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RWS - 2 Pieces accepted

Great News!!!

2 pieces accepted in the years Royal Watercolour Society “21st Century Watercolour” Competition 20th February – 15th March 2009


The Royal Watercolour Society's annual open competition encourages innovation in the use of water-based media on paper and stimulates fresh approaches to what are considered to be watercolour's traditional strengths.


Artists are limited to 3 pieces so getting 2 accepted is a great achievement and recognition for my work. I’m very chuffed to be given this fantastic opportunity to show my work and hounored that the RWS have chosen my work considering the number of fine artists that submit


The two pieces:

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janet--carol-beside-sh75-p.jpg

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Link to RWS site

 
Work accepted for RSMA 2008

Despite strong international competition and limited places, the critical selection committee chose one of my pieces to be included in the 2008 RSMA exhibition at The Mall Galleries.

I submitted 4 pieces for selection and after a nail biting wait finally received the letter that the work entitled “Blue Wave” had been accepted.

I’m thoroughly chuffed and delighted!

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Royal Society of Marine Artists
Wed 15-Oct-2008 to Sun 26-Oct-2008

Exploring the theme of the sea and all things maritime the 63rd annual exhibition presents the work of some of the world's finest marine artists across a wide range of subjects and media. This year also sees the second appearance of the Shipwrights Young Marine Artists Award, an exciting new prize available to artists aged 16-25.

Admission £2.50, concessions £1.50, Free to FBA Friends, Art Fund members and Westminster Res-card holders

 

Link to RSMA website

Link to Mall Galleries website

 

 

 
LIGHTFAST

By Dr. Sue Roe


Clark’s stylish handling of light is what draws us in, whether he’s evoking the leather interior of a car, the craggy rocks of the Yorkshire Moors, the architectural elegance of a grand hotel or the salty fascination of a landscape. The way he lights his scenes turns them into places of intrigue and fascination.

Though Graham Clark studied graphic design at art college he has never denied being self-taught as a painter. His graphic precision, striking colour combinations and stylish lighting put him in the realm of artists with a strong design sense, inspired by painters such as American Impressionist Ross Sterling Turner, who began his career as a mechanical draftsman in the US Patent Office – though Clark’s vision is undeniably contemporary. It’s the feeling of something unexplained, of a story as yet untold, that’s the special hallmark of Clark’s work. His landscapes often feel as if he’s just stepped ashore, not knowing quite what he’ll find. We wonder what has just happened on the twisting path between the tall trees, in Purple Fields, or in the deserted pagoda, empty of people on a summer’s afternoon, in Magnesia Well, Valley Gardens, Harrogate. That sense of mystery extends to his fascination with nature itself, and takes us to the heart of his vision. A particularly striking example is Farmhouse, Derbyshire, where we just sense that the sudden wash of light, picking out a blue door and a bright, striped wall, will last but a minute before the buildings again blend into the landscape, nestling back into the shelter of the surrounding moors.

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