I was lucky enough to be asked to draw these two gorgeous dogs. Both in graphite pencil on A4 paper.
Hereโs my latest Dorset drawing, titled from John Masefieldโs poem Sea Fever.
Itโs drawn with my usual Mitsubishi Hi-Uni pencils on Daler-Rowney smooth heavyweight cartridge paper. The location is the famous Durdle Door with the Isle of Portland in the distant background.
The annual open exhibition of the Society of Graphic Fine Art is a true celebration of drawing in all its forms and is held in the Mall Galleries in London. This year the exhibition ran from 13 to 18 March.
This is the fourth year Iโve entered drawings into the exhibition and the first year Iโve entered as an associate member of the society. I had three pictures selected.
Living in Dorset, itโs quite an investment of time and money to exhibit in London. Itโs involved three trips, one to take the pictures up, one to visit the exhibition while itโs open, and one to collect the pictures after itโs closed. Iโve learned to think carefully about which exhibitions to enter but the SGFA open exhibition feels like home, itโs all about drawing and printing and pencil and charcoal; everything I love, in fact.
This year the exhibition was in two of the three Mall Galleries galleries: the North Gallery and the East Gallery. The East is a big space that was hung with larger works, while the North is a zigzag of smaller rooms that was perfect for smaller pictures. It can take a long time to draw even a small pictures so there smaller works are more common.
This yearโs exhibition was extremely well hung. The walls werenโt crammed with work and similarly themed work was grouped together. It really showed off the pictures and was a real treat to look around.
Itโs finished now (I had meant to write about it before it started but didnโt find the time) but the work is still available to see online.
I was fortunate to be included in the 17th volume of Collect Artโs magazine, a special edition featuring twenty-five artistsโ sketches and drawings. We were all asked more or less the same questions and itโs fascinating seeing the common threads and the differences. The work in the magazine is really wonderful, too.
Just in case youโre interested, here are my answers to the questions I was asked.
Where are you from and how does that affect your work?
I live by the sea in Dorset in the south of England. Iโm surrounded by light, water, open space and beautiful countryside. All of that inspires what I draw and how I draw it.
What is your background?
I did a lot of drawing when I was a child but was told at school that I worked too slowly to be able to continue to study art. I do work very slowly! Instead I became a maths teacher. After a change of career a few years ago I decided to take my drawing seriously again.
Why did you choose to be an artist?
I donโt think you choose to be an artist. Being creative is part of what it is to be human and everyone is an artist in one way or another. For me, that way is by drawing because I just love making marks on paper with pencil.
What inspires you?
Iโm inspired by the work of other artists, particularly those who are able to express lots of ideas with very few lines, something I find difficult. But mostly Iโm inspired by where I live, by the sea, the light and the sky, and by the people in my life who I love. I try to bring those elements into all my drawing, from landscapes to portraits.
Name the artist or artists youโd like to be compared to, and why?
Iโm not interested in being compared to anyone. Everyone makes their own art in their own way and itโs all beautiful in and of itself.
What is the hardest part of creating for you?
I keep an ideas folder and it currently has 128 ideas in it. It would take me a lifetime to get through all those and Iโm adding to it all the time. So deciding what to work on next is always quite traumatic. And funnily enough, when I do start a new drawing itโs usually something that isnโt even in that folder.
What is the role of an artist in society?
Art is a mirror for society. It reflects the best and the worst of us. The best artists show us what weโre capable of, whether thatโs incredible beauty or incredible ugliness, and through that get us to ask questions of ourselves.
Who are your biggest artistic influences?
I love David Hockneyโs drawings. He shows so much with just a few simple lines. Iโm always looking at his sketches trying to work out how he decided what to draw and what to leave out. I also love the work of Vija Celmins and Laurie Lipton for how they push the boundaries of what you can do with just pencil.
When is your favorite time of day to create?
Anytime time during the day is fine by me.
Describe how art is important to society.
Art can challenge us, ask questions of us, and itโs also important for reminding us that we are part of a much bigger world, an infinite universe. We often seem to be doing our best to wreck it, to fill it with ugliness, but art can remind us that human beings are capable of creative incredibly beautiful things and inspire us to do better.
What motivates you to create?
Itโs partly internal โ I canโt not draw. And itโs partly external โ I want to capture the beauty thatโs all around me โ my wife, the light, the sea, the countryside.
How do you define success as an artist?
If Iโve drawn something that moves someone then Iโve done okay.
Does art help you in other areas of your life?
It stops me going completely mad.
What are your long term goals?
I just want to get my work out in front of more and more people, online and in galleries, and I want to get better at drawing.