Showing posts with label bottles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bottles. Show all posts

Saturday, November 29, 2014

New Light Through Old Glass

New Light Through Old Glass
Oil on mounted cotton
 $POA

This will be the 1000th post here and this seems a good painting to celebrate that numerical milestone with.

This also happens to be  Black Friday, which in case you live under some kind of cyber rock, you will know is the day of mass sales after Thanks Giving in the US, and I thought to celebrate I would have a sale of my own!


I don't post to this blog very often, and regard this project on hiatus. I have been painting though and have begun work on a series of larger paintings that is all very cloak and dagger at the moment...

I would like to thank everyone for your support and interest over the last few years and wish you all a happy and healthy Christmas and New Year!

Tuesday, July 29, 2014

Still life With More Bottle


Still life With More Bottles
 Oil and pigment mixed to a coloured mud and applied to the surface of  thin cotton stuck onto some kind of  corrugated plastic stuff
Something by something similar in mm or inches
 $ several pieces of printed paper or circular metal tokens

Well, I wanted to call this one "More Bottle". It's always a challenge coming up with interesting and relevant titles for still lifes (lives?)  I was trying to paint this one with more gusto and vitality, and the saying "more bottle" popped into my head. It's funny how certain phrases resonate from our past and I'm sure I'm familiar with this as a saying, meaning to give something more life and vitality, or "more balls" - a turn of phrase that seems to be in more common usage in these parts.  Anyway, I ran it past "She Who Knows" or "My Better Half",  and she had never heard of it and suggested I "ask Uncle Google". Well, Uncle Google doesn't seem to have heard of the expression either, so I'm wondering if I just made it up myself. The closest I could get was "bottled out" or "not much bottle" from the Phrasefinder:

"...that is, 'useless; no good for anything'. This usage is recorded in a glossary of 19th century street English slang The Swell's Night Guide, 1846:
"She thought it would be no bottle, cos her rival could go in a buster." "

Well it may be archaic, but if you can have not much bottle surely you can have more bottle?

Anyhoo... It gives me something to write about and I have bottled out and called it prosaically "Still life With More Bottles".

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

Two Small Bottles in the Light



Two Small Bottles in the Light
 Oil on linen on MDF
93x152mm

I was trying to capture some of the iridescent quality that I observe in these clear glass bottles.

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Small Cluster of Bottles

Small Cluster of Bottles
Oil on linen on MDF
160x200mm

Tuesday, February 16, 2010