Thursday, July 11, 2013

Inspiration

A task set for a June 2013 Leeds Savage Writers meet I did not make .

The bastard motivation of passion and obsession drove Stewart to his canvases.  The early morning had begun to leach a grey dullness from the chill summer night.  A thick palette board he’d left on the chair a few hours ago was taunting him with its gelled pigments smeared and globbed in vibrant discord.   Stained rags lay matted and stiff around the base of the easel and around the studio where they had been dropped onto the colour encrusted floorboards days, weeks and years ago.  The room was a complete chaos encasing another astounding work of focus, depth and clarity on canvas.  Similar pristine images shone from countless abandoned and partially complete canvases laid angularly against the walls, the furniture and nestling on the  piled detritus of the room.
What he called the studio was a front room upstairs, usually the main bedroom.  It was in one of the damp stone terraces crammed into the bleak back streets of Ayreshire, three down from a derelict pub and a bleak co-op.  It was the only room in the socially funded house that glimpsed the southern sky and could steal any benefit from daylight.  It had been Stewart’s retreat and sanctuary for 20 years.  Two decades of chasing perfection in his style of almost transparent oil painting. His works had developed over this time and become fantastical creations of layer upon layer of disparate images all interlinked and visible through each other.  Each layer held a story with related meaning and subtext to the greater story told by the finished work.  Painted transparent images laid one over each other like each were on a gossamer film.  Stewart knew he had developed an exquisite and deceptive technique that took the eye to depths of perspective and wonder.  He knew he had broken new ground, he knew he was doing something the art world would eventually recognise. This canvas, the one he’d titled ‘Inspiration’ was one of four in a series but he knew it would be this one that was going to make his name.
The Scottish Academy submission dates were three days away from closing and this work was complete, along with three lesser but related works.  Stewart cleared a space to prop them.  Working without the uncertainty of previous years he placed one beside the other and finally took the final piece off the easel to take it’s position next to the triptych.  The display was stunning, pleasing, fulfilling, a justification of dedication and a clear reflection of the faith and support Jillie had given him.  The four works were also an acknowledgement to the facility that Glenn had invested in him by providing a stipend, a goal and a contract for publication of his work in limited edition.
One never knows if an artist will become popular but Glenn had a better eye than most dealers when it came to commercialism of contemporary art.  He had a strong gut feel that Stewart’s unique style would tap a niche of collectors to be milked.  There was no way he could have known that six weeks after signing Stewart to his company that the Scottish Academy would award ‘Inspiration’ its highest praise and award.  There was no possible indication that from that endorsement the Savoy in London would offer Stewart the chance to be Artist in Residence for 2013.    Until 2012 The Savoy had not had an artist in residence since Claude Monet so the appointment of Stewart, a little known, no, an unknown Scottish painter had set the art critics into a spin.  Estelle Lovatt on the BBC  has been quoted to say Stewart was the one new artist for speculators to invest in for now and for the aesthetics of the future to marvel and comment on. 
Stewart had always known.

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