Monday, December 28, 2020

Happy Beginnings

I've been doing copies of famous (and sort of famous) paintings I like, just to warm myself back up after a long time away. It seems to be working. I'm already getting restless and want to strike out more in my own way.

The warmup after time away has been useful. Good for noticing such things as;

-attention span
-areas of interest or boredom in setting up a piece
-the feeling in the body: arm/hand to eye/thought and their relation to the emotive/inner visual
-motor skills and duration, and the nature of them
-one's internal image and reference bank. Has it changed? What might it be now? What is one's relation to it?
-ability to translate emotive/visual and logic/visual into workable visual tropes on a canvas or piece of paper
-what's interesting to oneself now?

So, with all that going on (as usual), I set out to do a small copy of a Corot from reproduction.

I'm entranced by the original, but right away, I was ferociously bored by the thought of pecking and flitting away at all these minute details - details that were so integrally gestural in the original, it would be an idiotic errand to try and match them. so, i found myself brushing away with washes rather wildly, letting things drip and run  - and enjoying myself!

I think that's a good sign. A Happy Beginning - to setting out, originally, again.





Monday, December 21, 2020

For Sale: a Georges Braque handpainted repro.

For Sale:
A lot of people think that Picasso invented that crazy modern way of painting called Cubism more or less by himself. That couldn't be further from the truth. A lot of people helped (especially the anonymous creators behind they African sculptures he found so inspiring) - but in Paris, his main help was his partner in revolutionizing the way things in painting could be seen: Mr. Georges Braque.
Picasso was violent in his work. Visceral. Rip, tear, rend, etc.
Braque, by contrast was civilized, urbane, more polished.
Still it took the two of them, practically roped together like mountaineers, to crack the accumulated weights and codes of hundreds of years of basic realism. Picasso, after this feat was accomplished, took off to become artist of the century, whereas poor Braque's reputation became a footnote.
Happily, his reputation has been restored.
Here we see a cafe table, where there's a basic sort of arrangement of cafe objects - with hints of newspaper and book headlines showing here and there. It's a refined depiction of a place where a few hours were spent in leisure, near a window, with some engaging things to read.
This is a hand painted reproduction by myself of the original, done to get myself back into painting after a long hiatus.
It measures about 24 x 30" , oil on canvas on a wooden frame.






It's currently in the O'Connor Gallery in Gananoque, Ontario. Take a peek!




For Sale: 'Early Summer'

 For Sale:

Early Summer
2002
Oil On Canvas
36 x 48"
This is a painting I did for my 2002 show at O'Connor Gallery in Toronto. With the exception of the final 'wash' coat, it was actually all painted using palette knives, which was tricky for me, at the time.
It was being sold for $2800 by Dennis O'Connor in 2002.



Wednesday, June 24, 2020

"Po-Tee-Weet?"

In addition to Facebook, I have taken up Instagram and Twitter.
My twitter profile is quite blank, but the other two are full of stuff.

I'm also setting up my very own website again, at: www.jameshuctwith.com

I am now social media'ing myself into a vaporous stupor.

Links on the right.


Wednesday, June 3, 2020

Knock, Knock, Braque.


This is a Braque knockoff I'm doing for fun. A lot of my expected ways of working seem to be intact - that's good. My insecurites are too, but, what of that!

Sunday, May 31, 2020

Knock it off!

Still working on that new website. Or, more exactly, haven't been lately due to lots of this-and-that going on. Plus no new truly original paintings.

However, I have been painting.

After nearly ten years away, I've picked up the brushes and started working again.

Right now, just to warm up, I'm doing some good-natured knockoffs of early modernist paintings I like.

Robert Delauney's Red Eiffel Tower, a Braque still life, and more on the way...

Here are some pics.





The original repro (bottom) and some pics above it of the 'copy' on the way. More or less life size!