, , ,

Impressions of Westminster Bridge – Original Painting

£879.00

Impressions of Westminster Bridge – An original painting by Cathy Read.
Created in England in 2020. The painting is 41cm high by 59.4 cm wide.

The painting includes a certificate of authenticity.

Framing: The painting is currently unframed The painting is 42 cm high x 59 cm wide, framed size is approx 60cm high x 77cm wide. Framing will be arranged in white.frame with double mount off white and dark grey.  Please allow up to three weeks for framing.

Framed images are for guidance only and may differ slightly from the actual framing.

Care: Display under glass. Keep painting away from moisture, heat and bright lights or direct sunlight

All copyrights are retained by the artist, and the artwork cannot be reproduced without consent from Cathy Read.

Impressions of Westminster Bridge – Original Painting

About the Image

Cathy Read’s painting, ‘Westminster Bridge – Impressions of Westminster had a working title of ‘Westminster Bridge: descriptive, safe, and boring.  Although dissatisfied with it, nothing better came to Cathy’s mind. But as she meditated on the painting more deeply, ‘Impressions of Westminster’ came to her. A suitable name when considering one of London’s more contentious bridges.

With seven iron-ribbed elliptical spans across the Thames by the Houses of Parliament, the arch bridge is clear and solid.  It opened in 1862, making it the oldest surviving road bridge across the Thames in central London.  Its size is deceptive because in the painting, scale is relative. What may appear massive in one situation is smaller in another – but more on that later.

Bold Westminster Bridge

On various grounds, the Westminster Bridge has permission to be bold. An ancient structure rebuilt to reflect its significance as a thoroughfare. At one time the bridge was nicknamed the ‘Bridge of Fools’ because at the time funding was not raised in the typical way (private enterprise and tolls); instead, money was raised via a then-fashionable ‘lottery’.  Even its colour – green – is significant.  In 1970 it was painted to match the seats in the House of Commons standing near the bridge.

The Westminster Bridge bold structure hogs the scene. County Hall stands reticently behind – its terracotta roofs studded with dormer windows and elegant flagpoles – regimentally white against the tiles. And here solid solidity begins to fail… artistic impressions emphasis a sense of more transient matters.

The sky is a stark, pale hue emphasizing the large contrasting structures that stand ghostlike in the scene. The Southbank Place apartment block and London Eye, upon close examination, reveal details, but so subtly, that in places the effect is transparent; almost invisible.

Scaled Significance in the Westminster Bridge Scene

In the Thames River there is the merest suggestion of water around a cruise boat. A quick wide stripe of red interrupted by the words ‘River Cruise’ picked out in white. A few trim lines and windows are all that give substance to this boat. Even the prow peters out into the waves as they reflect the sun.

Cathy mentioned scale earlier. Look closely, and notice a crowd atop the boat. A mass of people huddled together, watching the world pass by from their vantage point.  Some point, while chatting.  Others just enjoy the view.  A few squiggles and changes of colour suggest the last individual’s features.

Glancing along Westminster Bridge there are more people – tiny lined up specks of colour. Even the vehicles are small and diminished in significance.  A red London bus disappears to the left, followed by a white lorry with blue panels and the car roofs are last against the County Hall walls. Even ornate streetlights disappear in the daylight visible atop the bridge signals.

Finally, notice the ink tendrils. Cathy usually considers these as life force reflections emanating from buildings in use. Here they seem to take on a different role.  Bold statements marking rising from County Hall, and the London Eye may be a defined progress into uncharted spaces? All the colours seem to escape, reaching out for some elusive future suggestion. What could it be?


Creation: Masking fluid is painted onto watercolour paper to create an image. This is covered with a watercolour wash and covered with clingfilm. The picture is further developed using acrylic inks once the film is removed. The masking is removed after several layers are added and allowed to dry. Revealing the final picture.

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Only logged in customers who have purchased this product may leave a review.

Scroll to Top