Wednesday, 23 September 2009
La Bella Milanese - A Question of Attribution
Leonardo da Vinci has long been one of my heroes but his work really came alive for me when I stood just inches away from his drawings at an exhibition of his work at The Hayward Gallery in London, 20 years ago, in 1989. Martin Kemp recalled in that catalogue the many different techniques and media that Leonardo adopted during his long and fruitful career. But that did not include coloured chalk on vellum, the medium for this new, previously unknown work.
Thought until now to be a 19th century German work in the renaissance style, Martin Kemp presented the basis of his historical and scientific analysis to support his view that this portrait of a young Milanese woman is, in fact, a work of Leonardo. His findings are shortly to be published in a book, "La Bella Milanese", which I look forward to reading. The exhaustive researches which lead him to question and revise its attribution, should make for a fascinating read.
I have paid my own homage to Leonardo in my chalk pastel painting, "One Summer's Day", in which I attempted to capture the transient beauty of my own Bella Milanese as if on a worn and fading fresco. I don't make any claim to Leonardo's mastery of technique, composition or imagination but I continue to be inspired, 500 years after his death, by his vision and ambition.
Thursday, 3 September 2009
JP at the Jazz
During the Marlborough Jazz Festival in July I did dozens of sketches in more traditional media; pencil and brush pen, trying to capture the energy of the musicians and the excitement of their performances. Based on these sketches I have now created a series of images drawn with my forefinger on the touch sensitive screen of my iPod using the JP App.
The Jackson Pollock App simulates the drip painting technique of the eponymous abstract expressionist painter. There is no "undo" function so you can't correct any mistakes. You have to respond to marks already made just as Jackson Pollock did in real life. This makes for quick, gestural drawings, which encourage you to work quickly to capture the moment.
The colour options I opted for, echo I think, the spirit of jazz and the buzz of live performance. You can see a selection of these iPod sketches by clicking on my flickr image library site and judge for yourselves.