Monday, 5 October 2009

Annika

Below: Portrait of Annika, 2009, charcoal on paper, approx. 45 x 35 cm

Friday, 18 September 2009

Ingrid


Above: Portrait of Ingrid Pelgrims, 2009, charcoal on paper.

Saturday, 6 June 2009

Portrait of an Oriental Woman


Left: Portrait of An Oriental Woman, 2007, charcoal on paper, approx. 40 x 30 cm.

I made this portrait in a studio I used to have in Ixelles, at a time of considerable mental turmoil, when I tended to place my affections on the wrong people and idealise things generally. It is not a particularly good likeness of the lady in question, mainly because the head is slightly too long. I realised this one day when I happened to look down at the drawing from an angle, so that the image was foreshortened and, as it were, compressed vertically. With the resulting smaller, squatter head, the likeness is much closer, as apparent from the photo below, where I have manipulated the image to achieve this effect.








Right: Vertical compression results in a closer likeness.

Tuesday, 2 June 2009

Portrait of Myriam


Above: Portrait of Myriam  (La ragazza del 93), 2009, charcoal on paper, approx. 60 x 40 cm.

Monday, 1 June 2009

Ascension I


Left: Ascension I, 2007, acrylic on canvas,
approximately 120 x 80 cm.
Photo by Michael Shackleton

See older posts for three other paintings in the same series (Holding Hands by the Sea I, Gale in the Trees and His Great Love). A fifth painting in the series (Holding Hands by the Sea II) has probably been destroyed.

Friday, 17 April 2009

View of the Eiffel Tower VI













Left:
View of the Eiffel Tower VI, 2009

Tuesday, 14 April 2009

View of the Eiffel Tower V





























Above:
View of the Eiffel Tower V, 2009, photomontage

Thursday, 9 April 2009

Holding Hands by the Sea




Below: Holding Hands by the Sea I, 2007, acrylic on canvas, 100 x 80 cm
A slightly macabre, ironico-sentimental painting. It belongs to the same series as His Great Love and Gale in the Trees (cf. earlier posts)... See below for two detailed views. Around the time when I painted this picture, I wrote the following in my diary:

One late-summer evening, we stopped at a place overlooking the sea, where the stone balustrade was covered with lovers' graffiti, some older, some more recent, all fading away unremittingly. Had we been foolish enough to inscribe our own names, they, too, would be fading away. And it strikes me that just as every corner of the world has at some time witnessed birth and at some time witnessed death, so every corner of the world has at some time heard the words of lovers, seen their smiles, their hands clasped and their lips touching. There is in every corner of the world an invisible detritus of bygone smiles, dying echoes of words, dreams unfulfilled. Everywhere around us are phantoms with lips grown cold, hands yearning to hold, clutching at emptiness. And the eyes that once stared long into yours, there by the sea, now stare out into the rain of a winter afternoon.






Right and below: Two details of Holding Hands...

Saturday, 17 January 2009

Four Views of the Eiffel Tower

Below: Four Views of the Eiffel Tower, 2008, photomontage





Monday, 12 January 2009

Walk of Fame


Above: Walk of Fame I, 2008, Photomontage

Three Views of Montmartre


Above:
View of Montmartre I, 2008, photomontage
Vista de Montmartre I, 2008, fotomontaje
© Allan Riger-Brown



Above: View of Montmartre II, 2008, photomontage
Vista de Montmartre II, 2008, fotomontaje
© Allan Riger-Brown


Above: View of Montmartre III, 2008, photomontage
Vista de Montmartre III, 2008, fotomontaje
© Allan Riger-Brown

Sunday, 11 January 2009

His Great Love


Right: His Great Love, 2007
Acrylic on canvas
100 x 80 cm


See below for two details of this study.



































Friday, 9 January 2009


Gale in The Trees, 2007,
acrylic on canvas
80 x 120 cm

This study was supposed to be the first in a series on the same subject. The following two documents provide some background information.

From an entry in my diary, dated 13 March 2007:

For the painting provisionally called ‘Gale in the trees’ or ‘Sound/Song of the wind in the trees’:

1) Add some tree trunks where appropriate (varying the curvature), as well as twigs, which should be drawn or ‘dashed in’ very vigorously (albeit variedly) to suggest their tuning-fork vibrancy in the wind.
2) Lay in some light grey impasto, not too thick, in the highlight areas (guy’s shoulders and back, particularly the heart area; her forehead, cheekbones, hands; the tree trunks, twigs and undergrowth; and the sky).
3) NB: The impasto in the upper part of the painting should be particularly thin – so as not to interfere with subsequent ‘crossborder’ washes (blue wind).
4) Lay in the undercoats for his and her hair and clothes.
5) Both the impasti and the undercoats to follow, where appropriate, the ‘complementary-colour principle’, as follows:
- For hear coat (which will be green): broken red.
- For hear hair (which will be red/golden brown): broken dark grey/green.
- For the sky (where the blue wind will be visible): slightly orangy, very light, broken grey.
- For the tree trunks (which will be grey/blue/black/brown): neutral lightish grey.
- For the skin areas (face, hands): same as for the sky. (Try using a cold-hue wash this time).
- For his coat (which will be off-white): same as for tree trunks.
6) Suggest that her eyes are closed. See if you can do something to suggest eyelashes.
7) Put in the swirling washes representing the wind (broken blue – see Point 8 below). Put them in vigorously, without too many swirls (Remember: it’s a strong wind!), one at the time, using a sufficient amount of retarder, so as to be able to remove the wash where the trees and tree-branches overlap it. Vary the thickness and intensity of the washes so as to suggest perspective, starting from the background.
8) NB: The blue of the wind should be the same as the blue in his temples/hair/heart area (suggestion of radiance). She may have a smaller, darker (shrivelled?) heart.
9) Lay in washes and any additional details in the middle ground as appropriate.
10) Finish the painting with various washes (skin, clothes, etc.).
11) NB: Vary amount of elaboration across surface. Keep Chinese/Japanese painting in mind. Keep linear composition and mass-distribution in mind. Keep close to the material properties of the medium; follow its own penchants.
12) Try to find a better title.


Right: Gale in the Trees at an early stage of elaboration.


From a message to a friend, dated 18 March 2007:


Vendredi j’ai fini le tableau dont je t’avais envoyé une photo… Il est maintenant plus coloré (du vert dans les cheveux de la fille, du rouge dans son manteau, du jaune et du brun par-ci par-là dans les arbres et le ciel…) mais quand même encore assez macabre ! ... J’avais l'intention del’élaborer davantage (surtout rendre les mains et le visage de la fille plus beaux, moins cauchemardesques) mais quelqu'un m’a dit d’arrêter…que je risquais de perdre l’énergie de départ, de tout gâcher – et je me suis laissé convaincre. Je n’ai même pas ajouté les bandes diagonales d’outremer qui devaient représenter le vent…Je le regrette un peu, parce que je ne suis pas du tout convaincu que ce conseil était valable (il ne faut pas trop écouter les autres en tout cas…)…. Je me propose de faire une autre version, moins sombre, du même tableau…cette fois sans m'écarter du plan de départ.