Sunday 26 April 2015

RAF Tholthorpe

NFE Night Flying Equipment Store

This is the second painting I did on the former WW2 RAF airfield, Tholthorpe. Painted on location on a sunny, but breezy, afternoon during the Easter holiday, between giving Seth driving lessons.
It's great that so many of these buildings are still standing. I am including some of the photos I took of this and some of the other buildings at the bottom of the page.
It's always tricky painting outside, given the limited time, changing light and not having the comfort of your studio. However, it is great fun and very rewarding. The results are always looser and more impressionistic painting outdoors than they often are indoors, largely because decisions have to be made quickly.
Anyway, here it is..
 The Night Flying Equipm.ent Store
 The angle I chose to paint from.
 Early blocking in and establishing colours and values.


The finished painting.

Some of the remaining buildings:





Some of the buildings are still used on the industrial estate, including the hanger type building where we have our car serviced.  It was something like a 'fusing shed'- the actual hanger is used on a farm at the other end of the airfield. There are also defensive buildings on a farm at the bottom end of the field, but you need permission to visit those.




Paul's amazing house in the 'Newer' Control Tower.

Difficult to see, but the nearest (long) building is from the war.

Sunday 12 April 2015

The Old Watch Tower RAF Tholthorpe

A couple of miles from where we live is the old airfield RAF Tholthorpe, which was home to several Canadian squadrons in the war. Although it is now largely just farmland and industrial units, some of the WW2 buildings survive, with some still being used as businesses, and others allowed to fall into ruin. I have started taking Seth there for his first driving lessons, and in doing so I looked again at the remaining buildings with a view to painting some of them. This painting is the old watch tower, which also served as the operations/control room. It was later replaced when the airfield was upgraded by bomber command from a satellite airfield for RAF Linton. Halifax and Lancaster bombers flew sorties from Tholthorpe, obviously not all of them returned. One fully loaded Halifax crashed close to our house on the train lines.
My friend Paul and his family renovated the 'new' watch tower and converted it into a great house. Paul is an artist and you can see the influence of the clear views and huge skies around his home in his work.
The airfield is reputedly haunted, and has been the subject of numerous 'paranormal investigations' (cranks), however, there are a few stories relayed by some of the people who work in the businesses based in the remaining WW2 buildings.

A couple of links about the history of the airfield:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RAF_Tholthorpe

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QhwVkkh9ad4


This painting is a small oil on canvas, painted on location.





The Old Watch Tower
RAF Tholthorpe
Oil on Canvas

Friday 10 April 2015

Painting Outside

I took my paints out for a few hours this week (several times actually, but some of those are to follow).
Sitting in the middle of a badgers sett, I was painting looking pretty much into the sun. This painting is smaller than I usually work on, and the idea was to make myself consider more carefully every brush stroke.
Here it is.
Oh, and for the record, I didn't see any badgers, but did see treecreepers, buzzards, roe deer, and I heard them barking.
Good times.






 'Across he Field From Black Wood'.
Oil on Canvas


Monday 6 April 2015

First Post of 2015

..... and the first painting since October.

I flick around on the net a lot, looking at artists and their work. I don't watch TV- I read and I browse. There are some great painters around, and I've just come across someone who I think is very special; Jeremy Mann. He's the kind of painter that confirms two things; just how much I have to learn, and how much I want to paint. Jeremy Mann makes me want to paint.
I particularly like watching people paint on YouTube and Vimeo. Unfortunately I have not been able to find any footage of how Mann works, which leaves me looking closely at pixelated images trying to work out his method, and how he lays the paint down. It's all good fun.
I started this painting (it isn't finished yet) after looking at Jeremy Mann. It's very crude, but it is nice that he has (unknowingly) given me the nudge to paint again. I need to be painting again. The idea is that now that I have stepped down as Head of House, and once we move house, I will have more (time?) energy.
Here's hoping.





Thirsk 
(unfinished)