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View In My Room
Fine Art Paper
9 x 12 in ($40)
White ($80)
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Inspired by the teachings of Eckhart Tolle and other zen buddhism teachers. We create our story through the narrative and interpretation of our thoughts. Thoughts are based in past and future, never the present moment. Thus all thoughts are just thoughts and subject to illusion. Our ego's use our thoughts to rewrite the past or anticipate the future, in a way that satisfies. I enjoy using the immediacy of charcoal and simple use of acrylic on paper. I have finally become very comfortable with my work. It has taken me several years of isolation to distance myself from worrying about what people think of what I do. I treat everything as a private sketch, just focusing on using the work as a means to explore ideas. Mistakes, accidents, changes of direction etc etc all contribute to a dialogue that I find echoes what is in my mind. I like the Hockney observation that a "line has time in it" and I feel my work now has that process and time in it. This work is very personal and part of my journey to awakening and becoming aware of self or non self. Mike Heseltine
2020
Giclee on Fine Art Paper
9 W x 12 H x 0.1 D in
14.25 W x 17.25 H x 1.2 D in
White
Yes
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United Kingdom
Living in Scotland and interested in producing works that speak back to me during their creation. I enjoy making unpremeditated marks and letting them introduce new lines of thoughts. I believe that if I maintain an integrity in this process, without diverting into 'picture making' or being concerned about any finished product, then the image will inherit a special quality, making it a catalyst for thoughts for other viewers. I used to paint large oil paintings but decided to simplify the process in order to concentrate on the subject matter. I tend to start with a single thought, often from a zen buddhist quote, koan or from the Dharma. I contemplate how this thought relates to me and something in my life, and then start drawing. I like loosing control of the pencil, or allowing it to become blunt and thus uncontrolled marks. This process of being very focused on my thoughts but allowing the drawing to be slightly out of control, presents the new lines of thoughts that I find so interesting. For instance, I did a series of drawings on paper depicting the moment I let go of the rope between my small boat and the mooring buoy. This moment never ceases to fill me with both joy and trepidation. In exploring the ideas with ink and pencil on paper, drawing with little attention to the actual lines on the paper, I suddenly realised that the boat I had roughly drawn resembled a coffin. A slightly morbid observation, but it introduced many new and unexpected images and ideas of 'letting go' and the journey we are on in life and death. This is why I now draw with just charcoal, pencil, graphite or ink on paper. There is a spontaneity and freedom which is born from the these materials, rather than using big canvases or more elaborate techniques. For me, this freedom generates the means to create images that have nothing to do with creating art and more about creating thoughts.
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