Painting for me is directly comparable to biochemistry, which I studied for a significant period of time. With the latter, one studies the relationships between substances in a test tube and their potential reactivity. With painting, the same sense of relationship and reactivity is looked for - between colours and between individual marks on the canvas. Paintings are also catalysts, a surface that stimulates a reaction to procede, not necessarily seen or articulated but felt within the viewer.
For me, painting is the external expression of the process of striving for and reaching a state of resolve.
This can best be summed up by the late Albert Tucker in an interview shortly before his death. "For me, art stops with that moment of poised tension which remains just before the solution of an enigma, the sense of an impending encounter before the final truth. It does not attempt the blasphemy of reducing it to our human scale in order to possess it and glorify our ego. To do so destroys our sense of awe and the miraculous human reverence; the area where our possible immortality lies."
- Miniature Sculptures
- Tim Allen
- Angus Adameitis
- Tom Arthur
- Robert Bell
- Janik Bouchette
- Andre Bowen
- Pamela Cowper
- Lyndon Dadswell
- Mark Draper
- Ivor Fabok
- Lea Ferris
- Helen Gauchat
- Peter Godwin
- Carole Griffin
- Ulvi Haagensen
- Madeleine Halliday
- Paul Hopmeier
- Dave Horton
- Geoff Ireland
- Orest Keywan
- Phillip King
- Brian Koerber
- Anita Larkin
- Ian McKay
- Russell McQuilty
- Michael Le Grand
- Ingrid Morley
- Brian O'Dwyer
- Tony Phillips
- Charmaine Pike
- John Reid
- Campbell Robertson-Swann
- Ayako Saito
- Rodney Simmons
- Tony Slater
- Phil Spelman
- Dave Teer
- Charlie Trivers
- Warehouse
- Jennifer Watson
- David Wilson
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