From poised purple-tipped silence - Summer exhibitions 2023

‘Well. Then we had the irises, rising beautiful and cool on their tall stalks, like blown glass, like pastel water momentarily frozen in a splash, light blue, light mauve, and the darker ones, velvet and purple, black cat’s ears in the sun, indigo shadow, and the bleeding hearts, so female in shape it was a surprise they’d not long since been rooted out.[…] a sense of buried things bursting upwards, wordlessly, into the light, as if to point, to say: Whatever is silenced will clamor to be heard, though silently.’ — Margaret Atwood

"Unlike many mortals, irises are not unsettled by dramatic changes in circumstance. Perhaps this is because they cradle memories of their ancestors, who fell asleep in autumnal earth as knobbly rhizomes or bulbous bulbs, only to dream and wake some seasons later, tall, slender, studded with purple possibilities,  and brandishing green leaves like pirate swords." Pavithra K. Mehta

"In grocery stores iris buds are bundled together, like perfectly sharpened purple-pointed pencils, like slender indigo-edged spears, like a quiver of Spring arrows poised to unbend unhappy bents of mind. Take a sheaf home, place it in a glass vase and by morning, from poised purple-tipped silence, spill sepals and petals frothy with filaments and ruffles, loquacious little fountains self-released into sunshine, suddenly aware of the greater world." Pavithra k Mehta

"What in your life is calling you, When all the noise is silenced, The meetings adjourned… The lists laid aside, And the wild iris blooms by itself in the dark forest… What still pulls on your soul?" –Rumi


Well I had another wonderful experience at Sala Mattioli for my third annual personal exhibition, lots of interest in my work, lots of new visitors, connections and friends made.

Our group ‘Inclusioni’ will be exhibiting collectively for the 8th time in the beautiful medieval city of Lanciano, this tie we are in 20 artists from various regions of Italy, me being the only non Italian and various forms of medium will be on display for a whole month, I look forard to it greatly, an opportunity to collaborate with fellow artists and wien the net. Buone Vacanze


Limited Edition Giclée prints

A small collection of selected original paintings professionally scanned and reproduced to the highest archival standards into limited edition prints.

Hahnemuhle museum etching matte finely textured natural white 350gsm 100% cotton paper

Editions of 50

Signed, numbered and titled on the front

A donation of 5% will be made on every print to Unione Italiana Lotta alla Distrofia Muscolare, the Italian Union Combating Muscular Dystrophy, a disease close to my heart and life that requires much funding, research and advancements in treatment

With its heavyweight and distinctive chalky feel, this paper has a lightly defined felt structure, lending the artwork a three dimensional appearance and great pictorial depth. The matt premium inkjet coating produces deep, impressive contrast and expert reproduction of detail. Acid and lignin free, museum quality for highest age resistance.

Each edition is carefully wrapped in acid free paper and rolled into a heavy duty postage tube to ensure it reaches you safely. Please note that prints are made to individual order and cannot be returned unless faulty. They all come with a certificate of authenticity. A hologrammed Hanhnemuhle official certificate can be provided on request at an added cost.

The prints are especially made to order, in the first certified Hahnemuhle print press in Italy, a highly professional studio in Rome, so to avoid disappointment please allow up to ten working days for production, in addition to delivery times.

What is a Giclee print?

The term was coined by an American printmaker Jack Duganne in 1991 and describes the way the ink is applied to paper during the printing process. Pronounced zhee’clay, the word comes from the French, meaning to spray, as they are made using high quality ink jet printers.

The quality of a giclee print is far superior to all other forms of printing and is the closest an artist can get to matching their original 2-D artwork. For art lovers who want a piece of fine art but cannot afford an original, giclee reproductions are a close alternative.

The inks are pigment, not dye based, and the papers are archival standard, meaning they last a very long time. Prints can last approx. 200 years in the photo album, 80-years on display behind glass (light fastness) and 50-years without the glass (gas fastness).

https://www.emmaarcherart.com/prints

Please contact me to place an order at emmaarcher@hotmail.com or through social media

Una piccola collezione di dipinti originali selezionati digitalizzati e riprodotti professionalmente secondo i più alti standard di archiviazione in stampe in edizione limitata.

Hahnemuhle museum incisione opaca finemente strutturata bianco naturale 350gsm carta 100% cotone

Edizioni del 50

Firmato, numerato e intitolato sul davanti

Verrà fatta una donazione del 5% su ogni stampa a Unione Italiana Lotta alla Distrofia Muscolare, una malattia vicina al mio cuore e alla mia vita che richiede molti finanziamenti, ricerca e progressi nel trattamento

Con il suo aspetto gessoso e caratteristico, questa carta ha una struttura in feltro leggermente definita, che conferisce all'opera d'arte un aspetto tridimensionale e una grande profondità pittorica. Il rivestimento a getto d'inchiostro opaco premium produce un contrasto profondo e impressionante e una riproduzione esperta dei dettagli. Privo di acidi e lignina, qualità da museo per la massima resistenza all'invecchiamento.

Ogni edizione è accuratamente avvolta in carta priva di acidi e arrotolata in un tubo postale resistente per garantire che ti raggiunga in sicurezza. Si prega di notare che le stampe vengono eseguite su ordine individuale e non possono essere restituite a meno che non siano difettose. Sono tutti dotati di certificato di autenticità. Un certificato ufficiale Hanhnemuhle ologrammato può essere fornito su richiesta a un costo aggiuntivo.

Le stampe sono realizzate appositamente su ordinazione, quindi per evitare delusioni si prega di consentire fino a dieci giorni lavorativi per la produzione, oltre ai tempi di consegna.

Cos'è una stampa giclée?

Il termine è stato coniato da un incisore americano Jack Duganne nel 1991 e descrive il modo in cui l'inchiostro viene applicato alla carta durante il processo di stampa. Pronunciato zhee'clay, la parola deriva dal francese, che significa spruzzare, poiché sono realizzati con stampanti a getto d'inchiostro di alta qualità.

La qualità di una stampa giclée è di gran lunga superiore a tutte le altre forme di stampa ed è quanto di più vicino un artista possa raggiungere per abbinare la propria opera d'arte 2D originale. Per gli amanti dell'arte che desiderano un'opera d'arte ma non possono permettersi un originale, le riproduzioni giclée sono un'alternativa vicina.

Gli inchiostri sono pigmenti, non a base di coloranti, e le carte sono standard d'archivio, il che significa che durano molto a lungo. Le stampe possono durare ca. 200 anni nell'album fotografico, 80 anni in esposizione dietro il vetro (resistenza alla luce) e 50 anni senza il vetro (resistenza ai gas).

https://www.emmaarcherart.com/prints

Se siete interessati a effettuare un ordine contattami su emmaarcher@hotmail.com o tramite la media sociale

Shakad, hasty awakening amygdalus communis, 41x56cm £120 excl delivery

Autumn fig 1, 42x49cm £120 excl delivery

Falling higher, wild iris series 5 42x50cm £120 excl delivery

 

Fiore di mandorlo 3, 30x30cm £85 excl delivery

 

Critical Review / Press article - Giuseppe F. Pollutri for Quiquotidiano

“Floreali”, acquerelli e acrilici di Emma Archer

Mostra Personale alla Sala R. Mattioli di Vasto
Dal 25 al 29 luglio 2021

Nell’avvicendarsi di esposizioni d’arte nella nota Galleria Comunale di Vasto, scopriamo con sorpresa e piacere l’artista inglese Emma Archer.
Originaria di Birmingham (England), laureata in Belle Arti alla “Liverpool  John Moores University”, vive e lavora in Italia, “… paese di cui è sempre stata attratta, fin da bambina”. “L’entroterra vastese dove vivo – leggiamo nel personale blog dell’artista –  è davvero stupefacente nella sua infinita varietà di sfumature. In autunno lo studio è circondato da magnifiche tonalità fiammeggianti. Una danza di seppia, cremisi, ambra, rame, castano dorato, corniolo, ruggine e smeraldo. Toni luminosi, audaci e vibranti. Le colline coperte da tappeti di nobili ulivi, bersò di cascanti viti, le campagne ingiallite con quello che resta dei pomodori estivi, la terra rigirata dei campi appena seminati, erbe e cereali in attesa di germogliare. Cerco di catturare l’essenza di questo paesaggio …”.

Appassionate descrizioni queste di E. Archer che ci portano a guardare i suoi “floreali”, acquerelli e acrilici su carta, non come immagini semplicemente decorative, ma sincere e avvertite narrazioni documentali di una natura vivente, sbocciante e reclinante. I vegetali da cui l’immagine prende spunto, iniziale disegno e colore, giovandosi della tecnica delle sovrapposizioni e delle riprese lavorative in più fasi e riprese, continuano in certo qual modo a porsi in tutto il loro biologico divenire, fiorire ed appassire. In tali elaborate raffigurazioni resta documentato il mutare delle loro essenze linfatiche, delle apparenze non meno, cosicché lo sguardo dell’autrice, prima, del visitatore nella expo, trascorre, come per una lettura labirintica, lungo i tratti pittorici delineati, ora flessuosi e morbidi, talaltra decisamente liberi e ricchi di energia improvvisa.

I suoi quadri – rigorosamente costituite da piccole o grandi tessiture floro-vegetative, rigorosamente  su fondo bianco – parrebbero degli ‘astratti’ d’autore. Sono in realtà traccia semiotica e cromatica dell’appassionato sguardo dell’artista sulla natura in cui ama vivere e costantemente interagire. Appaiono, di là del piacere estetico suscitato in chi guarda, testimonianza di una sua genuina e ferma idea: la convinzione panteistica che il creato tutto, seppur preso e goduto per ciascuna ramaglia, singolo bocciolo, fiore e frutto, per la peculiare e pur mutante sua forma, per il trasmutante colore e il vibrante riflesso di luce sui suo steli e foglie, sono parti interagenti, seppur costantemente mutanti – secondo la lezione del greco Eraclito – di un unicum di natura.

Per ben comprendere l’habitat visivo-emozionale in cui e con il quale l’Archer vive e opera, è fondamentale  far proprio il concetto di “creatività” da lei definito “… un pozzo profondo, pieno di idee, esperienze di vita, desiderio di conoscenza”. Come dire che dal profondo del proprio sentire psichico ci si pone nella luce dell’esistente, personale e relazionale, con un’opera, ad arte compiuta, che sia e rimanga traccia significante, se possibile imperitura, di una ben individuale vita, d’una peculiare vicenda terrena, del terreno divenire del tutto mon meno.

Flowers, watercolour and acrylics by Emma Archer

Personal Exhibition at the R. Mattioli Room in Vasto

From 25 to 29 July 2021

In the succession of art exhibitions in the well-known Municipal Gallery of Vasto, we discover with surprise and pleasure the English artist Emma Archer.

She originally from Birmingham (England), graduated in Fine Arts from “Liverpool John Moores University”, she lives and works in Italy, “… a country to which she has always been attracted, since she was a child”. "The Vasto hinterland where I live - we read in the artist's personal blog - is truly amazing in its infinite variety of shades. In autumn the studio is surrounded by magnificent flaming shades. A dance of sepia, crimson, amber, copper, auburn, gamboge, rust and emerald. Bright, bold and vibrant tones. The hills covered with carpets of noble olive trees, perched with sagging vines, the countryside yellowed with what remains of summer tomatoes, the turned earth of newly sown fields, herbs and cereals waiting to sprout. I try to capture the essence of this landscape ... ".

These are passionate descriptions by E. Archer that lead us to look at her "florals", watercolours and acrylics on paper, not simply decorative images, but sincere and warned documentary narratives of a living, blossoming and reclining nature. The plants from which the image takes its cue, initial design and colour, taking advantage of the technique of overlapping and shooting work in several stages and shots, continue in some way to present themselves in all their biological becoming, flourish and wither. In these elaborate representations the changing of their lymphatic essences, of appearances no less, remains documented, so that the author's gaze, first of all, of the visitor in the expo, passes, as for a labyrinthine reading, along the pictorial lines outlined, now supple and soft , at times decidedly free and full of sudden energy.

Her paintings - rigorously made up of small or large floral-vegetative textures, strictly on a white background - seem to be author's 'abstract'. They are actually semiotic and chromatic traces of the artist's passionate gaze on the nature in which she loves to live and constantly interact. Beyond the aesthetic pleasure aroused in the beholder, they appear as evidence of a genuine and firm idea: the pantheistic conviction that creation is everything, even if taken and enjoyed for each branch, single bud, flower and fruit, due to its peculiar and yet mutant its shape, due to the transmuting color and the vibrant reflection of light on its stems and leaves, are interacting parts, albeit constantly changing - according to the lesson of the Greek Heraclitus - of a unicum of nature.

To fully understand the visual-emotional habitat in which and with which the Archer lives and works, it is essential to embrace the concept of "creativity" defined by her "... a deep well, full of ideas, life experiences, desire of knowledge ". As if to say that from the depths of one's psychic feeling one places oneself in the light of the existing, personal and relational, with a finished work that is and remains a signifying, if possible imperishable trace, of a very individual life, of a peculiar earthly event, of the earth becoming altogether less.

Mostra Personale a Sala Mattioli, Vasto

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Cos’è la creatività? Un pozzo profondo, pieno di idee, esperienze di vita, fede e un continuo desiderio di conoscenza. Creare è ricercare, perlustrare ed inseguire i modelli universali, trovare correlazioni e regole per metterle poi in discussione, andando così ancora più a fondo, fino ad arrendersi e, con coraggio, fidandosi, lasciare che la consapevolezza incontri l’inconscio. Creare è in molti casi un processo libero, astratto ed etereo, effimero come i fiori che io dipingo.

“Il lavoro è ciò che fai ad ore, ma è la passione ciò che trasmetti con un dono” Lewis Hyde.

Cosa significa ‘creare’ in questa nostra società regolata da un sistema economico in cui tutto deve avere un prezzo. È difficile dare un valore monetario alla creatività, che si nutre di passione e originalità, e non dovrebbe essere sottomessa alle leggi di mercato.

Ho cominciato ad ascoltare un podcast in cui un esperto di funghi, Merlin Sheldrake, parlava della loro interconnessione col pianeta, della loro simbiosi con l’ambiente che li circonda e dell’armonia che si genera quando tutti gli elementi naturali si rispettano e vivono in equilibrio. Merlin parlava di questi argomenti con l’intenzione di farci capire, prendendo come esempio l’esistenza silenziosa ma essenziale dei funghi, quanto sia importante considerarci parte di un tutto in stretta interdipendenza. Questo sentimento di appartenenza alla natura, potrebbe portare l’umanità ad un risveglio, alla salvezza del pianeta e alla cura coscienziosa del nostro ecosistema. Le parole di Merlin mi hanno davvero colpito, le sue affermazioni erano l’antitesi dell’individualismo, del separatismo. L’allontanamento del cuore dal corpo, la scissione tra la ragione e l’anima, il distacco tra di noi: non sono forse questi i problemi all’origine del decadimento del nostro mondo? Arrivare a capirlo ed averne consapevolezza potrebbe ridurre i conflitti e incoraggiare la cooperazione?

Nello stesso modo se consideriamo il valore di un albero di mele solo dalle mele che produce, non dimentichiamo forse l’intera sua infrastruttura, ignorando e disprezzando per esempio l’intima e segreta relazione del micelio fungino con le radici dell’albero? Le parti nascoste non sono altrettanto importanti, ed estremamente necessarie, al fine di gustarsi un’ottima mela?

Così ho iniziato a capire che questi meravigliosi fiori che disegno e dipingo, pieni di speranza e appariscenza, non sono altro che la parte più bella di un lento e silenzioso processo di maturazione della pianta e ho notato come questo sviluppo sia paragonabile alla crescita di un artista: lo schizzo di un fiore può sembrare un atto semplice e veloce, ma spesso nei semplici tratti disegnati vi sono anni di sperimentazione e pratica passati a scavare e giocare con le forme e i colori, anche sbagliando, e non solo in campo artistico. Ogni disegno è vitale, contiene dentro di se tutta la strada percorsa, le scelte fatte, le sfide accettate e intraprese, il mondo che ci circonda nel presente e anche il modo in cui tutto questo si adatta nell’intero quadro della vita.

Per questo, mentre dipingo la fioritura di un albero, la mia curiosità e attenzione non è rivolta solo a quel preciso momento ciclico. Mi immergo nelle differenze tra le piante, studiando il loro posto nel paesaggio, riflettendo sul modo in cui il sole colora i loro petali, sull’ambiente che scelgono per crescere, immerse nel ronzio delle api e nelle dolci fragranze. Il modo in cui dipingo i fiori del mandorlo quest’anno potrebbe essere differente dall’anno passato e questo perché il modo in cui percepiamo le cose cambia e l’opera di un artista è un riflesso, non sempre consapevole, di queste infinite combinazioni.

Il mandorlo è il primo albero a fiorire, lo fa ancora in inverno e per questo con la sua rinascita, è un simbolo pieno di speranza. Amygdalus communis dulcis, mandorla dolce. Penso che il nostro passaggio su questa terra serva a riconoscere la sacralità della vita, l’immensa rete di intrecci e connessioni tra le diverse esistenze, questo intreccio quantistico. Vi è qualcosa di così dolce e rassicurante nell’annuale ripetersi del ciclo naturale della fioritura del mandorlo, sempre il primo, inevitabilmente sotto la neve. Questi alberi che profilano la mia veranda hanno un portamento e una presenza affascinante, il brusio delle api che si cibano del nettare dei suoi boccioli è incoraggiante. Dietro di loro il cielo varia da un luminoso azzurro ceruleo ad un grafite, da un platino ad un grigio Payne. Loro si stagliano fieri, a volte spettrali nella sera oscura e misteriosa.

“Vorrei solamente che qualcuno ti abbia detto della tua vera natura. Di quanto tu sia connesso ai ghiacciai di montagna o alle orchidee tropicali. Di come tu sia una derivazione degli antichi pesci e, ancora prima, di una singola cellula che ha scoperto il piacere di unirsi ad altre. Di come la luce delle stelle, da sempre, anima qualsiasi cosa intorno e dentro di te” Dr Elizabeth Sawin

Custodire un uliveto, curando ne e potando ne le piante, i miei dipinti riflettono l’ambiente in cui vivo, con le sensazioni e le meditazioni che scaturiscono dai suoni e dai profumi che mi circondano, dai giochi di luce, arrivando a riconoscere il grande potere terapeutico della natura.

Nei miei quadri lavoro in un sottile equilibrio tra spontaneità e scelte intensionale, cercando di trovare il giusto allineamento. Amo il contatto fisico con le opere più grandi, il fluire, il movimento a dispetto dell’immobilità, l’essere al di sopra del ‘gusto’, tutto è un esperimento, un gioco che rompe gli schemi e crea un conflitto, facilitando la fusione. Traggo un grande piacere da ogni singolo, tratto di gesso o linea, con consapevole del’importanza della musica, che ha nel dare accesso alla parte più profonda di noi.

Lavoro a spinte intermittenti, gli schizzi iniziali vengono a mano a mano riadattati attraverso un processo istintivo. Gran parte delle decisioni ‘estetiche’ arrivano intuitivamente, sul momento. Grafici e piatti campi di colore risiedono arditi vicino a nitidi segni dettati da gesti rapidi, in piena contrapposizione con essi. Mentre lavoro per trovare l’equilibrio nella composizione e sulla tavolozza, trovo un’immensa soddisfazione in un veloce e travolgente tratto di gesso o nel gioco che mi porta a trovare la vibrante energia nel dipinto.

Nei miei quadri parto sempre prendendo spunto dalla natura che modella le mie giornate. I semi che anni fa ho piantato hanno ora generato spirali e turbinii esultanti e vivaci, come i capolini conici dell’echinacea, che con i loro vortici di arancio bruciato si elevano da una corolla di lame pendenti. Ne ammiro le trasformazioni, gli steli sfioriti, cascanti, avvizziti, croccanti, fermi. E che dire del robusto vigore della ginestra estiva, una pioggia di colore, esplosioni di corolle di cadmio dorato e dolci sentori di vaniglia. Ginestra di miele, i suoi fiori sono come piccole farfalle dalle ali giallo limone, dai rami pendono lunghi baccelli che si attorcigliano ed esplodono, e le sue crepitanti teste di limone sono una manna per le inebriate api.

E l’ancestrale, mitologico fico? sono circondata da molti di questi enigmatici alberi neolitici, una delle prime piante addomesticate dall’uomo. Il fico vive da millenni una complessa evoluzione in stretta relazione simbiotica con la vespa del fico tanto che l’uno non potrebbe sopravvivere senza l’altra. La vespa femmina entra, senza più uscirne, dal momento che perde ali e antenne, nel bulbo del fico per deporre le uova. È incredibile pensare che il fiore del fico si trova all’interno del bulbo carnoso, e non veda mai la luce del sole. Questo siconio sboccia dentro sé stesso. Ne risulta un dolce, vischioso frutto mieloso, morbidi rami malleabili e grandi foglie arricciate dai lobi ondosi.

Ho dato vita ad una nuova serie di acrilici su carta prendendo come soggetto i fieri iris selvatici che crescono intorno al mio studio. Movimento e fluidità, staticità e oscillazione. Il gioco delle luci che guizzano tra le foglie e le trasparenze dei petali delicati donano a questi fiori una forma quasi umana. Tra le curve delle corolle, gli steli bulbosi e le barbe lanuginose, cerco di catturare l’afflosciarsi e l’innalzarsi di una natura imprevedibile e in veloce dissolvenza. Questi magnifici fiori racchiudono in loro la speranza, il loro nome ‘iris’ deriva dal greco e significa ‘arcobaleno’, un simbolo che è stato per noi molto importante durante questa ultima crisi mondiale.

Quando dipingo lavoro procedendo per livelli, cosa che i colori acrilici mi permettono di fare perfettamente. I vari strati che ne derivano e che si sovrappongono l’uno all’altro riflettono il mutare delle emozioni, così come i tratti più o meno decisi, liberi e tenui, a volte invece deliberatamente forti, catartici, altre volte spontanei ma pur sempre radicati nelle forme naturali. Il “layering” è un modo per spezzare il campo visivo, separare gli elementi, che, pur essendo indipendenti, si fondono, si ‘scontrano’, mitigano e alleggeriscono, si mescolano in unità.

Vi è una grandiosa energia nel creare!

È la natura stessa che scandisce il ritmo del disegno e della pittura. I passaggi sono dettati dal mutare del tempo e delle stagioni, a volte possono essere irregolari, a volte ripetitivi, sta a me il compito di trovare un equilibrio tra la spontaneità dei tratti impulsivi e la soddisfacente ma monotona simmetria visiva. Come la ‘breakbeat’ spezza e fa vibrare i suoni gutturali e le melodie ancestrali, così l’arte rompe lo spazio visivo.

Sia la natura che l’arte vivono di regole squisitamente combinate con un’istintiva arbitrarietà, mai artificiosa. Qui risiede la spinta vitale, nel trovare l’armonia nelle contraddizioni, confidando nella fluidità intrinseca che è in ogni cosa ..Tutto questo dimora profondamente nella natura ed in tutti noi.

L’entroterra vastese dove vivo è davvero stupefacente nella sua infinita varietà di sfumature. In autunno lo studio è circondato da magnifiche tonalità fiammeggianti. Una danza di seppia, cremisi, ambra, rame, castano dorato, corniolo, ruggine e smeraldo. Toni luminosi, audaci e vibranti. Le colline coperte da tappeti di nobili ulivi, bersò di cascanti viti, le campagne ingiallite con quello che resta dei pomodori estivi, la terra rigirata dei campi appena seminati, erbe e cereali in attesa di germogliare. Cerco di catturare l’essenza di questo paesaggio giallo brillante, dalle tinte sgargianti e livide, che mi porta alla memoria il costante cambiamento, una luce accesa, il lasciar andare, riposando prima di una nuova rinascita, il letargo

What is creativity? a pooling of ideas, experiences, beliefs, curiosities, of searching, looking for patterns, making connections, questioning assumptions, digging deep, essentially it is an act of surrender, of trusting, courage, openness, channeling consciousness or the unconscious. Creating is in many ways a loose, abstract, ethereal labour, transient like the florals I paint.

‘Work is what you do by the hour, but labour is what results in a gift’ Lewis Hyde. What does it mean to create, where do we sit in the economic system, this gift economy where it is so very hard to put a value on creativity in monetary terms.

I started to listen to a podcast with Merlin Sheldrake, his specialisation is fungi, he discussed their interconnectedness recognised by how they exist on the planet. Their symbiosis with the environment, he talked about how if we too were to understand, appreciate this oneness and consider how everything is interlinked this might reduce our destruction of the planet, if we understood how very integral we are we would feel less inclined to want to purge and destroy parts of the living ecosystem. It really struck me that this oneness is the antithesis to separatism, individualism, this disassociation, from heart and body, from mind and soul, from each other and how it is at the root of so many of the world's problems. To understand that enmeshment reduces conflict and encourages cooperation.

He talked too about an apple tree and that if we only valued the apple, you would miss, depreciate the whole infrastructure, how the fungal mycelium interplay with the roots, existing below this intimate relationship, the hidden parts.

I thought about drawing and painting blooms as I do, these flowers are such a magnificent, hopeful, mediatory part of the growing process and I thought about how this relates to an artists practice, that the drawing of the flowers can be quick and easeful but essentially it's the years of experimentation, delving, play, falling, sketching that is so vital, looking at the bigger picture, the lifetime, the deliberations, the fits and starts and also how this all fits in to the whole picture of life, experiences, surroundings.

And when painting blooms, consideration and knowing is made to not only the tree at that point in its cycle but how that particular species differs from others or sits in the landscape, in reflecting the way the sun touches the petals or trying in some way to reflect the surroundings, the sounds of the bees, the sweet fragrance. How I paint the almond blossom may or may not be different this year to last and how that too is a reflection on how so much can change in one cycle. That how these works are consciously or not reflective of this emerging, interconnection.

Painting - Shakad, hebrew for hasty awakening, the almond is the first winter bloom, full of hope, rebirth, amygdalus communis dulcis, sweet almond. I guess we are here to recognise the sacredness of life, the connection to a web of life, this quantum entanglement. There is something soothing about the annual assurance of the cycle of blooms, the first is always the almond, inevitably it snows as it flowers. The trees near the terrace have a haunting, looming presence, the bees drone is encouraging and the skies backdrop varies from bright cerulean, to graphite, platinum to payne’s grey, or they stand proud, ghostly against the dark eerie evening.

“I just wish someone had told you your true extent. How you connect to mountain glaciers and tropical orchids. How you come from ancient fish and before that single cells that found advantages together. How starlight, even now, animates everything about you” Dr Elizabeth Sawin

Custodian to an olive grove, I tend and prune the trees, my paintings emulate the natural environment, sensations, reflections of the sounds and scents, play on light, an appreciation of the therapeutic qualities of the natural world. In the works I work on the balance between spontaneity and deliberation, on getting that alignment, I love the physical connection with the bigger works, the flow, fluidity against the stillness, loose over gusto, its all an experiment, play, breaking down the surface with conflict, ease, melting, I get so much satisfaction from a single sweeping chalk mark or line, the musicality is something I am very conscious of too, accessing deep within us, that guttural vibration, frequencies, the interconnection of movement, pattern, tone.

Working still in intermittent bursts, initial sketches are later adapted in an instinctive, immediate process., much of the aesthetic decision making is done in the moment - intuitively working. Bold, flat, graphic colour fields sit alongside swift, gestural marks contrasting with sharp punchy lines. Finding the balance in composition and palette, play on finding the humming, vibrating energy.

Still working with the forms in nature that shape my day, the seeds planted that form eddy, exultant swirls such as the echinacea’s conical heads, burnt orange vortexes that rise above drooping blades, I love to see the transformations, the sagging, wilting, crisp remains, where motion is fixed. Or the robust, vigour in the summer broom, oozing colour, bombastic in its popping projections of pollen, explosions of golden cadmium corollas & sweet vanilla scents. honey scented broom, ginestra, small yellow papillionaceaous flowers with lemon yellow wings, oblong pods that twist & explode, popping citrus heads for heady bees, glorious summer.

Or the ancient, mythological fig, surrounded by many of these Neolithic, enigmatic trees, one of the first plants to be cultivated by mankind they exist in a complex co-evolution, symbiotic relationship with the fig wasp, neither can exist without the other, the female wasp enters to lay eggs losing her wings and antenna to never leave. The incredible part is that within the bulbous flesh form lies the flower, it never sees the light of day, this syconium blooms inside itself. What remains is a sweet, gooey honey fruit, soft malleable branches and grand lobed waving, curling leaves.

I have proud wild iris’s around the studio and so embarked on a new acrylic series on paper, still trying to get a sense of the landscape that surrounds me. Working on movement and flow, stillness yet fluidity, the play on light flickering through the leaves or the transparancy of the delicate petals, the form of the flowers are so embodying, the curves and containers, the fuzzy beards, hafts & falls, trying to capture the droops and crests, sweeping, dissolving nature. These flowers hold hope and the word iris originates from the greek for rainbow, which has been a true symbol throughout this world crisis.

I work in a layering process but the acrylic paints allows for swathes of colour to be loaded on the brush, the layers give a sense of changing moods or opportunities to vary the mark making, sometimes loose, tenuous, other times with deliberate strength, freeing, spontaneous but also rooted in the natural shapes. the layering too is a way to break down the visual plane, seperate the elements, that are independent but then merge, conflict, soothe, ease, melt into togetherness. There is great energy in creating.

There is a rhythm in drawing and painting, patterns that follow nature itself. May they be irregular or repetitive, it is the play on finding a balance between the pleasure of making satisfying repetitions, visual symmetry to the more impulsive, spontaneous marks. Like beats & breaks, the guttural tones, ancestral tunes that vibrate and then in the knowing of where to break the visual space.

The flow that nature & art provide, meandering, branching, that discernible regularity that is so soothing exquisitely combined with instinctive irregularity, the uncontrived, the push, it is in finding the harmony in the contradictions, trusting the inherent fluency that is in everything. That deeply sits in nature and in us all.

The Vastese hinterlands where I live are truly glorious in their varying tones all year round, autumn time the studio is surrounded with magnificent blazing hues. A dance of sepia, crimson, amber, copper, auburn, carnelian, russet & emerald tones, bright & bold and vibrant. The hills are carpeted with noble olive trees, collapsed vineyards, littered with the remnants of summer tomatoes or freshly turned earth seeded, grasses and grains below germinating. In some way I try to portray an essence of this brilliant landscape, gamboge, lurid & burnished tinges, these changing colours remind us of constant change, of burning bright, of letting go, resting before new growth, hibernation.

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Road of the lonely ones, being enough

 

It has been a while, the hours and days blend & bleed and time feels dormant sludging along in the slow and restorative winter. Little movement in the studio but walks along familiar paths armed with cats, hounds, starlings and a boy. I have made smaller watercolour works on paper reflective of my immediate Abruzzan vicinity and those daily ambles, the hills are carpeted with noble olive trees, collapsed vineyards, littered with the remnants of summer tomatoes or freshly turned earth seeded, grasses and grains below germinating. Journeying - be it proximal is inherently freeing, that desire to move, to be curious, to be watchful, an opportunity to reflect, declutter, loosen, these pandemic days encourage making conscious steps everyday to harbour consistent change in our inner landscape.

“A single footstep will not make a path on the earth, so a single thought will not make a pathway in the mind. To make a deep physical path, we walk again and again. To make a deep mental path, we must think over and over the kind of thoughts we wish to dominate our lives.” Henry David Theroux

I am currently drawing the almond blossom, there is something soothing about the annual assurance of the cycle of blooms, the first is always the almond, inevitably it snows as it flowers. The trees near the terrace have a haunting, looming presence, the bees drone is encouraging and the skies backdrop varies from bright cerulean, to graphite, platinum to payne’s grey, or they stand proud, ghostly against the dark eerie evening.

Working still in intermittent bursts, initial sketches are later adapted in an instinctive, immediate process., much of the aesthetic decision making is done in the moment - intuitively working. Bold, flat, graphic colour fields sit alongside swift, gestural marks contrasting with sharp punchy lines. Fluidity against stillness, loose over gusto, finding the balance in composition and palette, there is so much satisfaction in a sweeping chalk mark, or a play on finding the humming, vibrating energy. The next works will be a few more abstracted florals and landscapes, experimenting still with balance and techniques and drawing on the surrounding natural landscape.

I would like to collaborate or find way to introduce into my work interests in inspiring movements that I see in the world, sometimes home can be isolating and I feel need for connection and involvement, Covid has exacerbated inequalities, gender inequality consistently shows that women have shouldered the greatest burden, I see conversations about climate feminism and how changing the cultural, societal, political landscape to empower girls and women can have a major positive shift in climate change, 80% of peoples displaced in climate change are women, whilst they are agents of change women are mostly excluded from decision making, I would like to find a way to incorporate tenderness, cooperation, sovereignty into my paintings. Or does everything that you learn and unlearn, grasp and inhabit directly leak into the work. There are so many conversations to ne had, so much listening to do.

“Between stimulus and response there is a space. In that space is our power to choose our response. In our response lies our growth and our freedom” ViKtor Frankl

Over the next few months - I am pleased to have a painting selected as part of the VAA International Online Exhibition which will take place from 12th April - 30th June 2021 #VAAOPEN #visualartistsassociation and I am planning to organise a solo show this summer in Vasto, which I decided to hold off on last year. I also have pieces available as part of the generous & novel artists support pledge, a movement that has single handedly changed the entire creative landscape during the pandemic and established a new micro economy within the art market. “You give generously, you receive gratefully and you give back.” #artistsupportpledge

 

the seeker becomes the finder in the end

“Breath is a thread that connects us to the world. And when there is ambivalence about the safety of existing in the world, that thread can become tenuous.” Gabor Mate

Curious about the connections between the peaceful, freeing space of creativity and how to sit in that more & more within the day to day, accessing that beauty as a more general state of being. Current world ways of thinking and operating seem to be calling out for a more conscious, less individualistic, gentle, truthful, connected appreciation of our living, planet and purpose. All homed in the translations of creativity, culture truly forms the cogs of our society, the foundation to how we see politics, economies, societies, science, landscapes and it shapes how we feel, express, empathise and connect to each other. Despite art forms being massively undervalued & unsupported for the most part, we truly need this reflective , contemplative space to navigate, process the complexities of existence and layers of uncertainty, to find strength and form hope. We need to protect the arts as much as this precious planet, our capacity to care about the future is crucial to our ability to preserve it. The last few months I have listened to more healing, uplifting podcasts and readings, there is much to be found in accessing freedom, from ourselves for the most part but also from the archaic systems & conditioning, tapping in to more awareness. Similar to the space found when drawing or painting, a subtle consciousness where there is no room for criticism, fear, deliberation, mind noise, duality or hesitation.

Still working with the forms in nature that shape my day, the seeds planted that form eddy, exultant swirls such as the echinacea’s conical heads, burnt orange vortexes that rise above drooping blades, I love to see the transformations, the sagging, wilting, crisp remains, where motion is fixed. Or the robust, vigour in the summer broom, oozing colour, bombastic in its popping projections of pollen, explosions of golden cadmium corollas & sweet vanilla scents. Or the ancient, mythological fig, surrounded by many of these Neolithic, enigmatic trees, one of the first plants to be cultivated by mankind they exist in a complex co-evolution, symbiotic relationship with the fig wasp, neither can exist without the other, the female wasp enters to lay eggs losing her wings and antenna to never leave. The incredible part is that within the bulbous flesh form lies the flower, it never sees the light of day, this syconium blooms inside itself. What remains is a sweet, gooey honey fruit, soft malleable branches and grand lobed waving, curling leaves.

Usually suffering in some form leads to inquisition and a realisation that this sweetness, purity, energy, presence or peace comes from deep within, not on the surface or in the flights of reaction but it is part of interconnection, something greater and of greatness.

“The one who plants trees, knowing that he will never sit in their shade, has a least started to understand the meaning of life’ Rabindranath Tagore

lockdown abundance in Italy

And so with all good intention to create the planet has other ideas in deciding to halt everything and this is the way of living, we cannot know the future and it serves well to be willing and able to realise that uncertainty & insecurity is to be accepted and embraced.

With ten years in the making of a deliberate step back from the holds of a busy existence & seemingly unjust systems we have in some ways been self isolating for a number of years now and in not having secure jobs or incomes we have acclimatised albeit not easily to the stresses that come with financial insecurity but in appreciating the world in alternate ways.

The last month or so has been interweaved with beautiful days working on the land, the peace of being in nature alongside moments of grief and sadness at the gravity of the world situation. I have chopped wood, grown seeds, meditated and played with my young son and mulled over the shift, this new paradigm shift the world seems to be taking. This truly is a time for interconnectedness and presence, utter & attuned living in the moment.

While nature carries on, humanity is forced to change its habits and work in different ways, many will work under highly tragic circumstances. We understand and appreciate the value of those tirelessly putting their lives at risk for the greater good and those humbly keeping the fabric of society together and we know the true absurdity and abuse of greed and capitalism as it falters and reveals.

When in this lifetime has there been such collective adversity, hours to reflect and to listen, share in communal compassion and be in new and creative ways.

Furnishing us all more heart space and without doubt and gladdened we will all be changed forever.

Art offers refuge in times of crisis and I too need to find time to create but also to use art to process. A form that feels so excruciatingly essential I have worried will not be seen as in these days. But there is certainty that artists will continue to create and that institutions will break the boundaries to exhibit in new and exciting ways.

I have uploaded paintings that I made in January and the start of February, almond & olive branches, I have toyed with this as I realise that buying art is not essential and for many a consideration that is not feasible but it may be the only way for us to live in these times without savings or government support.

I did book an exhibition space in Vasto to exhibit mid July, all pending, I will make updates later in the year.

Sending love & peace & strength in these unprecedented times.

I am offering paintings as part of #artistsupportpledge, instigated by @matthewburrowsstudio
The premise is to try and support the creative community.
Many including myself in the current covid crisis are finding that they have no income at all or financial support or savings, this pledge is a self sustaining lifeline to fellow artists across the globe.
Works for sale are no more than £200 (excluding shipping) and every time you reach £1000 of sales you pledge to buy another participating artist's work for £200.

A movement not a business. Give generously, receive gratefully

Please look at my instagram or facebook account to see works that will be put forward or my website https://www.emmaarcherart.com/fiore-di-mandorlo-1

Please contact me if you are interested in purchasing. Anyone can purchase.
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I think it's worth keeping in mind that as we look inward and are potentially self-isolating, we turn to artists, film-makers, writers, musicians, designers etc to give us hope and comfort. These creative industries are the ones who will really struggle, also as the second jobs individuals often have to support their practice are also in jeopardy. Support can be a kind word, a shared post, or buying a product. And lets face it you are buying a piece of art that will not lose value and is a shared moment in an artists life, many hours toil and experimentation, passion, expression, a work never to be made again.

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2020 - quickening

So it begins this new decade, greeted with the intention to create or at least be in the studio more often, let certain parts of building & maintaining the house, the works on the land or other work commitments slope to the side and lean in more to this artistic grip.

I have stretched up a few more bigger pieces and love the freedom & visceral connection they bring. Still working from the plants that surround the studio space, it is in this contemplative place where progress is made, through the hours you discover, engage in the slight transformations/shifts in the interpretations of shapes by loosely drawing from the various structures of branches & foliage.

There is a rhythm in drawing and painting, patterns that follow nature itself. May they be irregular or repetitive, it is the play on finding a balance between the pleasure of making satisfying repetitions, visual symmetry to the more impulsive, spontaneous marks. Like beats & breaks, the guttural tones, ancestral tunes that vibrate and then in the knowing of where to break the visual space.

The flow that nature & art provide, meandering, branching, that discernible regularity that is so soothing exquisitely combined with instinctive irregularity, the uncontrived, the push, it is in finding the harmony in the contradictions, trusting the inherent fluency that is in everything. That deeply sits in nature and in us all.

I will carry on enjoying this process and hope to portray the aliveness that is in everything, the quickening, that sweet spot.

I am intending on exhibiting this summer in the nearby beautiful coastal, medieval city of Vasto & so I am working towards that. This is the soul work.

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December endurance

I have been plonking myself in the studio for about 3-4 hours every day over the last few weeks and so have felt really blissful, creating like anything requires determination, endurance and well quite honestly putting the hours in to truly make progress. I have also realised how crucial drawing & painting is to me as far as maintaining a sense of peace & hope, I just don’t quite think I had realised how not creating had affected me. I have been drawing since a little girl & art in all forms is just so very crucial to the world in so many ways especially in the current political climate.

I am really happy with the bigger work on paper that I have made, something that I just wouldn’t have even embarked on over the last few years due to limited time, it is strange how when I felt the minutes that I could put in meant I zoomed down to just small works that I knew could be left for a while to come back to, the layering process helps with that as I guess is the way of life too, the days add texture, nuances and shifts & new experiences to process or just float over. Whilst I write I wonder if the flowing ribbons, the fluidity I try to create has something to do with the timescales, marks & thoughts flow in & out & through or bounce off. The intimacy of making art blending with those concentrated moments in the studio.

The bigger painting, paper stretched on board felt more freeing, more connection with the physical space. Reflections of the beautiful bright autumn landscape whilst drawing and making shapes drew me back to the days when I made much bigger drawings & canvases, seascapes, the size has more depth but I realise that I have almost started where I left off with over a 15 year gap. Those organic abstract marks are there as a part of me, the landscape, nature itself, already concrete and I am trying to fathom, draw them out of me, of what I see.

New works I have added to my website, there are two smaller series of four abstract pieces each, studies of a painting I made in September based on the foliage of an abundant almond tree outside the studio in the late summer. A reflection of the beautiful botanical landscape. These are all painted on Saunders Waterford 300gm 100% cotton rag NOT surface watercolour paper.

Here’s to more long stretches and the courage to create no matter what.

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Autumn awareness

The Vastese hinterlands are truly glorious this time of the year, the studio is surrounded with magnificent blazing hues. A dance of sepia, crimson, amber, copper, auburn, carnelian, russet & emerald tones, bright & bold and vibrant. I have been working on and still mid flow on a few organic foliage larger paper works trying to in some way portray an essence of this brilliant landscape, gamboge, lurid & burnished tinges, these changing colours remind us of constant change, of burning bright, of letting go, resting before new growth.

I forget how alive this season is, the colours seem more ablaze this year or have I underestimated how incredible nature is.

I have added 4 new abstract works for sale to my website, these are studies from a few almond foliage paintings that I made in September.

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exhibition within the subtle, trusted castle turret walls, sympathetic & gracious space in our little corner of paradise, 9&10 August

I am feeling very contented after a few frenetic days to have hung a new collection of botanical works within the beautiful castle grounds of our little village, the space is incredible and the works look magical, two nights where our local artisan dish is celebrated, fires stoked in front of the castle walls and the courtyard a brim with the din of community spirit

with thanks to our friend my Big Phil who trekked the alps to bring all of the framing kit that we had bought over christmas but couldn’t drive back in our stolen van, we now have a little space set up where Rob can create beautiful bespoke hand made frames, his history still defines him

happy to back out there creating and painting and working in wonderful spaces, if walls could talk

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new works available online now

I am excited to announce the launch of a whole new collection of botanical works, painted sporadically over the last few months and ready to view and purchase online

I have realised over the last few months how crucial making art is to me, something that has always been such a huge part of my life but in limited proportions

that nameless desire, beauty, sacredness that comes from creating, in the stillness of the studio immersed by nature is truly a wonderful thing, to be treasured, nurtured & shared

it is an indescribable experience to enter the space of creating, the mind becomes free, time lifts and I feel such joy & inner peace

what happens to the physical forms, the works after completion becomes a wonder, whether they become the visual landscape for somewhere or someone else, should they reflect in some way the love, energy or just simple expression that went into them, is it of importance, something I have pondered

‘everything is honoured but nothing matters’

I have a collection of 20 watercolour paintings available on paper and a couple of simple drawings, I am happy to arrange paid shipment world wide, please feel free to contact me with any enquires, commissions also available

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