Perennial

 
 


 

 

 

Perennial, not Annual.
It's not a calendar (yet) and as such is a repeating thing - a study of the passing months. When it does shrink down to becoming a calendar it becomes dated and therefore will only be valid for one year.
 I may be thinking of these titles in terms of plants (bedding ones in particular)


During the course of putting the Advent thing together, I realised that I have been trying to build a calendar since 1983. It started in a large sketch book with the front page signed by my father. It feels like Ive added a bit every year, but never felt the drive or need to finish it off - maybe I am because I realise that I am approaching old age! He was younger than I am when he signed it.




It started off with my acquisition of the Julian calendar , or at least a spiced up verbal definition of the same. I am sure that in parts it isn't anywhere near correct, but will at least do for now. I felt it very important to get the very basic black and white (Giff) images rolled out - looking very much like
 potential lino cuts.


But looking back over the years, I realise that I have always had an eye on the changing of the seasons - in fact my first show after leaving Epsom College in 74 was entitled "The Seasons".

Ten years centred around Shipping Hill was very much concerned with what was happening right there outside.
Breath in breathe out go through the seasons, go through life.














January, a man with two faces.
The one - that of an old man
looking back on the past. The other - that of a young man looking forward.

or/ The figure of a man clad in white garments
and blowing on his fingers.
Under his left arm, he held a billet of wood.

 


o by the by
has anyone seen little you - i
who stood on a green hill and threw
his wish at blue
with a swoop and a dart
out flew his wish
(it dived like a fish
but it climbed like a dream)
throbbing like a heart
singing like a flame
blue took it-my
far beyond far
and high beyond high
bluer took it-your
but bluest took it-our
away beyond where
what a wonderful thing
is the end of a string
(murmurs little you-i
as the hill becomes Nil)
and will somebody tell
me why people let go

e. e. Cummings

Snow crystals, one of the pages from my Advent blog calendar from last year.

 
Snow dogs from under spaghetti junction, from this January (13), put together from a collage of snap-shots.






 



 Rich, but dismal colours,
glazed in a wet sheaf.
The rain is pouring down in white sheets.
It's dancing splash,
upward from the bottom of the windowsill

Different tones of patter
At the window, on the roof
percussion for the wailing wind,
sometimes shrieking through cracks.
Rocking the place: buffeting gently.
Dancing with the grass,
bending many trees in unison.


(words of a song with Phil Gray and Colin Browne)

Notes on card from the seasons show 1975.




We are not asleep
can't you feel it in the air?
down by the streams
there's not many sees
but we are coming on strong
In a couple of months
we will take over all

we are just the spirits -
the life and soul of the party.





Earth Love.
I slap burst forth
crying with a rapt reckless yearn
an untaught abandon
which leads on and returns
standing far out of reach
lost excitement wavers
visions want and craze veils
sorely, soulless, nightly.

A rooted radiance
as equal parts roam
with reflections waver
that emptily feels forth
to alight fixedly on shimmers hidden self
of shadow less black gripping single eternity

She winces, sad and strange
whisper dreams encaged beast
raging freedoms fall
                   mourns
Beauties faceless darkness
spellbound silence teeters.

Drawing rising strength up
searching in answers quests
Can you wade on the land
and walk alone
holding my hand, hollering moon?

 

Hurt, Happy, Angry a sign of the time.





March
A man of tawny aspect
with a helmet on his head
leaning on a spade
holding almond blossoms
in his left hand
with a basket of seeds
on his arm.

 

The Valley at Shipping Hill 1975



It's all happening.
Art college painting March 73.



 

Bob Meecham 1983?

  
 (Those) Wild March Skies.75




Boundary Wall 75





Songs of spring.






Just a bunch of long haired lads experimenting in the Devon woods near Taunton, Easter 70.
The light changes were incredible.
When we came upon a little pond at the bottom of a hill on the other side stood a peacock.
(Johnny Burfit, Mick Crotty) 


Seven golden daffodils, gleaming in the sun,
to light the way of evening, when day has done.

I don't have no money,
I don't have any land,
not even one dollar bill
to crinkle in my hand

But,
I can show you the morning, on a thousand hills,
and kiss you, and bring you
seven golden daffodils.


Lonnie Donergan 




Mopsey's wallpaper


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Waiting for George.




For a pub sign, "The Icon" 2012







 


To speak of peace and brotherhood
and what might be the cost.
A man he did it long ago and they hung him on a cross.
Long ago, far away,
those things like that don't happen nowadays.




Moist and earthy 75




Forestry picture, April 13.



April face 13.



Sunset on the waters
 and the rocks stand out like boulders
light translucent brambles
line the sides
dripping dangly moss
shooting lights past boulders
gently soothe over the top
swirl to a heap
rumble bubble leap glide and fall.

The bath is filling
the noise surrounding
the amber light is dimming.

Hiding between tall upright trees
reaching for the sky
groping for breath
umber amber sepia stones
lie relatively undisturbed
whilst the clear, sometimes milky
hair thin lines of water
 criss cross pass over
here and there a lighted obtrusion
and the luminous moss
stands sponge like absorbing
and soothing.




Stream 2 (both digital versions)

Ruth Parke
In some ways, I should have written a comment on the digital difference thing up on the blog, it's a fairly important point - ta.


I included both versions, because I'm a bad photographer and I often have to enhance photos: crop, brighten, darken, blend edges.
I do feel that even though I'm representing a painting that I have made, it can be nice to maybe take it a bit furthur. (Ken Kesey).
I don't want to bust a gut trying to make it look as close as it is in real life, which is subjective in human terms and changeable in terms of the different quality of light that falls on it at different times of the day.
 And with possibly less effort, I can make something new anyway.
And that certainly aint my skill, in terms of conversion to media.

So at times when I find myself re-working an image, this doesn't bother me as the image is probably going to look totally different anyway. I think I can take photos as they come!

And--
The digital stuff may in fact look better than the original!



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Stream 1, started around 97,
stored and forgotten then finished 13. Maybe I didn't know then just what I was after!


 

St Agnes, spring sea picture.




Palma spring.
Original drawing from Palma 92
This painting 2013









May May its a beautiful day.




Dawn Chorus 13.




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Every body dance -wild flowers on the cliff.
Little Orchard Village St Agnes 2012.




Down to the Wood.


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Bluebell wood, under Spaghetti Junction.
2013




Hedgerow, Shipping Hill 13.




  

Fritz the cat stretched out  - mee-owed - head and feet above the crowd. 98.

A lot more to come from May Apple Ball. (even a song!)










 
 
 
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Mayis, first papier-mâché work of the year (2013)


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A fresh smell
a fresh heart
sweeps clean,
lightly hovers daintily in mid air
it came from over there somewhere
and disappears
to other fresh smells.



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Medieval



A Compendium of June
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A delicate blue on the distant horizon
the air has a nip for
the sun is still rising
The wind takes a feather
and blows it away
a souvenir of a beautiful daydream.
Another day begins
another day.

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Sprites.

A deep dark rich sky
behind the fire
the dry wood burns
not only in itself
but also in the air
exploding in sparks
it leaves pin thin wisps
of trail behind it
and every now and then
 a shiver of the complete picture
of the whole
- every spark of them
all at once
dancing, swaying in "do it"
with the heat in no breeze
clear crisp night.
76






 



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July
A man clad in long flowing garments
having a scythe in his right hand
and a sickle in his belt

-riding a lion









Bobs Garden




Eddie Maddox, pruning an Ash dangerously behind the house at Shipping Hill
C 75
Painted with graphite. 



No matter what happens something always escapes you.
Sometimes, you just cant beat the real thing.

 




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I can hear the grass grow




 The Wright Brothers, Shipping Hill 76.

Big Day Out - Erdington, July 13









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August
The maiden crowned with ears of corn
and bearing stalks in her hand
- the righteous virgin lived here on earth
and plenty made abound
- but after wrong was love,
and justice sold
She left th'unrighteous world
and to heaven was extolled.




Gold on the moor, listen for the rush when the wind blows across the valley (King Harvest has surely come)

Cave Lodge. Thailand.


Drawing from "Achilles Shield"

Then the famous crippled god created there a pasture
in a lovely valley bottom, an open ground
for white-fleeced sheep, sheep folds, roofed huts and pens.


High and gently rolling - off the board.
Phil Gray

Dumfries, 1975




L.S.A. Bromley 1975


Falling Light
Late summer sundown.




More - floating gracefully downward.


Preliminary for the view below.





View from Millholme, Chagford. With Julian Pefanis





Twilight Thistles at Millholme.





 

Profile from Face Book.

September
A man, past the prime of life
heavily laden with corn
in one hand he carries a sickle
in the other - a pair of scales.




 
  
Little Orchard Village St Agnes 2011
Painted on my 60th birthday - rather reflecting the mood and time (in the way of things)



The School Run, Brookvale Park 2011





Details from The Bramble panels. A large painting produced at Epsom Art College in 73.


Photographed by the official college photographer complete with spotlights and all.
I should have used my brownie box camera maybe.


 

Waiting for food.
Kashmir 83

 October.
A picture of hawking
a man, full of merry glee
enjoying the fruits of the earth
&
revelling in the midst of plenty.



First main rough for "13 Chestnuts" 9th October13.
 
 
13 Chestnuts.



Photo sent to me from Wendy Richard.







 
Let me take you down. Shipping Hill 75 


Autumn under Spaghetti Junction 2012


Weird Window, Ashtead Surrey 75.



Made in the Shade. Ashtead 75

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22nd October 2013, notebook cover.

 23rd October 13 more chestnut sprites.



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Autumnal Woodland disco 24th October 13.




and they fly and they fly and they fly away

 



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 November.
An elderly man, very stout and quite exhausted with his labours.
with his right hand, he is wiping
the sweat fro his brow.
And in his left, he holds a large knife
with which he has been pruning the plants
he carries on his arm

(he is riding a centaur, carrying a bow and arrow)





Three Waking Dreams 1st November 2013







Autumnal woodland disco Nov 13.








Big day
Shipping Hill 75





Its a new dawn, its a new day, its a new life for me and I'm feeling good.
Shipping Hill 72

( more watercolours to come from early days at Epsom - mainly night skies after sunset.) And dried on a radiator.


 






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Imagine learning how to fly, then realising you had dragon's eyes.







A page from my advent calendar from 2012.











Dave Bridge

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I wonder, is this following of the passage of time and its subtle deviations and how we cope what has really underpinned my practice all these years ho ho.




















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