Showing posts with label flight. Show all posts
Showing posts with label flight. Show all posts
Friday, 4 January 2019
Thursday, 4 September 2014
Friday, 16 December 2011
Saturday, 12 November 2011
Aviary of WIld Flying Thoughts
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White bird on Dark Background |
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Birds soaring upwards |
Labels:
bird,
drawing,
flight,
flying,
gouache,
imagination,
Japanese,
landscape,
mythic,
painting,
pastel,
sky
Saturday, 17 September 2011
Sailing the WInd
Today I made a picture of a bird sailing the wind.
Watching the seagulls, I was reminded of the work of Peter Lanyon and Georges Braque.
Have you ever watched a gull ride the thermals? Here is Peter Lanyon's painting of a thermal http://bit.ly/r8q30H so evocative of Cornwall's coast with its currents and sea mists, so expressive of Lanyon's strong feeling for the elements. I imagine it as a record of his experience of gliding on the winds. I shall never forget how he was to die tragically in a gliding accident four years after he completed this picture.
A bird flies through Braque's studio http://bit.ly/qHlkar. It comes from a series of late paintings which are amongst my all time favourites for their spatial sophistication and complexity.
On the ceilings of the Louvre Braque's birds fly. They are framed by a 16th century richly carved ceiling. There is an apparent simplicity to the design. I admire his masterful handling of space and form. Here is a sketch he made for this http://bit.ly/nL7Ffz and here the context which frames them.http://bit.ly/paB1FP
Watching the seagulls, I was reminded of the work of Peter Lanyon and Georges Braque.
Have you ever watched a gull ride the thermals? Here is Peter Lanyon's painting of a thermal http://bit.ly/r8q30H so evocative of Cornwall's coast with its currents and sea mists, so expressive of Lanyon's strong feeling for the elements. I imagine it as a record of his experience of gliding on the winds. I shall never forget how he was to die tragically in a gliding accident four years after he completed this picture.
A bird flies through Braque's studio http://bit.ly/qHlkar. It comes from a series of late paintings which are amongst my all time favourites for their spatial sophistication and complexity.
On the ceilings of the Louvre Braque's birds fly. They are framed by a 16th century richly carved ceiling. There is an apparent simplicity to the design. I admire his masterful handling of space and form. Here is a sketch he made for this http://bit.ly/nL7Ffz and here the context which frames them.http://bit.ly/paB1FP
Friday, 5 November 2010
Dragon of Air and Fire
Here is another dragon.![]() |
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