Blackfriars Railway Bridge - Original Painting
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Blackfriars Railway Bridge: Engineering Meets Art
The abstraction of Blackfriars Bridge.
If you hadn’t seen the title, would you know what you are looking at? Once we understand what we see, it’s hard to unsee it. This is Blackfriars Bridge seen in close up detail. The closer you look, the more abstract it becomes.
I developed my technique as an abstract style. The focus was on mark making, repetition of patterns, how a series of movements produces a line shape. That you can repeat the movement, but each line shape will be slightly different in subtle ways. These patterns exist in architecture, patterns of rivets, arch supports, windows, vertical supports and inner bracing. They may be identical in size and shape or vary to accommodate a curve, as in the painting, but the patterns of construction in the various elements or layers are the same. Looking at Blackfriars bridge, you can see the strata of construction, layers of changing patterns and a rhythm of marks. These areas of similarity take on characteristics of the paint layers, in subtly different ways. Darker here, mottled there, spiky tendrils elsewhere. In real life, weathering affects a building in different ways, depending on external forces. Some are rusty, others over painted, shattered, battered by rain, twisted by tools.
When a building is new and pristine. It can feel featureless, but add a few decades of elemental attack, and the uniformity gives way to craggy inconsistencies. And when you’ve finished admiring Blackfriars, look down and right where there’s a whole new bridge to look at. Pretty in Pink Waterloo Bridge hides in the corner. Are you drawn to its novelty? Or will you stay gazing at Blackfriars Bridge itself, in all its blue glory? For it is very blue. I might have used every single blue ink I own on this project?
Totally worth it!
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