Upcoming Exhibitions: Canada & Thailand

October 26, 2011

Boonkasem Sae-Kwoa at Jamjuree Art Gallery, Bangkok

Bangkok, Thailand hosts an upcoming watercolour exhibition soon and it’s always refreshing to experience what we think of as European traditional styles in non-European countries.  The focus of this exhibition is Boonkasem Sae-Kwoa, a resident of Krabi in south west Thailand who will be displaying a collection of some 50 or so watercolour paintings.

Boonkasem Sae-Kwoa watercolour

Boonkasem Sae-Kwoa watercolour

Boonkasem’s work is largely inspired by the Andaman Sea, the body of water which stretches west from the coast of Thailand and is home to some of Asia’s best beaches.  The exhibition is entitled “Home Is Where The Heart Is” and Boonkasem says that:

Home is where we feel comfortable and safe.  There were times I forgot my Andaman home which has been part of my life.  And “Home Is Where The Heart Is” is the meaning of this exhibition.  It portrays my big world – the Andaman world in which I live with freedom in my mind.”

The exhibition will be held at Jamjuree Art Gallery, owned and run by Chulalongkorn University and situated in the commercial area of Bangkok, just one block down from the MBK shopping centre for those who know Bangkok.  Jamjuree Art Gallery is more accustomed to displaying Thai historical works related to the University’s history departments but occasionally dips it’s toe into other mediums.

Boonkasem Sae-Kwoa watercolour

Boonkasem Sae-Kwoa watercolour

Money raised from this event will go towards humanitarian activities  at a charity called the Nat Association in Krabi and the exhibition itself will also be displayed there after passing through Phuket also.

 

Viktor Mitic at Gallery Moos, Toronto

Viktor Mitic is an interesting character;  regarded as taking much of his influence from gestural art.  The 1950s played host to a

Viktor Mitic

Viktor Mitic

whole host of experimental abstract expressionists, some of course better than others and in the 1960s artists such as Yves Klein worked with innovative styles which almost certainly influenced Viktor Mitic’s most famous works – his ‘bullet paintings’ – which are made by shooting a revolver through the canvas.

This exhibition is something a little different and perhaps a little more accessible for fans of traditional watercolour.  Described as ‘rain paintings’, Mitic combines watercolour styles with the haphazard nature of rainfall.  The origin of Mitic’s ‘rain paintings’ is one of chance.  He prefers to paint outside and on one occasion left the canvas for a break, returning to find it had begun to rain and that “the rain had produced some interesting effects on the canvas.”

This discovery led to Viktor Mitic actually painting in the rain, mixing the minute planning of a watercolour with the random splashes of a rain shower.  Mitic also stresses that the liquid must be rain; other water does not have the correct mixture of minerals and chemicals as the artist has discovered through trail and error.

The Serbian born Mitic has a history of simultaneously releasing films and books alongside his exhibitions and this is no exception.  A book and a short film will accompany the Gallery Moos show.

Viktor Mitic - Galaxy

Viktor Mitic - Galaxy

 

 

Categories: Exhibitions, Watercolour News.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,

Watercolour Workshop at Kuch Khaas, Islamabad

October 18, 2011

It’s not often we bring news about watercolour painting from South Asia, and even less often that it comes from Pakistan.  The

Kuch Khaas logo

Kuch Khaas logo

simple news here is that Kuch Khaas, a type of creative arts centre in the capital Islamabad is holding a month long watercolour techniques workshop for beginners.

More on that later but let’s first have a look at Kuch Khaas and what sort of organisation it is.  Shayan Afzal Khan is the brains behind the project and is only a handful of years old.  The centre themselves describe themselves as a  “…centre for arts, culture and dialogue, a not-for-profit social enterprise [and] is a community space for interaction, public discourse, cultural and intellectual pursuits, and civic engagement.” It has also been described it as a “…community space for meaningful dialogue and creative expression,” among other things.

Much of its focus has been on extra education for children and to enable them to explore their own creativity outside what Khan feels is the stifling atmosphere of standard education.  Apart from painting, Kuch Khaas offers many vocational courses for the practical side of things as well as a media centre, a library, performance arts facilities and of course a cafe.  There’s a nominal fee for those who can afford it and it’s free for those who can’t, meaning people from different walks of life can mix together in this productive environment.

The watercolour techniques course is being run by Mahjabeen Atif, a graduate of the National College of Arts who believes that the gateway to one’s creativity is to master the elementary techniques of that medium.  Reinforcing this point she said that “…when you don’t have to agonize over the “how” you are free to paint your dreams.”

Ultimately everyone involved at Kuch Khaas would like the centre to a driver for social and cultural change within the country and for us, it’s always gratifying to report on a good news story from a country with the problems that Pakistan has.

 

Categories: Watercolour News.

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

After 125 Years, Turner Watercolour Is Up For Sale

October 10, 2011

If you’re a fan of Joseph Mallord Willam Turner and have a bit of spare change, there will shortly be a chance for you to acquire a painting that has not been for sale for 125 years.  Turner’s 1816 painting is entitled ‘Kirkby Lonsdale Churchyard’ and it captures the river Lune from St. Mary’s in Kirkby Lonsdale, Cumbria.  The view was regarded as famous before Turner immortalised it in canvas; John Ruskin (of Ruskin’s View) was a prominent art critic of the Victorian era, among other talents, and regarded the view as one of the world’s most beautiful:

“…..I do not know in all my own country, still less in France or Italy, a place more naturally divine, or a more priceless possession of true ‘Holy Land’.”

William Wordsworth is also known to have regarded the view highly and there is an interesting story behind the work;  Turner was asked to produce 85 watercolours for a book featuring views of Northern England.  Turner apparently demanded a small fortune to complete the work – 3000 guineas, which equates to around £200,000 of today’s money.  Not surprisingly the publishers lost money on the book.

Kirkby Lonsdale Churchyard

Kirkby Lonsdale Churchyard

So where has the painting been for the last 125 years?  It’s last purchase was in 1884, when it was sold to a seemingly unknown buyer for 820 guineas – no small sum – but by the it was already  70 years old and Turner himself had been dead for 30 years. The shipping magnate Sir Donald Currie owned it for some time although he too had died by 1909.  At one point Currie’s collection contained 57 Turner watercolours and 14 oil paintings.

‘Kirkby Lonsdale Churchyard’ has not been viewed in public since the Great Watercolours show at the Royal Academy in 2000 and it will be interesting to see how much interest there is in the painting when it comes up for auction at Bonham’s in London on 25th January 2012.  The guide price is between £200,000 and £300,000.  Charles O’Brien, of Bonhams, described the painting as ”…..a very pretty, quintessentially English scene with an outstanding provenance.”

 

Categories: Watercolour News.

Tags: , , , , , , ,