Ever since I can remember I have always
wanted to paint. At school I spent much of my spare time
in the art room. Once in the sixth form I was advised to
do a Foundation Course at Newcastle-Under-Lyme where I was
awarded a distinction along with the Fine Art Prize. I was
very lucky and had a fantastic tutor who encouraged and
gave me the confidence to pursue life as a Fine Artist.
I was taught to experiment freely with an unrestrained approach.
I continued my education at Loughborough University where
I became interested in studying landscape and developed
a taste for travel when I spent six months of my degree
studying at Granada University in Spain. When I graduated
I sold my degree show to ‘Welcome Break Hotels’
which gave me the boost I needed to pursue painting as a
career. Since 1998 I have been based in Bristol in my city
centre studio where I have experimented considerably from
abstraction through to figuration and collage which included
sticking computer circuits onto my paintings. All of this
contributed to the understanding which I feel I have now
reached within my work today. My paintings are primarily
abstract, although my new work contains references towards
landscape. My partner is also an artist and we both spend
time researching our subject matter through travel and by
both being self employed we find that we can be more flexible
with our time. I get a lot of my inspiration during these
periods and spend much of my time sketching, although I
rarely use this information to literally translate into
a painting. My work doesn’t draw reference to any
particular place. Colour, alongside texture, is the main
ingredient to my work. I am particularly interested in the
contrast between heavily textured areas and the very flat,
serene and blended areas of paint. Many ideas for my palette
stem from colours experienced in different places, such
as those from the Mediterranean, Africa or the South of
England. My friend has a cottage in Cornwall and I spend
as much spare time as I can in the summer sketching, occasionally
dolphin spotting and speeding on my little dingy over to
Padstow. I get ideas for my work from everything and anything.
Building structures in the city or random objects, in contrast,
to more natural subject matter give me constantly varied
compositional ideas for my paintings. When painting a picture
I rarely have the end product in my mind, my work develops
spontaneously and the painting is finished for me when it
works. My paintings are made up of layers and as I paint
in oils I tend to work on more than one at once; this helps
me to be less precious and less likely to overwork them.