Sea Scours Seaford’s Shingle

Sea Scours Seaford’s Shingle

It was in 1987 that the groynes on Seaford beach were buried under tons of imported gravel, brought in to boost the defences along the beachfront. Over the last few months I have photographed and written in two earlier posts about the Environment Agency’s...
Impressionism in Winter

Impressionism in Winter

I always used to hammer it into students that a sketch book was their personal idea library. Not a scrapbook, as so many lecturers allowed them instead, but a place in which you record manually your response to external stimuli, through using eyes and some form of...
Capturing the Colour and Movement of the Sea

Capturing the Colour and Movement of the Sea

The Impressionists went to the south of France for the light. English artists found their vision at home,  Constable in Suffolk, Turner in Sussex. Sussex is now my ‘home ground’ and the light  is startling in its clarity, cleansed by sea breezes and...
Practicing my Scales

Practicing my Scales

Musicians practice their scales hour after hour, and play practice pieces over and over again, seeking perfection. In my new studio I too am practising my scales – my colour sense is being subjected to physical testing, using different media to play games and...
Sixties London

Sixties London

The news that London is the most popular tourist destination on the globe will come as no surprise to Londoners. It comes as a  mixed blessing for those who have to endure never ending crowds of rubber-neckers, people carrying rucksacks larger than themselves on the...
Life with the Lions

Life with the Lions

I’m very lucky to have relations in South Africa. This makes travelling to the Dark Continent relatively affordable, but generally tourism to Africa, especially safari tours, is an expensive activity for a European or American. Yet over 40% of tourists to SA...