The potting shed


The potting shed

Potting sheds are great places especially like the one at Heligan full to the ceiling with terracotta pots and dried flowers and all the paraphernalia you would expect to find. The smell is of the earth. I have seen artists paint plant pots many times but they often fail to add the different layers of soil, salt and stains that accumulate of the years they are only one uniform colour when they come out of the kiln. I love the design quality of the different sizes of pots. I originally had the floor extending twice as much again towards the viewer but after discussing it with a fellow artist we both agreed that it did not quite work. I will be back in the potting shed many times in the future.


I'm taking my son to the children's hospice this weekend which is only a couple of miles away from Heligan so a couple of sketching visits will be in order

A Silent Tear




I first came up with several ideas from tiles to sculptures hoping that it would lead to a series of art for the gardens, a project. These ideas may develop over time and I think a couple of them would be very interesting and challenging.
After many hours thinking and sketching my start was from a painting by Rene Magritte called ‘the son of man’. I wanted to make the character more relevant by using the hoodie instead of the smart suited bowler hatted ‘uniform’ of the past, but instead I wanted the figure to be non-gender or age specific. The painting grew as I worked, nothing was planned beyond the figure and everything was developed directly on the board. The board I used is the dimensions of a standard external door using specialised plywood, I had in mind to let all my art be used outside eventually rotting back into the earth.


The painting as I have said developed as I painted it and the symbolism and meaning developed with the work. In very general terms the painting is about our interaction and knowledge, or not, with the natural world. We are fascinated and fearful of what is hidden or we are ignorant of and until we can understand the world around us then there is little hope for our future. I will let the viewer interpret the painting and ‘interpret’ the silent tear for themselves. But for example the large blue butterfly became extinct in the uk because we did not understand the symbiotic relationship with the red ant but once we saw this we were able to bring it back and now it is established once again in the country. But what about the fish or the granite steps – you can decide.



Acrylic 82 x 40 inches