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>>> Duncan
Palmar's Work
From as far
back as I can remember I have been interested in painting and
drawing. Even at school I would try and find any excuse to go
into the art room. I had a fairly traditional education taking
the usual O and A levels and art featured very strongly in both.
I began painting people's houses, in order to pay for driving
lessons, and would then knock on their doors in the vague hope
that they might feel obliged to purchase my humble renditions
of their homes. To my astonishment I managed to sell several
pictures which prompted me to continue. A college course to
study Graphic Design awaited me, as my parents had both said
'you can not make your living painting'. On one fateful morning
that summer I was sitting outside someone's house painting,
when a lady came up to me and uttered those immortal words "I
paint".
To cut a long story short she offered the use of her conservatory
as a studio for the summer. She gave me a lot of encouragement
and guidance in the use of both oil and watercolour, teaching
my about colour, tone, composition and the source of light.
I lasted one day on the Graphic Design Course I was enrolled
on and returned home begging my parents to let me paint for
a living. They gave me a year and I took some of my work into
a local gallery where I was given the opportunity to have an
exhibition, so at the tender age of nineteen I began working
for my first one-man show. The majority of the paintings were
of local scenes and fortunately the exhibition was a great success
which enabled me to continue painting, undertaking commissions
of various subjects, and not just people's houses!
I concentrate primarily on architectural, landscape, seascape,
harbour and beach scenes all of which I enjoy painting very
much. Over the years I have been commissioned to undertake several
very interesting and challenging subjects which have included
three Military paintings, and a Millennium picture of my home
village which entailed being elevated in a cherry picker over
the main thoroughfare in order to see the whole high street.
An altogether hair raising experience. I was also commissioned
to do a second millennium painting which depicted all the houses
in a single parish and once again meant being in a elevated
position, this time from a helicopter where they very kindly
removed the door so I could get a better view!
I paint in both oil and watercolour and tend to apply similar
techniques to both mediums, but at the same time try to retain
the individual charm that each medium incorporates.
Recently I have begun to experiment with the wonderful range
of mediums that are now available. Most of my watercolours now
include texture, granulation, iridescent and gum Arabic mediums
as well as paint, enabling the artist to paint the most realistic
effects. Whether it's the challenge of trying to capture the
effect of wet seaweed on a harbour wall, wet sand and mud, or
a glimpse of a distant fell as low cloud passes, introducing
these mediums greatly enhance the scene.
Most of my paintings are on either canvas or paper. But from
a desire to try a new surface and medium I began to work in
acrylic on gesso boards with tinted grounds. The rapid drying
qualities of the paint forced me to work very vigorously giving
the painting a looser and more lively appearance. For someone
who had, up until that point only painted in a detailed way,
I found it a very liberating and satisfying feeling, a real
breath of fresh air, ideally suited to capturing a beach with
the movement of sea in its diverse moods, rhythms and space.
I now work with oil in the same fashion, and have begun not
only to produce beach scenes, but also harbours, estuaries and
landscapes.
I now enjoy the best of both worlds, as one moment I could be
working in my loose style on a painting of a beach with paint
flying across the board, and the next painstakingly working
on a highly detailed intimate watercolour of a harbour scene.
Variety is the spice of life!
I often begin my working day with the Beatles or any other contemporary
or classical music blasting out from the stereo. Well, that
is after I have got the kids up, dressed, breakfasted, dropped
off at school and nursery (on the days my wife works) walked
our two chocolate Labradors, come back, opened the post, sat
down and had a cup of tea! I love my early morning walks as
it gives me a chance to be quiet and contemplative. I am never
satisfied with the finish result of a painting and always strive
for perfection and tell myself to do better next time! I think
in order to progress and grow as an Artist you need to feel
that way, and when those feelings stop I think its time to give
up.
My studio is located at the bottom of the garden, and as far
away from the house as poss bile. Once there, I am able to focus
purely on the painting or paintings that are on the go at the
time, where it is just myself, my music and my art. I try to
spend at least seven hours a day in the studio but this varies
according to the time of year. I try not to work with artificial
light as I find it corrupts the colours too much, even though
I have daylight corrective lamps, which I am forced to use during
the winter months when so often the light seems to go after
lunch.
I love to look at the work of other Artists past and present.
It fascinates me to see how they have portrayed a particular
subject and very often one that I am trying to come to grips
with myself. I am particularly inspired, for instance, when
painting landscapes, by the Victorian watercolourists. Similarly,
when the painting of an intimate harbour scene I find the same
applies to the work Newlyn School of Painters From 1882-1947.
When painting in my loose style I tend to look at the work of
William Turner, the Impressionists and that of Edward Seago.
I feel very privileged to be able to paint every day and although
the demands of every day life and a growing family make it increasingly
hard to earn a living from the very precarious occupation of
art, it is something I am very passionate about, and determined
to continue for as long as I can.
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