Monday, June 27, 2011

A Fine Artist

I was away on holidays in the Canary Islands last week. Being Irish, my friends and I decided to drop in to the local Irish bar called The Claddagh and outstay out welcome. We met a musician called Simon who asked us what we did. Instead listing out our current crappy jobs we told him we were artists. No, Fine Artists more specifically.

My class and I graduated in 2006 with a BA in Fine Art Painting and since then, very few of us have gone down the route of establishing ourselves as practicing artist. Most of us started off in entry level jobs in the service industry or admin and can't seem to find a way out.

How long can you call yourself an artist for when you haven’t really produced work of any significance since graduation? What's the minimum quota? Do you have to sell the work too? Surely a person practicing art who doesn't sell a thing has an expensive hobby rather than a vocation in art. I have sold one piece of work in my entire 'career' as an artist, but produced a number of pieces as gifts for my family and friends. The only time I paint is when someone asks me to.

My sister requested that I paint her a landscape as a gift for her 40th birthday (in January). I drew the outline in February and the painting sits, half finished, in my mother's utility room in my family home. I don't like painting landscapes - my ideal style of painting is expressive and colourful works based on thumbnails of a still life or photograph. I have avoided completing this painting like the plague. Every time I go downstairs, this half finished painting taunts me. An array of excuses line up to be validated:

The dried out palette will take ages to clean. I need new paint brushes. There is a collection of dirty laundry in the way. The light is crap. I can sing along with my music because I’ll be heard by the tenants in the basement flat. There are too many spiders down there. The washing machine disrupts the creative process.. I’m too tired to walk down the steps to the garden. The cat’s in there (my studio is also the cat’s bedroom) and he’s going to expect me to feed him. That really funny episode of Friends is on E4 again.




Simon, the musician sings at the Irish bar every night. Whenever he saw us he would call out, 'oh look, here come the fine artists again. Ba ha ha ha ha.'

Simon, you mock my pain.

Sunday, June 5, 2011

Ladies who lunch, dinner and dessert


Had a lovely day out with the sisters and a friend doing a tour of Wicklow and Wexford. Despite the crappy weather and cranky beginnings. Here are some photos of the ladies in a few different locations in the last week.




 A nice wander around the Avoca shop and cafe in Wickow, all wishing we we rich enough to buy things in the shop... A cup of coffee was the only affordable item. So we poshed it up as best we could...








At the Avoca Shop & Café









 


Nom Nom Nom Birthday Dinner followed by...


Not best pleased with this dessert as you can tell from the expression on her face.





Ladies who lunch...in Gorey

Jesus could have fed a few hungry folks with these pastries...


Musings from my armchair

It's all good and well to make the great debate while sitting comfortably amongst your friends in a house, pub or café but on closer examination, how pro active are you really?

I remember recently the Irish Government launched an initiative campaign on how to make Ireland a better place. The idea was that you put forward an idea of improving anything in terms of public operations within the country and there was a serious cash prize for the best one etc.

A few friends and I ended up in a local pub and I asked if anyone had heard of the campaign. We then proceeded to come up with the 'solution' to long term unemployment in Ireland. The idea was that a number of organisations in the public sector could offer a set of 'vacacies' to persons who were on a job seekers allowance to come and earn their money in specialised roles within their organisations. The roles would be voluntary but would allow the person who was unemployed practical experience and better their chances of becoming employed again (in theory). This is a short summary of the plan which I still believe is a very valid idea and as long as it was supported by the government, it would be quite easy to roll out. There might even be extra income for the person who worked voluntarily to 'earn' their allowance from the organisation they work in who (with permission from the Dept of Finance) could subsidise part of their earnings.


Sitting back after this very enthusiastic discussion, we all felt very positive about our idea and had full intention of submitting it to the competition mentioned above. Unfortunately, like many great ideas I've had in the past, this one never received an airing. Perhaps those blessed with the ability to come up with the good ideas need to find themselves a less like-minded person to actually get the ball rolling for turning an idea in to an action.


You can put the lack of motivation down to one of two things - pure laziness or scatty genius. Let's lean favourably towards the latter...