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Kate Birrell
  • About
  • Paintings
    • Street Scenes
    • Footy Paintings
    • Glen Huntly Station - Then and Now
    • Commissions and Other
    • Yamba
    • Exhibitions
  • Shop
    • Footy Art Works
    • Construction Prints
    • Paintings on paper
    • Oil Paintings
  • Archive
    • Home
    • Flats
    • People
    • Racecourse
    • KB TV - Footy Show
  • Contact

This Footy Life

Afternoon tea for the boys; with crows hovering aboutunique prints/10

Afternoon tea for the boys; with crows hovering about

unique prints/10

Sometimes life creeps up and before you know it weeks have gone by and you find you have been busy doing 'other things'. I haven't been able to paint for a number of weeks, a medical hiatus...apart from some smaller stuff on paper at the kitchen table. My second youngest is also doing V.C.E.....

....What's for dinner? the texts have been coming in thick and fast all year.

Anyway, that part is nearly over! four down, one to go, albeit in six years time.

And then there was the footy.....well, that has added to my painting hiatus too, and taken me to another place and consumed all manner of time and emotional energy. Eleven games was my tally this year, a record for me since having kids divests one of precious leisure time.

That which is hard to believe is the fact that every game I went to was a winning one.

Over the years I have often sketched at the footy. This year I just couldn't. So much momentum and pace that built as the season wore on.

It was such an incredible year of footy for the Tigers. After the end of last season, there was not an inkling of possibility that the Tigers would and or could get up and win the grandfinal.

And so a different series of work has been elicited this year. Instead of looking at the motion of the game, the crowd and all the visual facts before me, I decided to instead work from memory, feeling, imagination. I decided to take bits from my own domestic scenery and build into these spaces something from each round of the season.

I’ve been able to continue flattening my colours and bringing in a stronger design element at times. My penchant for black sits comfortably in this style of work. Black can so easily deaden colours surrounding it if you aren't careful. I have also been able to take many of the footy euphemisms too, and play with these words in a visual and personal manner.

These paintings are still evolving. Many have been done at home, not the studio, in between house work and cooking meals. Most are acrylic on paper A3 in size and I want to expand on a couple and develop a few more into works on canvas. Whilst the method is quite different to that of my larger Melbourne Paintings, it is one that I am really enjoying as I am constantly thinking as to how best resolve both pictorial and narrative dramas.

Anzacs

Anzacs

I am also wondering if the distortion of style is, perhaps, more than apt. Footy, the ever present distraction from the daily grind of everydayness and these twisted little pictorials, also become distractions from that which is usual for me. Footy, especially Aussie Rules, allows one to escape with raucous abandon and channel unused energies within.

Over the years I have loved many an artist from the pasts' work. But one constant would be the work of German painter, Max Beckmann. His use of vibrant colour and black are always enchanting and appeal to my mind. His paintings are just so expressive. I saw quite a few last year at the MET in New York.

And recently, I came across the work of Jacob Lawrence, an African-American painter. His scenes of daily life in the Harlem district of New York in the early 20th Century are intriguing too for the way he flattens perspective but maintains a vivd and colourful narrative. His pieces are smaller and quite domestic in size. He first came to be known for a series of paintings he did that focused on the mass migration of African Americans from the south to the urban areas of Northern USA.

In the meantime, I'll admire the works of these other artists, but try to bring together these various elements into a singular working style.

This series, that I have dubbed Afternoon Tea for the Boys, is partially up on Instagram at @thisfootylife....search it.

Right now, my own boys have arrived home and Nicola too, from her Vis Com exam, and I have just caught the Anzacs in the oven, before burning them, yet again.

If you visit my shop katebirrelshop.bigcartel.com you will also find some prints recently added along with some greeting cards. These smaller items help to achieve some income to cover my painting costs. I am still building it up.

Recipe for My Anzacs Today

125g Butter

2 tablespoons of honey

1 cup of Rolled Oats (traditional, not the fast cook porridge ones)

1 cup of plain flour

1 cup of white sugar

3/4 cup of coconut

2 tablespoons of boiling water

1 teaspoon of Bicarb

Melt butter and honey together over the saucepan. Mix all dry ingredients in a bowl except the bicarb. 

Add bicarb to the 2 tablespoons of boiling water and stir. Then stir into the melted honey/butter mix...it should bubble and fizz a bit.

Then mix this butter mixture into the dry ingredients and stir until well combined.

Then take out approximately 1 dessertspoonful each and plonk onto a biscuit tray that is covered with baking paper.

Pop the tray into the oven at approximately 150 degrees for about 10 minutes or until just lightly browned.

Warning....they cook very quickly and burn if you are distracted by your phone, iPad, desktop or other things.

tags: Footy, Recipes, Afternoon Tea, Acrylic Painting
categories: Newsletter
Tuesday 11.14.17
Posted by Kate
 

Ok, Where am I?

Kitchen Scene with new Mixmasteroil on canvas50cm x 40cm

Kitchen Scene with new Mixmaster

oil on canvas

50cm x 40cm

It is Monday the 6th of March. I'm at home.

I have had a good break from the desktop over the holidays. So here I am cleaning up 99 unread emails, paying bills and booking seats to the Richmond v Carlton game on the 23rd March.

And baking... The never fail Custard Powder Sponge Cake for afternoon Tea...here it is...

And back to painting... I am finally coming to the end of the Doggies  work. Most of it has been A4 acrylic on canvas paper. Over the last month I have added to the collection with, at this stage about five paintings; oil on canvas. (I will put them up shortly, either here, on my shop or on Instagram. Instagram is much easier to load images than it is here. It is a lot quicker as it can all be done easily from the phone. Details will follow when they are up.)

After having worked on the smaller A4 acrylic pieces it has been good to go back to using oil on canvas. The acrylics are great for speed and quick drying time. They are a great back up if I am stuck at home due to school holidays or sickness. The acrylics are bright and vibrant and work really well when diluted with a medium. Given they are on paper they frame up well in either a simple black or white frame.

The oils on the other hand are much slower to work with in terms of drying time but this can be beneficial in that compositions can be changed and altered and scraped back as required.

The oils also have a capacity that enables you to work into them and build upon layers that can become quite sculptural, and almost velvet like in texture and lustre.

For a while now I have been wanting to paint in a way that is less dependant on either what I see directly in front of me, or on a reference photograph. So, I began by going back to my domestic scenes that I began with years ago and have worked at bringing in a newer approach that incorporates memory and imagination too, and a method that is hopefully freer and less academic in style.

Domestic Scene with the new Kitchen Aid above is the very first one I did. I have taken a similar approach with my bulldog footy images too, where the reality is diminished, the colours have been heightened and flattened; and the emphasis is on both narrative and expression.

We shall see how this progresses throughout the year. It is a process, undoubtedly.

Back soon, it's time for cake.

a similar composition to the one aboveacrylic on canvas paper

a similar composition to the one above

acrylic on canvas paper

 

 

tags: Domestic, Afternoon Tea, Oils, Acrylic Painting
categories: Painting
Monday 03.06.17
Posted by Kate
 

Yamba Works; Seaside Frolic

Seaside Frolic 2016/17Acrylic paintings on A4 Canvas paper 

Seaside Frolic 2016/17

Acrylic paintings on A4 Canvas paper 

After a series of pen and ink and watercolour works that I did earlier in 2016, I have explored the seaside theme further by using the sketches (image below) to form the basis of a collection of small paintings. Visit the Yamba 2016/17 Gallery to view the images.

All works are available through Belinda's Store, High Street Yamba

Framed ink and watercolour sketches 2016300gsm watercolour paper; A5Sold Out

Framed ink and watercolour sketches 2016

300gsm watercolour paper; A5

Sold Out

tags: Yamba, Acrylic Painting
categories: Painting
Monday 02.20.17
Posted by Kate
 

Lots Happening...

Tiger Fans; After the Game 2015 sold

Tiger Fans; After the Game 2015 sold

Busyiness all round!@ 

Fortunately the cold winter air has taken off, for now, and has finally been replaced with something that resembles spring, and even summer.

Painting continues to slot itself in between the odd gaps between the various school runs, sporting commitments, doctors visits, VCE stuff, meals, meetings, dealing with teenager stuff and dealing with overcrowded inboxes....and sleep.

Fortunately, I have found other ways to create when it gets this busy.

I wanted to paint something on Richmonds loss in the first final. I will do something bigger, but in the meantime, I did a small reflective piece, a week or two after the event. The ideas cured for a little bit until I finally decided upon the best view of that day. I ended up doing a small acrylic piece on canvas paper titled Richmond Fans; After the Game.

I also put some words with it and contributed it to the Footy Almanac.

The piece is titled That Day and you can find it

And recently.... here is a link to an interview I did with Andy Fuller on his Sports and Culture website Reading Sideways

tags: Footy, Acrylic Painting
categories: Lately Painting
Monday 10.19.15
Posted by Kate