One of the key paintings by Charlotte Salomon in her collection Leben? oder Theater?

One of the key paintings by Charlotte Salomon in her collection Leben? oder Theater?

She escaped from Berlin to the south of France where she made over 1200 gouache paintings. The words were sometimes in the paintings and sometimes added on transparent overlays. It's good to hear that her work will be more widely known.

Charlotte Salomon was 26 years old when she was killed at Auschwitz.

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Here is the link for the Amsterdam exhibition: https://jck.nl/en/exhibition/charlotte-salomon

 

 

 

Word-bags

The 25% 'birthday month' discount on my book finishes at midnight tonight. So be sure to order your copy before then - go to this page and enter the code SCARLET at checkout. Some people have found it challenging in parts; it responds to the pain of lived experience, as well as the joy.

And here is a final glimpse of the artwork

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This seems to fit

From the book I paint... , I have chosen today's artwork to fit how it feels after the long drive from Berlin to Bute. The car is unpacked, paintings stacked in the spare room, and we are recovering our energy.

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To buy a copy of the book, go to BUY THE BOOK page of the website. For a 25% discount, this month only, use the code SCARLET at checkout.

Leaving Berlin

I painted this image before leaving England for Berlin. Now, two years later, I am packing for the journey back. Another threshold to cross. Excitement, logistics, and a little fear. Onwards!

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This is a page from my new book I paint...  To buy your own copy (or one for a friend), go to BUY THE BOOK page of the website. For a 25% discount, this month only, use the code SCARLET at checkout.

 

September

To mark my birthday month, I will be posting painting~poem artworks from the collection in my book here on the blog. I hope you enjoy them! If you would like to buy the book, there is a discount available throughout September. Just go over here and at the checkout enter SCARLET to save 25%.

I love the title of this first one - it came to me early in my exploration of intuitive painting. And I used it to title and frame my Berlin residency that is now nearly over. It was nearly the book title too, but I found that the poem on the front looked so striking that I went with that.

 

Our flying shapes the sky

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I painted a woman -

not an angel

- green and pink

and she flew through the sky

                                                blue-black

yellow stars

            over a church and a cottage

            a red hill

            and an inky black path.

She moved the sky by her flight.

                       

And underneath

in dissolving darkness,

            watching from the cottage,

someone sees

the sky shifted.

           

I filled the sky around the stars with blue.

I carved the cradling moon.

Pink trails behind the flying.

I enhanced the stars with yellow and white

            until they become

            flowers

                        dropping

                                    petals

earthwards.

 

She flies,

shaping the sky.

 

 

Street gardens of Berlin

Today I was walking and thinking about some of the things I love about Berlin.

I love the way people adopt bits of the street to grow flowers

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I love how motorists take care to stop for pedestrians and cyclists.

I love how people trust each other enough to leave their phones on cafe tables.

I love the quiet of public places.

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I love the reliable grumpiness of my local shopkeeper.

I love the roses in unexpected places.

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I love the high ceilings in old apartments.

I love the sense that a good life is worth the effort.

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