Industrial Cathedral

Industrial Cathedral
"Industrial Cathedral" charcoal on paper 131 x 131 cm Jane Bennett. Finalist in 1998 Dobell Drawing Prize Art Gallery of NSW Finalist 1998 Blake Prize Winner 1998 Hunter's Hill Open Art Prize

About Me

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Sydney, NSW, Australia
I'm an Industrial Heritage Artist who paints "en plein air".If it's damaged, derelict, doomed and about to disappear, I'll be there to paint it.
Showing posts with label Sulman Prize. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sulman Prize. Show all posts

Sunday 4 March 2012

Time for Safety

"It is with fire that blacksmiths iron subdue
Unto fair form, the image of their thought :
Nor without fire hath any artist wrought
Gold to its utmost purity of hue.
Nay, nor the unmatched phoenix lives anew,
Unless she burn."

Michelangelo, Sonnet 59

I've finally completed my portrait of Chris forging chisels.

Oil painting of blacksmith in the Australian Technology Park, Eveleigh Railway Workshops painted by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett
Portrait of "Chris Sulis forging chisels" 
2011-12 oil on canvas 152 x 122cm .

Oil painting of blacksmith in the Australian Technology Park, Eveleigh Railway Workshops painted by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett

Portrait of "Chris Sulis forging chisels" 
2011-12 oil on canvas 152 x 122cm.

In Renaissance and Baroque paintings, the artist would often paint dark red velvet drapery fluttering behind the subject. The dye used for this colour was extracted from the murex shell.
It was prohibitively expensive and difficult to obtain, so using it as a backdrop would emphasise the aura of aristocratic power. Think of the background to Van Dyck's portraits of the pre-Civil War English court or Titian's portraits of the Papacy.
My luxurious crimson curtain is actually the welding screen, but it does give a feeling of the lost glories of the past.
Oil painting of blacksmith in the Australian Technology Park, Eveleigh Railway Workshops painted by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett
Detail from Portrait of "Chris Sulis forging chisels"
 2011-12 oil on canvas 152 x 122cm .

Oil painting of blacksmith in the Australian Technology Park, Eveleigh Railway Workshops painted by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett
"Time for Safety" detail from
 Portrait of "Chris Sulis forging chisels"
2011-12 oil on canvas 152 x 122cm 

 A decrepit "Time for Safety" sign is propped against the arched window frame. It reminds me more of a late Victorian moralizing wall plaque than an early example of Occupational Health and Safety regulations.

"Time for Safety" detail from
Portrait of "Chris Sulis forging chisels"
2011-12 oil on canvas 152 x 122cm

These days people have become risk averse to a ridiculous degree. In doing so they lose the chance to turn their fear into courage.
To paraphrase an old song, there is a time for safety and  there is a time for risk.
 Being an artist is risky. Doing anything interesting is always inherently risky.
Risks aren't always obvious.
The major risk to the blacksmiths isn't their hair catching fire, as they are too skilled. The real threat is that a combination of economic and political conditions could make their entire existence no longer viable.

Oil painting of blacksmith in the Australian Technology Park, Eveleigh Railway Workshops painted by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett
"Blacksmith forging chisels"
2011-12 oil on canvas 122 x 183cm

Enquiries : janecooperbennett@gmail.com 

I'm now touching up the background of this painting of a different stage of the chisel forging process. This painting shows Euan crouched in the centre as the Massey hammer pounds the point into shape.
I'm very happy with both of these paintings.
So happy that next week I'll enter the painting of Chris in the Archibald Prize and the one of Euan in the Sulman Prize at the Art Gallery of NSW.
I'm not famous and neither are they, so I haven't a prayer with either work.
I'll waste $60 and half a day delivering them, but I feel like entering just for a stir.
Might as well be hung for a sheep as a lamb.
Unlike most of the entries, these haven't been whipped up just to enter a prize but are part of my normal work. I'm sick of the typical Archibald formula for prize winning entries - a  giant close up of a head, without context or content, painted from a slide projector.
Oil painting of blacksmith in the Australian Technology Park, Eveleigh Railway Workshops painted by industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett
Detail from portrait of
"Chris Sulis forging chisels" 
2011-12 oil on canvas 152 x 122cm
 
I hadn't originally expected this to be a portrait, but one of a series of paintings of the process of chisel forging.
The previous painting showing Euan at the hammer is a very good likeness, but the figure is in the midground, although he is the focus of the whole work. The blacksmiths could not "pose" for me in any formal sense of the word, or even stay still for more than a few seconds as they were very busy working to their deadline. I took an immense risk painting a large full length figure dominating the foreground in a pose that he could not sustain for longer than a few seconds. I had to watch and wait whilst immersing myself in their world.  The more I painted Chris, the more his pose seemed to gather authority and purpose.
As I have painted Chris doing the work that he loves in the place that he loves, this painting will probably be tagged with the pejorative term "genre piece". Yet it tells you more about the thoughts and values of the subject than most Archibald portraits.