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A bridge in Waterloo, London - Limited Edition 5 of 50 Print

Liam O'Farrell

United Kingdom

Printmaking, Watercolor on Paper

Size: 18 W x 10.5 H x 0.1 D in

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About The Artwork

NOTE: THE SIZE GIVEN IS THE IMAGE SIZE AND DOES NOT INCLUDE THE LARGER WHITE PAPER BOARDER SURROUNDING. BETTER FOR YOU! Each giclee print is individually signed and numbered . One afternoon I decided to do a painting of a view of Waterloo station in London. I have previously painted the large entrance on Waterloo Road and had it in my mind to do another view of the rather shabby exterior of the station. I was on the north bank and made my way over the Thames over Waterloo Bridge towards the station. I was nearly there and I spotted this scene of this bridge crossing the road just next to St John’s Church. I was really stuck by the harsh shadow across the road and it seemed to me that the railway engineers simply carved a brutal line through the map of London to mark where the line had to go regardless of who lived there. This was done in the days of steam too so life in those upper rooms must have been pretty, noisy, suffocating, and short I shouldn’t wonder.

Details & Dimensions

Printmaking:Watercolor on Paper

Artist Produced Limited Edition of:1

Size:18 W x 10.5 H x 0.1 D in

Shipping & Returns

Delivery Time:Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.

An artist who draws and paints in both watercolour and oil though he says ‘Fundamentally it is all about the drawing. That means drawing in front of the subject, on the street or in the field.” He has featured in The Guardian, many art magazines including Artist & Illustrators and Paint & Draw. Liam has also exhibited widely in the UK and here in London at The Royal Academy Summer Exhibition. Also at The Mall Galleries with The Royal Society of British Artists, and The New English Art Club. Also abroad too as far afield as Tokyo. The ordinary world The trouble with the ordinary is that there is so much of it. When looking at something every day there is a natural tendency not to see it anymore. From there it is a tiny step not to appreciate it. We do this with the place we live, our dearest loved ones and ourselves too. Liam likes to notice, and celebrate the ordinary things in our lives, he believes much of life’s genuine and lasting pleasures are in the everyday world. People and places Even though much of Liam’s work is architectural, the core influences are all about the people. “I couldn’t paint a building or street scene without a population to occupy it and to perform in its space.” He says. The characters that appear in his work are taken from the initial on- site sketches on the day; they are wearing the same clothes and behaving in the manner as he recalls. Influences In regards to painters, Lowery and Stanley Spencer are personal favourites although Walter Sickert and the narratives of William Hogarth are not far behind. Music is also an influence. Often in his market scenes he is a looking for something of the flavour of The Beatles ‘Penny Lane: A song that on the surface is rather cheerful, though close beneath there is a quiet melancholy.

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