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>>> Brian
Jull's Work
I have affinity
for drawing from a very young age. I also had a paper and pencil
ready to draw everything from animals to super heroes and villains
from the comic books that I collected with great enthusiasm.
I remember a TV show from America featuring an artist/detective
who lived in a house overlooking the sea, with
its own private beach. At seven years old, I thought "this
is the life for me", apart from having to solve a mysterious
crime every week.
When I reached 15 I was ready to leave school and join an Art
College, unfortunately nobody informed me that I was too young,
and would have to wait until I was 16. I think this was the
youngest they would consider at the time and this was a blow
to my plans. An even bigger blow was when my elder brother decided
I should get a proper job and work with him as a floorlayers
labourer, although, I am not sure it was with good intentions
as he did not believe I had any chance of becoming an Artist.
I put my dreams on hold, went to work and never did get to College.
It was not until I was 21 years old and my first son was born
that my ambition was rekindled by a visit to Bayswater Road
in London. Here any Artist could exhibit & sell their work,
you didn't need a Diploma: just a modicum of roar talent could
launch your career. After a day of selling all your paintings
you would go home with your pockets full of cash ready to paint
some more for the next week. But my wife was convinced enough
to buy me an easel some brushes and oil paints, and now I had
somebody who actually believed I could make it. My dream was
back on course.
I decided in order to reach fulfillment as an Artist, that I
should study the best art available to me, which was the Old
Masters. Where I lived in Greenwich I was lucky enough to have
the Maritime Museum which I could visit and study techniques
of some great Masters as often as time allowed. I was also able
to do sketches along by the river Thames.
As the years have gone by my influences have been very broad,
not wanting to miss anything and certainly not dismiss any nuance
of Art without seeing if it had anything useful to offer me
for my ongoing progress in Artistic fulfillment.
My Technique has evolved from paining Photo Realism some years
past, to the looser Impressionist style that I favour now, although
the Realism does edge its way back if I think the subject requires.
I try not to let it dominate the feel of the picture, making
sure I leave something to the imagination of the viewer. I have
paintings in most mediums (oils, acrylics, watercolour, pastels
etc) with oils being my main choice now and pastels for certain
subjects that I feel require their unique quality.
Brushwork is important to me now in oils, whereas at one time
I would get rid of all traces of the brush for the photographic
look, I now want to express my character in the surface of the
paintings and make a more personal statement, that somebody
can take home with them when they buy a piece of my work. My
ideas and inspiration now tend to come from the sunlight, sometimes
being softened and sprinkled by movement of leaves on the trees
or reflected from water, and the way it completely transforms
and changes the same scene from morning to midday to afternoon,
it always surprises your with a different view and never seems
to run out of ideas. Add to this the different seasons of the
year and you could spend years just painting your own back garden,
I have a feeling somebody has!
This is what makes me happy to paint and after years of soul
searching and wondering what makes me tick and what profound
message I should be conveying in my art, I realise that if I
can project the feelings I have for a particular subject and
convey this to an audience through my painting, I would have
been successful.
My day usually starts after 2 slices of toast a mug of tea at
9.00 in my studio, a converted loft above a 3 bedroom house.
Its been chaotic, I am not the organised type but seem to know
where everything is, most of the time anyway!
I work from sketches and photographs that I have acquired over
the summer months from travels abroad and the few days of sunshine
in England. The sketches help me remember what it was like when
I was there, the photographs are useful for detail, but as everybody
knows when you get your precious holiday pictures back from
the developers, they bare little resemblance to the beautiful
place you have just visited, that's where my job begins to recapture
the atmosphere that resides in the memory and put it on canvas.
Even though my B&W pastel work is greatly influenced by
photography and is in a tighter style than my oils, I still
have to reduce the irrelevant detail and compose the picture,
to get across the right feeling I want to convey. Without colour
the right balance is even more important.
I usually work through the day only stopping for mugs of tea
at regular intervals ending the day around 6 or 7 o'clock, I
like to leave my time flexible and not work to a clock, although
a call from my wife that my dinner is ready sometimes tells
me its time to call it a day.
In the future I would like to have some one man exhibitions
in England. So far I have had to travel to Sweden where I have
had much success in various galleries from Gothemburg to Stockholm,
and my paintings being collected by several Art Societies and
Banks. You never know my childhood dreams may still come true.
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