Lou decided, after watching the celeb-paint-off-challenge portrait thingy on telly, that what she and I really needed to do was
to gather up a kitchen full of art materials, and to spend the afternoon staring
anxiously at ourselves in mirrors. For some incomprehensible reason, I agreed. Lou
grabbed the acrylics and a table easel, I dusted off my oils and the bockety
leg-sliding full-size easel, and with our propped up mirrors in precarious place
we set off on what turned out to be an entire afternoon’s self-portrait painting session.
This was the sunniest, warmest, most glorious day of the year so
far, and we spent it all indoors, utterly focused in rapt concentration, staring intently at every minute
detail of our reflected faces. Which is all very well when you are a smooth
fresh-skinned 20 year old, not so very well when you are a teensy (ahem) bit more mature and have spent quite a number of years successfully avoiding
the fact that you are ever so slightly getting older. Whoever decided that
there are only 7 signs of aging clearly has no idea whatsoever.
Wrinkles aside, painting a selfie turned out to be
enormously interesting and enjoyable. I had no real idea of where to start so I kind of jumped too randomly from loosely painting large flat area to laboriously
fiddling with little details, but gradually a semi recognisable face appeared. Although it is by no means an
exact likeness ( I am adamantly not admitting to being that haggard and worried), neither is it a million miles from resembling the middle aged
woman fixedly glowering at herself in the mirror.
Lou was excellent; she had never painted a portrait before
nor has she much experience with acrylics, but she just dove on in there. I was
deadly impressed with the boldness and surety of her approach. She blocked out
her whole face in big tonal shapes, and then just put in enough detail to make
it right, but not fussy. I think her
portrait is wonderfully striking – and much though I’d love to grab a little
bit of credit for any teaching or motherly inspiration, I can’t actually, she’s
just a natural.
While Lou and I had our mini artist’s colony up and running in the kitchen, Paul was in the garage also working on a self-portrait, one of a series he has been doing lately. Is this normal? Is this how other families spend Easter Sunday? Hmm, I suspect not. This face below is as yet unfinished, I believe will have paint, an aerial, possibly candles; yup, not normal at all!
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