...please go to my instagram account here. It is updated frequently with current and archival work.
For a selection of finished works and concepts, go here.
This blog is no longer regularly updated. It remains, however, a large achieve of artworks. They include:
A large number of free sketchbook drawings in china marker, done from life in the cafe, the university, various airports, lounges, subway cars, parks and bars.
Etchings, mostly printed at the Open Studio in Toronto, Ontario. And also drypoints.
A good number of watercolours, chiefly painted on site in Italy, France, and elsewhere.
A masterly and sombre series of English landscapes done in black ink over the course of three weeks in May, 2011, in the hills of Surrey near Guildford. These remain some of my best work.
A great selection of life drawings, mostly in ink, from the TAP Centre for Creativity in London, Ontario; from Bijan's School of Art, also in London, Ontario; in bondage and kinky costumes, in Toronto; and from the long running Toronto life drawing group, the Collective.
A large array of drawings made by Tarragon Smith on the iPad or iPhone.
Some of Tarragon Smith's beautiful pottery. More of Tarragon's ceramics may be seen (and purchased!) at his commercial site.
More categories are at the bottom of the page.
Drawings almost every day by Romney David Smith and Tarragon Smith. Occasionally paintings or etchings or silkscreens. Or whatever else catches our fancy.
Thursday, July 5, 2018
Sunday, July 1, 2018
Two Seek Adventure
That Wednesday, Carmen and Carmichael had a field trip to the Villa di Pratolino near Florence. The class of children rampaged through the garden's geometric alleyways, and sometime before noon Carmen, leading Carmichael by the hand, found the giant.
They weren't supposed to slip past the fence and shuck their shoes by the waterside. They shouldn't have have waded out into the water. Above all, they should never have looked up at that rocky face and said - with the insouciance of extreme youth - hello.
The Apennine Colossus may still be seen at Pratolino, in the remains of the garden laid out by Francesco di Medici in the 1570s. It was created by Giambologna, greatest of the sculptors of the mannerist era, some of whose more famous works are in the Loggia di Lanzi in downtown Florence.
They weren't supposed to slip past the fence and shuck their shoes by the waterside. They shouldn't have have waded out into the water. Above all, they should never have looked up at that rocky face and said - with the insouciance of extreme youth - hello.
The Apennine Colossus may still be seen at Pratolino, in the remains of the garden laid out by Francesco di Medici in the 1570s. It was created by Giambologna, greatest of the sculptors of the mannerist era, some of whose more famous works are in the Loggia di Lanzi in downtown Florence.
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