Conservation work for Gallery Tresco and Tresco Estate Feb. – March 2023

From time to time Gallery Tresco asks me to have a look at various peices in their collection of artworks that are in need of some attention, sometimes just a thorough clean and sometimes just a loose canvas, and sometimes much more serious damage. I never say no, work is work and I love my work as an artist, but also working with artworks by other artists is fascinating in that it gives me an insight into how other artists work with paint. Over the years, and I have been an artist all my life I have picked up a few methods for renovating and repairing artworks. It helps that on ocassion I have had to repair my own paintings simply because of the way I work. Often painting outside in stormy weather can be problematic especially if the wind is fierce enough and blows the canvas of the easle. Fun Fun Fun

So anyway this year Tresco Estate was having a lot of work done in preparation for a photo shoot and so it was a good oportunity for the gallery to check on their collection, in the end and over a period of about 2 months I repaired 22 paintings. I am not going to go into huge details, instead here are some photo’s with the odd comment here or there …..

 

Also I am not going through all 22 paintings, the following examples are the most notable for various reasons but mainly to show the extremes of what I sometimes am asked to work on

 

First one to repair was one of mine painted back in 2007

This painting had one noticable dent towards the bottom and right of center, also there were several dents and scuffs across the whole area of the sky. I long ago stopped trying to speculate on how such damage occurs. All the paintings I work on are placed in time share accommodations on Tresco, Isles of Scilly and they are very very expensive places to stay and are very very top of the line as far as luxuary holiday accommodation goes all of them are homes from homes with multiple bathrooms, bedrooms, living rooms, underfloor heating, multiple tv’s all top of the line so with this in mind you have to be very well off financially to stay here, which is interesting for me especially seeing the kind of damage I have had to repair over the years. I mean who are these people and how do you damage artwork to the following extent. It is baffling ……

 

Setting up a studio work space, assessing damage, and details of damage, and working out a method of repair

                   

                          

There is only one close up image of the sky as an example and dents like this were radomly skattered across the sky each had to be individually treated by repeated careful sanding, cleaning and building back up the layers. With my own work it is a much easier process not least because I know how I paint, and I have a fab arrangement with Tresco Estate to rework my paintings as I see fit.

The title of this painting is ‘Venus, Crescent Moon, Earth Shine and Noctilucent Clouds’. 96×195 cm Oil on canvas 2007

and on the back of the painting are details of the positions, time, distance and brightness of Venus and The Moon

…. And this is how it turned out ….

 

 

 

Next is another one of mine with substantially more damage

 

This painting had what seemed to be huge areas where the painting had been impacted by something, and I have to say it was in a dreadful state, it needed complete reworking and the affected areas which totalled approx. 30% of the surface area of the painting carefull sanding back and re painting the impacts had created multiple overlapping concentric ring cracks and the cracks had penetrated through the primer layers and had created seems/creases on the back of the canvas that traced out the surface cracks.

 

assessing damage, and details of damage, and working out a method of repair, again a few examples out of many

 

                 

Repairs in progress at this stage all the problem area’s have been identified and carefull sanding back is in progress ….. it requires several days work

 

finished and drying along side another with similar problems

 

and finally restored

Storm oil on canvas 96x 243 cm

 

Not all are as bad as that last one was, some only need a minimal amount of work the next two are also my paintings and required a good clean, the first one had a small chip of paint that had been knocked away where the canvas wraps around the stretcher bar and that was all, a very easy repair that theretheless requires care and still took a few days to complete

 

   

 

 

 

Next – this small painting was by far the worst damaged painting. Despite it’s small size the damage was horendous, it looked like it had fallen with some force on a sharp edge. The problem was that there were two rips in the canvas with cracked and fragmented paint radiating outwards with overlapping cracks again through to the primer layers and close to each other. I have no idea how such damage occured that there were two rips rather than one long one is a puzzle. The damage was also complicated by the sensitive and very delicate nature of the painting. For me this is worst case scenario. It is a completely different way of working paint to my own technique. The problem is also excacerbated by the force with which the damage occured which stretched and distorted the fabric of the canvas around both rips. It is puzzling because the painting even with it’s frame is really quite light …..

 

It took almost 2 months working every day to fix this …. as much as all the other 21 paintings combined and yes it was not fun …. it was an utter nightmare

 

Also none of this damage is ever reported either to the gallery or the estate ….. let that sink in. This painting was found in one of the timeshare properties …. absolutely unbelievable

 

 

Details of the damage

 

              

 

         

 

Another one of mine this time that needed a clean and then placing in it’s new home and was a new acquisition by Tresco Estate

Title ‘Helios’ Oil on canvas Sold through Gallery Tresco to Tresco Estate

 

 

The damage on this next small painting was so very subtle that it is difficult to show, also the frame needed re painting. Again it needed a delicate touch to sort out which entailed removing from the frame so that the painting and frame coud be dealt with independently. The frame was simple mix and match the colour and then a couple of layers of a wax based double rectified turpentine varnish and that was that for the frame. The painting was fairly straight forward – tightening the canvas using the corner wedges and smoothing out the dent by repeated heat treating the back of the canvas

 

           

 

 

Another painting – another tear, though not so bad and the canvas fabric had not been stretched so much, still the same care needed to be taken, careful sanding and rebuilding of the layers and matching the original palette

 

       

 

 

This next painting was a fun repair ….. The painting is quite small and I was informed it had a small thickly painted area that was about to flake off. on close inspection there were many more areas that needed sorting of the same problem. However it was fun to work with because painting in an impasto technique is something I fullly understand and so the conservation work went without any surprises or set backs.

 

Just a few of the problem area’s that needed attention there were 17 in total like this that had to be sorted

            

 

Without going into details as all the next artworks had similar issues and all are now restored re varnished and back in the time share properties

conservation in progress

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

…. I saved the best until last, around 70% of this painting was damaged with overlapping concentric ring cracks. My first reaction was utter disbeif and horror at what I was looking at, then the panic set in, I literally had to go and have a coffee ….. a very strong coffee just to calm down. Then I had a chat with the gallery I basically had no idea if I could sort this painting out, so initially and in some panic I said I could not repair this. But a couple of hours pass, calmness returns, and well I love a challenge I really really love a challenge and I love the work I do. So I had a think, considered my techniques, made a working plan and told the gallery I will give it a go and just got on with it.

Nothing quite like a surprise, just when we all thought that was it ….. another horribly damaged artwork needed attention. The following image is after all the conservation work was done.

 

 

You will hopefully understand my initial reaction when you see the following images of the damage …. I have included large images …. for maximum horror effect

 

 

 

 

 

Oh and the next images are the back of the canvas to show the creases that form with such damage

 

 

 

 

New painting

Portheras Storm oil on canvas 77×153 cm 2022 £2500

 

New painting

Sol – The Sun Converts 600 million tons of hydrogen into 596 million tons of helium every second releasing energy at the mass energy conversion rate of 4,26 million metric tons every second

The Sun has been doing this for around 4.6 billion years

 

A Storm is Coming

 

New painting

New Moon Comet Neowise and cirrus clouds after suset. Oil on canvas 80×90 cm 2022. £1800

 

New painting

Daughter of Theia Waxing Gibbous Moon, Cirrus Clouds After Sunset. Oil on canvas 80 x90 cm 2022 £1800

 

New painting finished

…. New painting finished a part of my artist in residence on Tresco Isles of Scilly November 2022 ….

 

 

Crescent Moon and Earth Shine. (Daughter of Theia) statue Menhir and Cirrus Clouds at Sunset looking South towards the Eastern Isles from Breckiek. Ynysek Syllan.

oil on canvas 80×90 cm 2022b £1800

An Impromtu self organised artist in residence…..exciting stuff….. February 3rd – February 11th 2022

It is absolutely fab when you can work off the cuff like this with no preparation and everyone is on board with the idea. So as we were about to start the cycle tour North I sold a large painting but it needed to be brought over from the Isles of Scilly and an individual crate needed to be made by me, in order to ship it to the clients.

This is the painting that sold, and is from my artist in residence at Gallery Tresco Isles of Scilly January 2022

Noctilucent Clouds withThe New Moon, Earth shine, Mercury Jupiter and Saturn. Oil on canvas 90×180 cm 2022 £3400

 

So a delay but a worth while one which led us on to staying somewhat longer at Castle Horneck Lodge YHA. No problem with that it is a fab place.  Set on the outskirts of Penzance and in a small woodland we were woken each morning  and serenaded into relaxation  each evening by bird song. It is huge Georgian building, and the staff are wonderful. Many years ago as a teenager I began cycle touring becoming a member and staying at many YHA hostels.

I have to say that nothing has changed for the worse, somethings are done differently concurent with the changing of the times, staying at Castle Horneck brought back such wonderful memories…..it is a fab place…. It was useful as well to have a base for a few days before heading North to make some final changes to what we were going to take with us. We were trying to reduce to a minimum what we packed into our panniers  and this needed a fair amount of thought.

Just before coming here and while still on Tresco we had been in touch with my close friends Jan and Ewa and it is they that organised our stay at Castle Horneck Lodge YHA they wanted to come down from Manchester to see us before we left on our cycle tour to multiple artist in residencies over the next year. Our friendship is a long one and dates back to 1991 when we met in Krakow Poland. Jan and I were doing our ten month postgraduate sholarship in Fine Art at the University of Fine Arts in Krakow. That year was one of the defining times of my life and I carry those experiences with me every day. Jan and Ewa were married in Krakow, and I was of course present. This visit of their’s to Penzance was also an off the cuff last minute decision to meet up to celebrate their 30th Wdding aniversary and we had a fab time, though they were only down for 2 nights due to work we made the most of them. Good food, great conversation, making plans to meet up later on and generally enjoying each others company…..

Jan and Ewa……

 

Me,my son Aaron and Ewa

 

My son Aaron Jan and me

 

…A walk to Mousehole… Me and Ewa

 

Our room, which turned into a drawing studio for just a few days…

 

The YHA lounge which became a place to write my website blog….

 

We also took the opportunty to collect our bikes from the storage container over at kelynak and to begin final preparations for the cycle tour checking over the bike and going through all our equipment to see what we could leave behind to make the bikes as light as possible……

 

 

I had noticed immeadiately that the YHA has a collection of original artworks and after Jan and Ewa headed back home I got chatting with the receptionists about this…..that groups and individual artists had donated artworks to this YHA, and so I explained what my son and I were doing with our long term cycle tour round the world and how I organise artist in residence opportunities as I go some like this voluntrary and impromptu and others planned long in advance and I wonder if theyt would be interested in having some some drawings, it would have to be drawings due to time limitations and access to art materials – to add to there collection and they were very happy for this.

Following three images are of the artworks now part of the YHA Castle Hornek collection.

 

 

 

We had also planned to visit friends in Bristol before heading into Wales, but the delay with shipping paintings due to storms had complicated things in the end we decided to go and see our friends anyway and just accept that we had to come back to Penzance for me to finalise sending the painting to the client. Being in Bristol is also a mixed bag of stuff for me. I love the city and have a lot of memories here. My partner Julia came from Bristol, but it is always great to see firnds especially after the pandemic….

Carole and Steve are musicians who specialise in medieval renaiscience music and they are superb. I do not have many photo’s as I am too involved in their company but here is a small sample of their musical instrument collection. These are some Carol’s Crumhornes… the smaller ones that is. They are the ones with the bend…..

And I had to visit the house my partner Julia grew up in, in Cotham

 

…..In between all of this we were cycling about too, making sure the bikes were okay and all the components were fine…..

…A typical ride…

 

 

 

 

Artist in Residence January 13th – 3rd February 2022 Gallery Tresco Tresco Isles of Scilly

Theia oil on canvas 90×180 cm 2022

 

Theia oil on canvas 90×180 cm 2022. £3400. Started summer 2021 and finished January 2022 as part of my artist in residence at Gallery Tresco Tresco Isles of Scilly Cornwall 2022

  This painting grew in the making, and became more than just a single work of art. My interest in astronomy and mythology continues to inform the work I do to an ever increasing level, and mid summer 2021, after several long and difficult weeks working on the Garrison campsite, Aaron and I had the chance to visit Samson, one of the uninhabited Islands which we had been waiting to visit for quite some time, I was intrigued as the Island has ruins that date back around 4000 years and I wanted to visit the buriel chambers. One of the the members of staff here has ancestors that were inhabitents of Samson many years ago. To have that connection is fascinating and I was looking foward to this visit with anticipation. As it happens we had good weather and again the Moon was in the sky, and the ideas for paintings as always where instantly filling my thoughts. That evening we  were relaxing over a few beers and some food. It was a glorious summer evening. That lovely king’s Blue of the sky, long wispy sirus clouds streaking across the sky and their framed in the sky by these clouds – the waxing gibous Moon. The atmosphere was clear and it was easy to pick out several large features on the surface of the Moon including mare serenitatis, mare tranquillitatis, Mare Crisum, mare fecuditatis, Plato crator was just about discernable as was Tycho crater, Mare Firgoris, mare imbrium, and mare nubium. The Moon as always is captivating and the conversation faded for me at this point as I just stared at the Moon. It always fascinates me as it seems to be there in complete calm and absolutely beautiful. It reminds me of The Hitch Hikers Guide To The Galaxy in which Arthur Dent asks the wise old bird in exaspiration what is keeping the cup in the sky from falling, and the wise old bird replies ‘art’ that it is artistically correct. The Moon always seems to have in a far more serious way that feeling of being in absolute harmony, perfectly placed, artistically correct. Call it a feeling of awe and beauty and connection with nature. As always when I observe I draw upon a wealth of knowledge gained over many years and I start to rumage through what I can remeber of the names of the surface features, the history of the Apollo missions, humans landing on the Moon, and the theories of how the Moon formed, that as moons of the solar system go, in comparison to other moons and there parent bodies the Moon is exceptional in it’s size compared to the Earth…… During my contemplation of the Moon, visiting Samson and in the  evening I considered once again the origin of the Moon, oddly I had been reading a new article on this subject involving a collision between the proto Earth and a Mars sized proto plant named Theia billions of years ago. Hence the Title ‘Daughter of Theia’ and that evidence for Theia or whats left of Theia are buried deep inside our planet. So there I was sitting contemplating that deep beneath me were the remnants of Theia and above was the Moon both consequences of that immense collision, and that those remnants deep in the Earth also cause the Atlantic magnetic anomaly…….. And at the same time the reasons for the title of this painting are also intimately linked to the naming of ‘Theia’ and the mythological stories behind Theia, which are fascinating. In greek mythology Theia was the Titan goddess of sight, (thea) and the shining aithre (ether) of the bright blue sky and right there we have the first visual connections as Selene one of the three children of Theia is the orginal name for the Moon, hence the title Daughter of Theia and the observers gaze is directed towards the Moon in this painting. The bright blue of the sky is representative of Theia – goddess of the deep blue of the sky. Theia also in mythology endowed silver and gold with their brilliance and lustre and so the bright silver luster of the Moon is also a direct reference to the goddess Theia. It is the focal point as it was mine on that evening – Theia bore the titan Hyperion three children Helios – the Sun, Eos – the dawn, and of course Selene the Moon.

The three children of Theia are also implicitly though indirectly in this painting. The painting has no particular refernce to being a dawn or a sunset there are no references to any particular time of day except for that time of day when I once again was caught up in contemplating our understanding of nature, but only for the purpose of the beginings of this description and so Helios the sun is part of this painting for without the sun how is one to see anything, also the painting could be after dawn and so Eos is implied and of course Selene – the Moon is the focal point.

The painting then conspires to present to the viewer all these aspects in one view. The mythology, my fascination, and our contemporary understanding for the origin of the Moon……and contiguously even through the four orientations of the painting, this remains the same.

 

Noctilucent Clouds withThe New Moon, Earth shine, Mercury Jupiter and Saturn. Oil on canvas 90×180 cm 2022 £3400

Noctilucent Clouds withThe New Moon, Earth shine, Mercury Jupiter and Saturn. Oil on canvas 90×180 cm 2022 £3400. Started summer 2021 finished January 2022 as part of my artist in residence at Gallery Tresco.

The artist in residence lasted for three weeks this year and my duties included checking on artworks in the time share properties and some public areas. The main one which is something I do every year is to remover and clean my 5 paintings commissioned in 2010 that are in the indoor swimming pool in the seagarden complex. The paintings have been protected from the humidity of the swimming pool using a double rectified genuine turpentine and wax based varnish and I have had no problems with the varnish since the paintings were installed, but they do need to be removed and carefully cleaned as salts in the atmosphere of the pool due to high humidity tend over time to condence onto the surface of the painting and if left will build up and form a distinct opaque crust. So this took two weeks.

4 of the 5 indoor swimming pool paintings

 

Sea Garden complex – building to the far left is the swimming pool

 

Indoor swimming pool which just about skows all 5 paintings

 

One of the things I really like to do is check on my late partners paintings. Julia was a Tresco Gallery artist and also took part in Gallery Tresco’s artist in residence program. For those who visiting my blog for the first time Julia died August 2010, but I love to see her paintings just to check on them and make sure there has been no damage so here are a few of Julia’s paintings. Some of which are held in trust by Tresco Estate until our children have places of their own. And occassionally our paintings hang together……

 

 

 

 

 

My other duties are really just based upon my own work. Usually I will carry sketchbooks, observing and drawing and making temporary stone sculptures on the shore. I also use a camera and inbetween all of this we have some fun. The drawings, the temporary sculptures, the fun we have, from observing the night sky, kayaking, simply walking sitting, contemplating all feed into the next series of artworks I will create.

View from our accommodation

Aaron setting off for the day to explore

 

Aaron setting off again for another days exploration…..and yes this will definately feature in the next series of paintings

 

 

 

Exploring…..

 

 

 

Aaron setting of again to circumnavigate Tresco and Bryher, landing at Samson on the way back

 

 

 

At the North end of Tresco on the moor

 

 

 

Looking into the West towards Bryher

 

 

 

Exploring….

 

 

 

Cromwell’s Castle

 

 

 

Exploring, scrambling, contemplating…..

 

So next is the sketchbooks…..

Moon rise

Dawn

 

Dawn Eastern Isles

Dark Sea

Crescent Moon rise

Stormy day

Stormy day

Venus

Mars

 

 

Temporary stone balance sculptures

 

Sentinel of sorts – Prometheus extruded

In conversation with the anomaly…… watched

 

pause for effect

Sulis No.1

 

Paintings finished during my artist in residence…..

 

heuldro’r gaeaf. ( Which translates to Winter Solstice) Alternative title is Winter Storm, oil on canvas 90×180 cm 2021 £3400

 

storm. Oil on canvas 90×180 cm 2021 £3400

 

Sol – Teg Hager Awel 2. Oil on canvas 90×170 cm. £3200

 

Sol – Teg Hager Awel 3. Oil on canvas 90x180cm. £3200

 

….And that concludes my first artist in residence for 2020 on Tresco for Gallery Tresco. I have enough sketchbook ideas for numerous paintings and every year I discover new ways to explore this place. I progress are several paintings about my son Aaron kayaking , some more astronomical and mythological inspired artworks and of course we had storms and those experiences will also lead to new artworks….. Next I have a short artist in residence at Castle Horneck Lodge in Penzance and that will be the next blog…..