Thursday, 24 February 2011

Start of Spring Half Term Break

I have had a fabulous start to my Spring Half Term Break!  On Friday night we went to the theatre in the West End and saw a play called 'The Rivals'.  It starred Penelope Keith and was fabulous.  It is apparently a fairly old play and was very clever and very well done. 

Saturday saw me doing more drawing, including an attempt to draw my Papa....not much of a likeness, but I guess I will need to keep practicing.


On Sunday we went to the football.  It was a knockout match for two of the teams in the last 16 for the FA Cup final.  We saw Fulham defeated by Bolton by one goal to nil.  It was lots of fun, but feezing cold.  It had been drizzling when we got there and even though our seats were supposed to be undercover we were getting wet.  Thankfully it stopped fairly soon after we arrived, so we only had to contend with it being cold, not cold and wet!  By the end of sitting for two hours my toes literally felt like ice blocks.  I have to say I was pleased when the game was over.  I managed to take some short video bites of the Bolton crowd (I tried to include the video but it wouldn't work!) as they reacted at different points throughout the game.  Unfortunately there is not a huge amount of footage as I was running out of both memory and battery.  I still say the most entertaining part of the soccer is the crowd reaction and participation.

On Monday I stayed home for most of the day and tried to draw a self portrait.  Again it is not brilliant, but at least I can see some resemblance in this one!



It is really hard to get decent scans or photos of these pencil drawings so I played with this one a little in photoshop.  It is a better representation than it was, but still not great. 

Yesterday I went and did some shopping and today I went into the middle of London to go shopping.  I bought myself a little set of pan water colours so that I can start playing with them too!

Tomorrow we are off to Athens for three nights.  Hopefully there will be no more riots there!!! I willl be taking my computer and will blog from there if we have time and I have the energy!

Sunday, 20 February 2011

Happy Birthday Dooks!!

Well my 'baby' girl turns 24 today.  I know we always say it but it really is very hard to believe that 24 years have gone since the day we welcomed that noisy little bundle into the world.  We were in a hospital ward in Sydney with three mums and their baby boys.  The boys had sweet gentle little cries.  My little bundle of sugar and spice had I am sure, the loudest cry in the whole hospital.  The nurses could hear her from the other end of the ward and at one point said she HAD to go into the nursery because she was disturbing the whole ward! 

Well that noisy bundle managed to grow into one of the most delightful young women to bless this planet....and I do not believe that is just a biased Mum speaking!  Happy Birthday my love, may you have the most wonderful year ahead.  With all the joy you bring to those around you, you deserve every ounce of happiness that is possible!

Ben took this photo of Ash at I when they were visiting the UK last year.  It is one of my favourites of the two of us together!

Monday, 14 February 2011

One of my best ever decisions!

Was to marry this gorgeous man!

 Happy Valentines Day. I love you sweetheart! 
 XXXX

Sunday, 13 February 2011

Busy weekend!

This weekend has been a busy one!  Yesterday I went into Southbank here in London and met up with a group of women who have all done the online experimental art course I did last September.  Amelia who runs the courses organised the get together and it was a great day.  We met for coffee and then lunch and then we followed that up with an experimantal activity with our cameras.  The idea was to walk for 5 minutes and then start taking photos.  You are meant to take one photo every minute for 36 minutes.....mmm!  Somehow I found it quite difficult to be so disciplined!  I am sure I took more than 36 photos and the intervals between them were very varied.  Not to worry I had a lot of fun doing it and got some interesting photos!

This is the group getting ready to go out and start shooting!

  
Loved this photo of the London Eye!


...and this one I caught of Donald Duck lighting up a smoke.....somehow ruined the image of what Donald should be!

 I love how moody this shot is!


The Valentines display on one of the support structures for the Eye.


Part of the Queen's Walk along the Thames.
  

A section of  a sculpture.


Part of a display of kids art work all about their brain. The display was really interesting and provided some food for thought for me with respect to my art classes at school!


A close up of some rose hips taken with the macro!


There is a story there.  I meant to take the lens from Richard's camera for my good camera, but grabbed the macro instead!  So most of the photos above were taken with the point and shoot!  Not to worry it still worked out ok!  I had lots of fun and really enjoyed meeting the others!  After chatting to one of the other ladies I have been inspired to learn about Photoshop so have put it onto my computer today and will hopefully start doing something about learning how to use it it the near future!

Last night Sam left to come back to Australia.  He has been over here since the end of November.  Some of the time he has been travelling but quite a large chunk of the time he has been with us.  The house will seem quiet and yes we will miss him, but it is also nice to have our little house back to ourselves again.  The house is only a two bedroom place and so is crowded when we have extras here.  We have loved having all of our visitors and would love to see even more of our friends and family!

Today we headed off out, not really knowing where we were going.  En route I suggested we have a look around South Bank together so we went to Waterloo Station and walked down there.  We wandered along the Queen's and then across the Westminster Bridge.  We then wandered towards the Houses of Parliament and Big Ben (or as my darling aspie husband would say 'the tower that houses the bell called Big Ben') ....got to be accurate you know!  We spotted Westminster Abbey and decided to see if it was open...no...but St Margaret's was so we had a look in there.  It has gorgeous stained glass in some of the windows, but not so wonderful in others as they were destroyed in the bombing of London!  Sorry no photos for two reasons....number one they ask you not to take them, and number two even if I could have, I had left my camera at home!

Anyway, after wandering through the church and seeing the memorial plaques for some famous people including Sir Walter Raleigh we headed off again with no particular idea of where we were going!  London is so brilliant because there is so much to see!  After a few minutes we wandered past the 'Cabinet War Museum' and decided to go in.  It is the underground museum where Churchill and the war cabinet ran things during WW2.  It was excellent and, in my view, well worth the visit.  Just an interesting note ...I spotted that the clocks in there said the time was 4:59!

The centre also has the 'Churchill Museum' as part of it and this was a fascinating exhibition of the life of Winston Churchill.  What an interesting character he was!  I never realised that in his spare time he loved to paint and did so with a reasonable level of expertise!  He also tried sculpting but did not keep it up because he apparently found it too messy!  We sat and watched film of his funeral parade through London.  Richard said he remembered it happening when he was a child.  Even after all this time it was actually very moving to see.  It reminded me of Diana's funeral in that the crowds were silent as the cortage moved along the road.  Somehow I felt the same awe at how silent large crowds of people can be when they are moved by the gravity of the situation and the sense of community mourning.

Wandering back to the underground it was cold and raining lightly.  We have had some warmer weather lately and have even been up into double figures, so I guess we were not as rugged up as we should have been.  We are meant to be heading into some cooler days again!  We decided to head home to the warmth and to cook dinner (well at least Richard cooked dinner) a bit earlier than normal.  We had eaten and tidied up by 7:30 ...very early for us!

Monday, 31 January 2011

A beautiful day!

We have had another cold snap here with night time temperatures below zero and days getting to the dizzy heights of only a few degrees.  It was actually zero at midday on Saturday!  Yesterday was a beautiful winter's day here in London.  It was cold, but gloriously sunny.  We headed off to Kew gardens for the final use of our 12 month passes.  Initially we were going to visit the open day for the herbarium, but the tours finished at 2:30 and by the time we got there it was too late.  Not to worry we still had a lovely time wandering around the gardens.


We came across this beautiful old Corsican Pine.  It was planted in Kew Gardens in 1814 and is said to be the oldest tree of its type in the country!  It has been struck by lightening several times and even hit by a small aircraft and is still standing...how's that for staying power!  Most importantly, note the beautiful blue sky through the tree's canopy!  Lovely, especially when Saturday would have won an award for the greyest of days!

In one of the glass houses we spotted this wonderful piece of art work.  He is a model of a hummingbird moth and is made of wood:


.... gorgeous isn't he!

Another arty thing we came across was this:






... and this was hanging inside:


We also discovered this fabulous tree which, from this angle makes me think of one of Tolkien's Ents!:



...and honestly it had the most fabulous gnarly, overhanging, yet gracefully pendulous branches.  ...and would you believe I can't remember what it was!

School's going well!  Only three more weeks and we are on our half term holiday....then hi ho, hi ho it's off to Athens we go!!  Have a great week everybody!

Saturday, 22 January 2011

Playing!!

Over the past week or so I have been playing around quite a bit in my art journal.  I watched this video and then started following Diana Trout's process and ended up with this:


There are quite a few hours of work in this. but it is a lovely relaxing way to destress after a busy day.  It was done over a few nights of the past week.  I used a medium Pitt Pen, acrylic paint, water colour pencils, metallic water colour pencils and glimmering H2O paints.  The colours in real life are much more vibrant....just don't know how to get it from a piece of artwork on to the computer and keep the intensity!  I have done similar things previously, but it was fun to try a slightly new take on and old theme!

Today I have again been creating!  A few weeks ago I bought Carla Sonheim's book 'Drawing Lab for mixed-media artists - 52 creative exercises to make drawing fun!'  I have been working my way through some of the activities and today did Lab 8.  The idea is to use water colours (I used watered down acrylic paints).  You do random swirls of red, let it dry, swirls of blue, let it dry and then swirls of yellow and let it dry.  You then look at the result and break out with the pens and in my case charcoal pencils and start creating little critters with your swirls of paint.  If you need to you can come back with a little more paint to complete the image.  I did these four this afternoon and really enjoyed the process.  I think I will be trying these with my boys at school because they are nice and quick and the results can be lots of fun.





The great thing was that while I was waiting for the paint to dry I finally (after having been stopped by many months of coughing and spluttering), got my saxophone out again....I am very rusty, but had a great time getting back into it!  It will not be so long between tunes again!!

After all that 'playing' I still need to do some prep for my classes next week!  Can I find yet another distraction?

Thursday, 20 January 2011

This and that!

We are well into winter here now.  The days are slightly warmer than they were a few weeks ago and getting longer again although I have been told it may get colder again.   I catch two buses to get to work each day, and have to walk around a roundabout and down a bit of a hill between the first and the second bus.  About a week ago I was on my way to work and this is the sight I was greeted with as I started down the hill.


 The sunrise was simply stunning and I had to stop and take a quick photo.  I am sure when the Londoners are rushing past me stopping to take photos,  they wonder what on earth I am on!  The morning was cold, but still.  The colours were a lot more intense than they appear here, but even at this level they are beautiful.

Richard has been growing us a little bit of spring recently.  We are just starting to reap the rewards of his efforts with these beautiful hyacinths and amaryllis.  There is one more amaryllis planted but it hasn't done much so far.  I guess there is still hope though because the bulb still looks reasonably healthy.



When Richard saw my last post he said I had missed the Rodin he had liked most.....so here she is now:


Her name is Rose Beuret in Straw Hat and she is very beautiful!  I had a lot of problems reducing to just a few images.  I took many photos of the faces he sculpted so that I could try to draw them later.  So as I do not have too much to add, I will add a few more photos to finish this entry!

Sorry about the first photo.  He was in a glass case and impossible to get a good photo of with the light and his position in the room!  I decided to add him here anyway because it shows you Rodin's early work:


...followed by the final piece based on that work!


...stunning isn't he!  Now look at him closer!  So beautiful!

This piece, out in the grounds was stunning!