The studio now looks like a bomb’s gone off but at least I’m finally ready for the Affordable Art Fair now – the van is coming to pick up the work at the crack of dawn tomorrow (well, 9.30 but still…)
And so Autumn comes around again – darkening days, morning chills, a certain decay in the air. Yes! Once again, it’s time for Half Moon Studio to haul it’s sorry arse over to Battersea Park to take part in the Affordable Art Fair….
Cue to the usual scenes of mass panic – not helped by the huge amounts of editioning going on…..
With a general air of suppressed hysteria, massed frames pile up in every corner…..
To a chorus of effing and blinding, enormous piles of prints in various stages litter the studio……
Calm is restored (temporarily) as the silver bags appear and start being filled with work……
Well, I’ve finally got my act together and I now have a short film, recording the process of printing one of my linocuts, Poetry of Departures. You can see it here.
I’ve been busy this last week or two trying to resolve some paintings, which are needed for a solo exhibition later in the year at Cambridge Contemporary Art. This one is of Kings Cross Station, looking back towards the entrance. Progress as usual is tortuously slow, sigh.
Looking on the bright side, at least I have a title for the exhibition, ‘Destinations and Departures’, even if there are no paintings in it…..
Here is my latest linocut, showing the interior of Balham Underground Station. It’s inside the north entrance at that point where you turn to go down into the ticket hall. This was a tricky subject, as I wrote in my last post, but I do like a challenge.
I’ve called it Gateway to the South, courtesy of Peter Sellers….
First, the working drawing…..
Inking up the first block…..
More cutting, this time it’s the second block……
Second block now printed – and (I suspect you may be ahead of me here) yet more cutting….
Three of the four blocks now cut…..
The third block is printed – some proofs to agonize over pointlessly….
Tools at the ready, fourth block awaiting – and yet more cutting, sigh…
Fourth block printed and none of the proofs look quite right. Time to cut and paste….
So I’m going back to the beginning – first block printed again, with some adjustments.
And there you have it – three weeks of my life that I’m never going to get back……
I once had a conversation with a printmaker, some years older than me, whilst we were both invigilating a group show in a gallery somewhere. We were chatting away, as one does, when she made a remark that has stuck with me. She said she wished she’d done more to promote her work and taken advantage of more opportunities. “Too late now” she said. And to be honest I guess it was a bit – she was probably in her late seventies at that time.
Anyway, I’ve always remembered that wistfulness in her voice and it’s become one of the things I say to myself, when I need a bit of a kick up the proverbial.
Mostly, life as an artist is pretty mundane, routine-driven. You get up, drive to the studio, make some work, send out an order or two, have several cups of tea, chat a lot.
Then suddenly a new gallery rings up offering a show, or you’re asked to submit a proposal for a new commission, beyond your current experience.
A big opportunity like this can freak you out a little and it might be difficult to manage. Like a small business suddenly getting a big order, there are the logistics of it to consider – producing the work, pricing it suitably, delivering it and invoicing for it.
No wonder your brain gets a bit fried and your capacity to cope has a wobble. But seriously, I’ve lost count of the times I’ve heard fellow artists say they can’t do something. Their default position is to dither and prevaricate – they haven’t enough time or experience, it’s too difficult, they’re going on holiday at the end of the month (seriously).
It’s easy to feel that a new opportunity might be beyond your capabilities as an artist, to feel overwhelmed. And obviously you don’t want to set yourself up to fail – you have to be realistic as to what you can manage but seriously, what’s the worst that could happen?
So you don’t quite get it right and the gallery gets eight new pieces instead of the ten they asked for? Well, doesn’t that just show your work is in demand? And that proposal you’ve sweated over is rejected – it just means it wasn’t right for the client – so what?
You just need to be ready to manage those extra sales, the new gallery or even that elusive lucky break. So how much energy do you have? How much stress can you handle? How can you tell, until you’ve tested yourself? And each time you take on a challenge, you learn how to set boundaries, to learn how much you can feasibly take on before meltdown occurs. (In any case, once it’s over you forget how stressful it was, until the next time..)
The point is that if you don’t go for it – if you put up too many obstacles and make too many excuses – you may not get the chance again and you’ll never know if you were able to rise to the challenge or not.
The times I’ve got through some new venture by the skin of my teeth but with the customer/client none the wiser, well it’s exhilarating. It can be a bit of a white knuckle ride sometimes but it’s a great feeling if you pull it off. And of course, other regular commitments might have suffered a bit but you can always catch up later…
So the trick is to try not to panic (this is possibly a bit rich coming from the Queen of Panic here). Just don’t be tempted to retreat back into the safety of the studio carefully avoiding getting involved with that sort of pressure again. That window of opportunity just passes you by – again and again until there are no more opportunities….
So just grab those chances and work out how to do it afterwards. Don’t be one of those artists that we’re all familiar with, the ones who say wistfully ‘I could have been a contender’.
If you can’t do any of these dates and would still be interested in coming along for a viewing, please make an appointment with the Curwen Gallery, by phoning 020 7323 4700 or by emailing [email protected].
In any case, I will be there for the Private View this Sunday afternoon (19th May 2-4pm). Please come along and say hello!
I’ve been in the studio on a Sunday, doing some last minute re-framing for our studio show at the
Rectory Gallery in Spitalfields. The van is coming at nine tomorrow – oh yes, there’s nothing like leaving it until the last minute…..
I have three Private Views coming up in the week ahead and the first is on tonight. The Royal Society of Painter Printmakers is holding their Annual Exhibition at Bankside Gallery. If you fancy looking at interesting prints with a glass of wine, then why not come along? It’s on from 6-8 tonight, right next to Tate Modern.
The other two are for a Half Moon Studio group show at the Rectory Gallery in Spitalfields – the first is on next Wednesday – but more on that later.
In the meantime, here is an earlier post of mine about PV’s: