Dutch Courage wasn’t always necessary. A series of abstruse spirals performed in a disused factory in Vauxhall, South London – gave rise to these undersea creatures, the likes of which Jacques Cousteau would have been happy to witness. The purpose? Again, to look at the ‘none mark’, the counterspace instead of the mark itself as an invasion of a ‘virgin’ white field of 100% cotton. Instead I made white marks on a black ground. The same mark, repeated, again and again.
Archive for June, 2010
But if you look closely
Monday, June 21st, 2010Where it all began
Thursday, June 17th, 2010This morning I woke with U2’s ‘Sunday, Bloody, Sunday’ playing on the radio station in my head. I’m not a U2 fan and I’m not so interested in the politics of the past – however, we live in a culture where we keep one eye firmly on the wake of the ship rather than looking ahead (for new land), because we believe that the future is or is likely to be a continuation of the past. That is what happens here and in the making of any conventional artwork. You look at what is unfolding and you adjust it accordingly. Any looking to the future is the visualisation you have in your ‘mind’s eye’. This itself might be likened more to archaeology, where what we are doing is uncovering what lies within, by the processes of art – but it is also an act of forming, creating, putting together in the ‘now’.
‘The big liberation’ as I called it after John Holden passed comment, was done in an effort to try working freely on a bigger scale. Not knowing what I was going to do, I made a 2m x 1.5m canvas and bought some household paints. At 11 in the morning I went to the Glass Blower on the Regent’s Street side of Soho and took some Dutch courage (a bad habit). Then I did this, with some whacking great brushes. The play of black and white marks is what set in train my interest in the foregoing and some other works, where I was taking a much closer look at ‘the mark’. This itself originated during the process of life drawing at the Royal Academy Schools.
A closer look at those white spirals on velvet
Wednesday, June 16th, 2010This pic is a close up of the previous one, showing how the impasted oil paint on black velvet has formed specific marks. Reminiscent of scenes I witnessed on the ceiling of our squat in South London whilst in a state of intoxicated reverie, (or does it just look like Artex?) this work is what we all have to do to expand our awareness of ourselves ‘in process’. I suppose Robert Ryman’s work owes a debt itself to Kasimir Malevich ….
Yes, I owe Robert Ryman a debt
Tuesday, June 15th, 2010This is one of several circular works I did in the 90’s in reaction to all that had gone before in my drawing. Not square, not a black mark on white – but a white mark on black (velvet), I looked at the counterspace in an outward spiral which I made repeatedly until the surface was returned to a state of lingerie whiteness. Again, the function in an academic sense, is to see the line anew. One metre diameter, oil on black velvet, 1500 gbp.

Line drawing by Alan Dedman
Why it is important to make colours equate with lines
Monday, June 14th, 2010This is a drawing I did in coloured pencils at 70, Fentiman Road in the Summer of 1986. I used a kids colouring book and took tracings of the gymnast (which is what it is called) and then drew ‘automatically’ over the line work, making it the sole purpose of the drawing NOT to lick my top lip whilst colouring carefully up to the outline.
This drawing is about not conforming to pre-existing definitions, about being with all that irrascible feeling; like the gymnast. Getting line to equate with colour is one of the academic bugbears of the Western art tradition. The drawing is A3 in size and sold for 75 gbp. For further examples of my art see: www.alan-dedman-artist.co.uk
Susanna: sketched at St. Martin’s
Friday, June 11th, 2010This is one of several drawings I did of Susanna, a model Eric Luke supplied for us to draw during our first year at St. Martin’s. She was American and she was a lovely shape – voluptuous. Along with Trevor Willoughby, Eric Luke (who studied at the Royal Academy Schools whilst Peter Greenham was Keeper) encouraged a lively line style and quick engagement with the model. I liked drawing Susanna.
Sleeping; as if she were not here: sketched today
Friday, June 11th, 2010This is a fine sketch I did of an old woman whilst she was sleeping. Corpse like, she lies there, eyes closed and mouth open. Unaware of the world and me. I like the thorough way I’ve looked at and recorded the form by use of line. Her face looks like a mask. Her glasses help define the shape of her head. This is the only sketch I made of this person.
Exquisite corpse by me & Winchester alumni
Thursday, June 10th, 2010Produced on New Year’s Day 1999, in Cardiff by myself, Howard Male, Dave Severn and Claire Grove (all of whom but me, studied at Winchester School of Art in the 1980’s under the leadership of Clyde Hopkins) – this exquisite corpse, is exemplary of the ‘rather loose mindset’ of us at the time.
Exquisite corpses were a feature of Surrealist artworking. I use something akin to this as an exercise on one of the London Art College’s courses. I’ve published it for the sake of students studying with us.
Talk for Clevedon Arts Club
Tuesday, June 8th, 2010Tonight: the 8th of June 2010, at St. Mary’s Cof E Church Hall, I will be giving a presentation & talk about ‘My life and my work’. So don’t miss it! Tickets cost £5,000. You won’t be disappointed.
I wasn’t disappointed. The talk went well, according to plan and people seemed to enjoy it. I think the colourful turns about my student life whilst at St. Martin’s in Central London – especially when I worked at the Doll’s House Striptease Revue in Soho, added an extra dimension to the content. So I suppose I must look to what happens next (which is what is happening NOW).
BP award: sketched today
Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010My portrait painting (shown here) wasn’t selected for the National Portrait Award 2010 as sponsored by British Petroleum. However, the effort I made in my third ever art competition wasn’t all wasted. My model came forward six weeks before the hand in date so I had to work, under pressure, and from photo’s more than I wanted, I like to work directly from observation. The Victorian Gothic window in my studio and January sunlight helped to give an air of ‘golden optimism’ to the picture. I will be doing a number of portraits this year and will re-try for selection next year, 2011.








