150. Wallscape
Acrylic on canvas
100cm x 100cm
SOLD
Exhibited at "Creative Moments - and elbow grease" 18th - 25th November 2023
Exhibited at "Members' Christmas Show", Eagle Gallery Bedford, 28th Nov - 24th Dec 2023 (sold 1st December)
So here is my third metre square painting. They tend to be time hungry and although I’d hoped I’d do a more expressive visit to the canvas; it merrily found its way to becoming a story of textures and meticulous detail… and so it went on and on. When deciding on what to paint on such a large canvas, I feel a certain pressure to find a stunning image. This both justifies the time spent and makes the long production the more satisfying. I mean I’m happy with the result but can’t quite remember why I chose this particular image. It was never going to be quick, and it’s hardly a classical landscape.
The location is Scotland, the Aisle of Arran to be precise. In fact, it is from a photo I took on the same day and very near to the standing stones depicted in painting 113 “The Stones”. It was a wall in a rundown disused farm building with no roof. I just adored the textures, inferred history and particularly the lines created with the various linking cracks. It shows both man’s creativity but also nature claiming it back. You can’t conceal nature; however hard you try.
100cm x 100cm
SOLD
Exhibited at "Creative Moments - and elbow grease" 18th - 25th November 2023
Exhibited at "Members' Christmas Show", Eagle Gallery Bedford, 28th Nov - 24th Dec 2023 (sold 1st December)
So here is my third metre square painting. They tend to be time hungry and although I’d hoped I’d do a more expressive visit to the canvas; it merrily found its way to becoming a story of textures and meticulous detail… and so it went on and on. When deciding on what to paint on such a large canvas, I feel a certain pressure to find a stunning image. This both justifies the time spent and makes the long production the more satisfying. I mean I’m happy with the result but can’t quite remember why I chose this particular image. It was never going to be quick, and it’s hardly a classical landscape.
The location is Scotland, the Aisle of Arran to be precise. In fact, it is from a photo I took on the same day and very near to the standing stones depicted in painting 113 “The Stones”. It was a wall in a rundown disused farm building with no roof. I just adored the textures, inferred history and particularly the lines created with the various linking cracks. It shows both man’s creativity but also nature claiming it back. You can’t conceal nature; however hard you try.
All Paintings are © Andrew J Naish
Naish Art website © 2025 |
Proudly powered by Weebly
|