In this video I chat about how painting can sometimes feel like setting off on a trip with no idea of the destination. When I start painting I can’t always predict the direction the paintings will take. The act of painting can feel like an adventure to an unknown land.

No idea how they will develop…

I’m currently working on a series of new paintings, developing several at once, edging them all forward slowly. Sometimes I enjoy the challenge of a destination which is totally unknown to me, of taking a blank surface and turning it into something alive with paint and colour and pattern… When I started these paintings I had no idea how they were going to develop or what they were going to become. They’re not yet finished, they are still becoming.

Sense of discovery

Sometimes when I create, I have a clear end result in mind, clarity about what I’m creating, I have an idea, a plan and execute on that plan. But in this instance, I set sail with no intended destination in mind. I enjoy the sense of discovery and problem solving which comes with developing a painting with no clear agenda or idea of where I’m going, I take one step, then another and another. I found a quote I had written in one of my old notebooks from the artist Paula Rego which I love.

“You are doing it (painting) to find out what the result will be”

Paula Rego

Sketchbooks: Muscle memory and cataloging

Sometimes this way of painting can feel like jumping out of an aeroplane and hoping the parachute will open. For me my sketchbooks and drawings are my metaphorical parachute. They are the support system that allow me to start with no plan or firm direction of travel.

My sketchbooks are a powerful resource for me, which give me the confidence to start without knowing exactly what I am painting. My drawings help my painting practice in two key ways. Firstly they have helped me to develop a personal visual language, a set of motifs, a way of creating art. So when I come to paint I have all that experience inside me, there’s a muscle memory I can pull on.

And secondly they are a catalogue of my work which I can flick through to remember. I know I can lean on them at any point during the painting process and they will help me to find a direction to follow. I feel safe in embracing the unknown in my painting practice because of what I have created in my sketchbooks…



If you’re looking for an art process to help you create beautiful abstract and semi abstract acrylic paintings from objects in your life, you may like to check out my online art class Objects to Abstracts:



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Collages and cardboard cut-outs