Artist Statement
Artist Statement
Art forms like music and dance, drama and poetry are fundamentally about communicating feeling at different levels and I want my sculpture to do so as well.You don’t choose to be an artist, it chooses you and the obsession grows ever more complex and profound. It drives you to make works which you feel you have to make, even though they are not commercial or at all suitable for the current market. The Art period that was the most influential for me, was the early part of the twentieth century as I grew up surrounded by Picasso’s and Matisse’s. Gutfreunds and Brancusis stared at me over breakfast, as my stepfather had a large collection of modern art all over the house.
Stone is an extremely ancient material, which has taken millions of years to form and takes a long time to emerge from the sculptor’s hand. When I havecarved it, the work becomes timeless, it could be two thousand years old and yet it also looks like it was made yesterday. I sometimes have a feeling when I am working which I call as “Going into the silence” it is a form of deep contemplation, a place that sometimes takes days to find and is hard to come back from. This feeling of serenity is tangible in my work, which is predominantly about connection with others, present or past.
It is difficult to perceive my work without touching it,because the hands can interpret meaning, better than the eye. In soapstone and some African stones, I almost stroke it into shape and form and my sculpturesare understood better by the hands than just by looking at them.
“Carving is as old as mankind and just as relevant to life today as it ever was. The joy is that it is difficult, you can’t stick a piece back on and you are always constricted by the size of the block. This calls for ingenuity and a fluidity of expression that does not exist for me in other materials. I use predominantly lime stones like Bath stone from the West of England, because I like the warm colours and I can work it quickly and carve as the thoughts flow to me, so I don't lose the skein of an idea. I love the texture and the fossils and faults and bits of shell that make you have to constantly change the design, which stops me getting stale or bored. I occasionally carve harder stone, which is crisper and can hold harder edges and has a finer texture, but sometimes banging away at a piece for months on end does not interest me for the sake of it. I would rather use something softer and cast it.
Some of the pieces have been cast into traditional bronze in limited editions and some have been cast into cold cast bronze to make them more accessible. Thank you for reading this. If you have an opinion about my work I would love you to share it with me. I am on face book.