JANETTE KERR is known for her elemental paintings. Here she writes about the sea and why it is an inspiration.
Janette Kerr in her studio |
Making work en-plein-air is integral to my working process. I seek immersive experiences - extremes of changing land and sea, and physical and meteorological shifts. I draw while out in boats with waves washing over the deck, crouched with my sketchbook and paints on rocks by the sea, blown across hills by gusts of wind, drenched by spray and sleet, going home with salt-encrusted skin. Sailing from Longyearbyen to Fuglefjorden on a tall ship in 2016, l drew beside glaciers, drifting mist hanging in dark snow-strewn mountains - a thunder-grey and pale blue world.
Stretch out you Arms | oil on canvas |
My painting has always been informed by history and science, reading first-hand accounts of storms and loss of life, of the disastrous yet compelling journeys of travellers in the frozen Arctic. I have spent time with oceanographers learning about the complex topography of the sea, the formation of waves - the impact of depth and terrain as a wave ‘feels’ the bottom of the ocean – and of extreme seas. I’ve talked to Shetland fishermen, hearing about the moder dy (‘mother wave’) - the name given over a hundred years ago to a wave-like motion or swell observed best in foggy weather, and by which they could navigate:
‘…no matter how fierce the gale, how wind-riven and uncertain the billow, the methodical undulations of the moder dy could be seen across the hills and valleys of a wind-tormented sea, always setting four-square towards the land.’
All this has made me far more aware of the dynamic complexity of the sea, which, together with my experiences of being out in it, are woven into the artwork.
Making a painting is perhaps like mapping an uncharted place; a searching for a path, a way through. The artist is adrift on an inward voyage; experience mediated through our body, so knowledge of our surroundings will always be partial and particular. The process of painting, of layering and removal, of veiling and unveiling, is perhaps analogous with the sea. Fleetingly the horizon is glimpsed, then tilts and shudders, simultaneously bringing into focus one level while another recedes, cloud becomes a crest of a vast wave; sunlight seems to burgeon from the depth of the waters not from above. I’m trying to transform something physical into something emotional and visceral.
The ocean is at once extraordinary, exhilarating, desirable, terrifying, and tragic. It is an integral part of the human psyche to enjoy nature and the power of the sea at its most elemental. We are drawn to it. Scientist and ecologist Rachael Carson:
‘Each of us carry in our veins a salty stream in which the elements sodium, potassium and calcium are combined in almost the same proportions as seawater. This is our inheritance.’
My art is and will always be a resonance between an internalized world and an external one.
‘And so we re-enter it mentally and imaginatively, recreating a world that, in the deepest part of our subconscious mind, we have never wholly forgotten’.
Janette Kerr PRWA
April 2018
www.kilmorackgallery.co.uk
www.kilmorackgallery.co.uk/janette-kerr-artist
Silence, Vasahalvoya | oil on canvas | 120cm x 130cm |
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