I really enjoy working with wood. I find that it helps give character to my characters. There鈥檚 an existing grain. It splinters. It rips. The lines are never clean. Especially in the subject matter I tend to work within which is industrial history. There is a real rawness to that subject. A rawness that鈥檚 kind of beautifully represented in the rawness of the wood.
Today we鈥檙e gonna work on this large wooden silhouette. Going to fix up the drawing, sort of correct the mistakes and then I鈥檓 going to start carving it. And then I will ink up the whole figure. So what we鈥檒l be left with is a black figure with a detailed face.
This piece here is part of a commission I鈥檓 working on at the moment for a museum. A commission is where someone wants you to produce artwork or artworks for them in return for money. It鈥檚 the commercial side of art.
So the exhibition鈥檚 鈥 it鈥檚 a history of Irish people living outside of Ireland around the world. I sort of start every project with preliminary sketches. I don鈥檛 like to spend too much time on these because no one else is ever going to see these. They鈥檙e not the final product, they鈥檙e about working through an idea.
So I鈥檒l start with these tiny black smudges almost, just looking at how you can read a stance. Then you鈥檒l sort of build that up a little bit further, looking at may be the overall composition, working up towards sort of maybe going a little bit bigger. A little bit bigger and changing the stance and looking at the faces and the little details that can add another level of information.
And from here I鈥檇 almost be ready to go on to the final drawings.
I don鈥檛 think I鈥檝e ever been 100% happy with something I鈥檝e drawn. A bad drawing鈥檚 there to be learnt from and if you don鈥檛 have these reminders, that you weren鈥檛 always perfect, and that you couldn鈥檛 always draw really well, it鈥檚 quite nice to have a reflection point to see your progress.
When Pok茅mon came out, I used to have books and books of circles with all these different creatures that I鈥檇 drawn in them when I must have been like eight years old. And everyone in the class found them really exciting and wanted me to draw them their own figures. And that was sort of like, that kind of, your friends at that age sort of getting really excited about drawing and you being good at something鈥 it hugely encourages you to push it on.
A lot of jobs are about following rules that are already determined. With art you鈥檙e encouraged to make up your own rules.
There are elements to making art that I see as a job. The finding commissions. The applications for prizes. The applications for work.But making the art itself doesn鈥檛 seem like it鈥檚 a job.
It takes a lot of confidence. The idea that you can鈥檛 undo. You can鈥檛 rub out a chisel mark.
To a viewer they might think that I鈥檝e considered every tiny little scratch on this piece of wood. And that they鈥檙e all intentional and really worked. They鈥檙e not. Every time is kind of like an experiment. And every time the chisel touches the wood I鈥檓 taking a risk. I鈥檓 just quite good at pulling them off.
This is the really satisfying bit if you鈥檝e done it right.
It turned out way better than I thought it would鈥
The feeling at the end isn鈥檛 about people saying they like your work. It鈥檚 about people understanding and getting the work without being prompted. At no point do I get the sense of satisfaction of someone saying, oh it鈥檚 really good I like it. But if someone walks in and they start to read in to it and get involved with the work and look at it long enough to start to pull out these little details that I thought no one would ever notice, that鈥檚 when the real satisfaction comes through.