sugarloaf under snow

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Around Christmas two years ago we had the first proper snow in years. The kids and I went up to the back of Powerscourt Golf Course for some fun and while there I took some reference photos. This little painting was one of a series that came from that day. It shows the sugarloaf mountain, which in truth is really a not much of a mountain but is iconic of Wicklow, the county where I live.

Sugarloaf under snow 8×8 inch on gessoed bord.

Anyway, an outside broadcasting company (Observe), based in Wicklow, have used the image on their Christmas Card this year. So this picture is now winging it’s way around the world to their customers and clients as we speak.

Very fitting as it’s snowing here this morning. Just a light dusting, but very festive all the same.

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source: tinywhitedaisies

 

Sugarloaf under snow 8×8 inch on gessoed bord.

 

better joy in a cottage than sorrow in a palace & an almost sell out weekend

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better joy in a cottage than sorrow in a palace

One of the small paintings destined for the Doorway Gallery’s christmas show.

better joy in a cottage than sorrow in a palace 25x35cm oil on canvas

An almost sell out weekend in London

The Affordable Art Fair In Hamsptead Heath, London closed it’s doors Sunday night and was a great success all round and an almost sellout of my paintings. 18 large paintings sold and 1 commission!

RDS Art Fair

Next weekend I’ll be at the RDS Art Fair Dublin and I’m hoping to see you there if you are near by. If you need tickets just email me.

Wet and wild in Lahinch

While all that activity was going on in London, 8 of us, if you include the odd adopted daughter, our student/aupair Francesca, the dog and the kitten (I know…you don’t need to tell me I’m mad I already have the papers) headed west for the weekend.

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Wet and wild with 12 ft waves in Lahinch this weekend but it was 16 degrees so not cold.

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We had a great few days before returning to trick or treat last night.

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kenny’s pub & wilderness explorers

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kenny’s pub

Sold at Lahinch Art Gallery over the summer.

moy village

moy village

Actually when I say village, that’s a bit like calling Dublin a metropolis, it’s more like a hamlet. This one is the last of a series of small paintings from that area around Lahinch and it’s now for sale at the Lahinch Art Gallery along with a few others to keep it company.

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wilderness explorers

We are still camping in the wilderness (25 minutes from home) and having a blast. I am using a mixture of pre scheduling and sneaking away to a coffee house with wi-fi to post this.

an’ all that jazz & buttered cat anti-gravity

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an’ all that jazz

Yes, that’s geranium lake again in the background. The second of three paintings that feature this colour in all it’s glory. The only way to deal with colour obsession is that go with it! This painting is only 20x20inch. Totey by my usual standards.

an’ all that jazz 20×20 inch oil on canvas

buttered cat antigravity

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If you drop a buttered piece of bread, it will fall on the floor, butter-side down.

If a cat is dropped from a window or other high place, it will land on its feet.

But what if you tie a buttered piece of bread–butter-side up–to a cat’s back, and then toss them both out the window?

Will the cat land on its feet? Or will the butter go splat on the ground?

Consider that (a) the laws of Butterology demand that the butter must hit the ground, and (b) that the equally strict laws of Feline Aerodynamics demand that the cat cannot land on its back.

Since nature would have no way to resolve this paradox, it just can’t happen–the buttered cat construct simply does not fall!

Yes, this is indeed the secret of anti-gravity!

A buttered cat will, when released, quickly move to a height where the forces of cat-twisting and butter repulsion are in equilibrium.

This equilibrium point can be modified by scraping off some of the butter, to provide lift, or by restricting movement of the cat’s limbs [using say, duct tape?--ouch!] to allow descent.

Most of the civilized species of the Universe already use this principle to drive their starships while traveling within a planetary system.

The loud humming heard by most sighters of UFOs is in fact the purring of several hundred cats.

There is one obvious danger, of course. If the cats manage to eat the bread off their backs they will instantly plummet.

Naturally, the cats will land on their feet, but this usually doesn’t do them much good.

Since right after they make their graceful landing several tons of red-hot starship and pissed off aliens crash down on top of them.

No really!

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