Becky Blair British, b. 1972
Becky Blair British, b. 1972
Moon Watcher, 2022
acrylic and mixed media on canvas
50 x 50 cm
61067
Desire Lines This work is not about lock-down but is born out of the experience and realisations of a time spent in pause. Time became slippery and all the habits...
Desire Lines
This work is not about lock-down but is born out of the experience and realisations of a time
spent in pause. Time became slippery and all the habits that reflect back to us our sense of
self were dismantled or reimagined.
Rather than mourning the lack of far-flung adventures, I felt an emptiness in my loss of daily
connections. Moments I relied upon to know myself. Life confined made me realise how
precious the most everyday happenings were. Buying a coffee on my way to work, random
conversations, and the streets I walked daily to my studio.
This time changed how I approached my painting. My studio moved home, a smaller space,
interrupted by the movements of my family. I found working in watercolours was the most
appropriate medium. I was happy to work small and liked the freshness and simplicity of the
palette. The slow pace of life naturally suited the patient approach of layering the wet
colour.
I started a postcard project on Instagram as a way of reaching out. Daily watercolours were
posted up at the end of each week, and the best title suggestion won! I then posted the card off
into the world, bridging distance and making contact despite restrictions: Combining new
and old ways of correspondence.
In my daily paintings, my interest was drawn to repeated motifs that I found in our home,
the garden, precious ornaments and abstracted shapes from the views from our house.
Imagery distilled down through repetition. Maybe the lack of human interaction led to the
disappearance of figures in my work, but I think I had already started that shift, before
COVID. I think lockdown was a hothouse to grow these new abstract shoots of creative
exploration.
This work is about people and connection, as well as simplicity and gratitude for
everyday happenings. How we know ourselves through the people around us. The
preciousness of loved ones, the thrill of chance encounters, people you see daily but don’t
know their names. Our habitual goat paths - or desire lines - become the grooves by which
we navigate our daily lives. There is a sense of communing with creativity that I feel about
this work, channelling the simplest of intentions and seeing where it leads. Using an abstract
language of personal motifs and found shapes, I see these works as conversations; an
abstract language conversing inwardly and outwardly. There is space for the viewer to be
invited in to play, explore and interpret.
I have found a simpler more stripped-back approach. The process is patient and meditative,
I can’t rush them. And although I still head into each canvas with no clear path, I have to
take my time as the raw canvas leaves little room for adjustment. This has been a
wonderful addition to the work and has provided a practice that feels more freeing than
you might imagine. Instead of making me more tentative, it has made me more confident
and trusting of my artistic voice.
This work is not about lock-down but is born out of the experience and realisations of a time
spent in pause. Time became slippery and all the habits that reflect back to us our sense of
self were dismantled or reimagined.
Rather than mourning the lack of far-flung adventures, I felt an emptiness in my loss of daily
connections. Moments I relied upon to know myself. Life confined made me realise how
precious the most everyday happenings were. Buying a coffee on my way to work, random
conversations, and the streets I walked daily to my studio.
This time changed how I approached my painting. My studio moved home, a smaller space,
interrupted by the movements of my family. I found working in watercolours was the most
appropriate medium. I was happy to work small and liked the freshness and simplicity of the
palette. The slow pace of life naturally suited the patient approach of layering the wet
colour.
I started a postcard project on Instagram as a way of reaching out. Daily watercolours were
posted up at the end of each week, and the best title suggestion won! I then posted the card off
into the world, bridging distance and making contact despite restrictions: Combining new
and old ways of correspondence.
In my daily paintings, my interest was drawn to repeated motifs that I found in our home,
the garden, precious ornaments and abstracted shapes from the views from our house.
Imagery distilled down through repetition. Maybe the lack of human interaction led to the
disappearance of figures in my work, but I think I had already started that shift, before
COVID. I think lockdown was a hothouse to grow these new abstract shoots of creative
exploration.
This work is about people and connection, as well as simplicity and gratitude for
everyday happenings. How we know ourselves through the people around us. The
preciousness of loved ones, the thrill of chance encounters, people you see daily but don’t
know their names. Our habitual goat paths - or desire lines - become the grooves by which
we navigate our daily lives. There is a sense of communing with creativity that I feel about
this work, channelling the simplest of intentions and seeing where it leads. Using an abstract
language of personal motifs and found shapes, I see these works as conversations; an
abstract language conversing inwardly and outwardly. There is space for the viewer to be
invited in to play, explore and interpret.
I have found a simpler more stripped-back approach. The process is patient and meditative,
I can’t rush them. And although I still head into each canvas with no clear path, I have to
take my time as the raw canvas leaves little room for adjustment. This has been a
wonderful addition to the work and has provided a practice that feels more freeing than
you might imagine. Instead of making me more tentative, it has made me more confident
and trusting of my artistic voice.