Showing posts with label art noir. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art noir. Show all posts

Monday, 17 July 2017

Andrew Cowdell, The way home, 2017

Andrew Cowdell, The way home, carbon and watercolour
The path tears through hedgerows across Bothampstead and cuts across fields toward the outskirts of Hermitage village. The familiar tree has become a symbolic signpost on a walk I've enjoyed countless times. It tells of home, journey's end, a couple of easygoing miles beyond the brow.

Tuesday, 6 June 2017

Andrew Cowdell, Dawn, 2017

Andrew Cowdell, Dawn, 2017, carbon and watercolour, 7 x 9"

These early morning sessions enable me to capture that sense of stillness when trees and fields are wet with the morning dew and the light of the breaking day has not reached its full intensity. The atmosphere created is both romantic and realistic.

Wednesday, 25 May 2016

Andrew Cowdell, Two crows at dawn, 2016

Andrew Cowdell. Two crows at dawn. 2016. Oil on linen.


My fascination with darkness requires an idea of light. In Two crows at dawn, the beauty of morning’s first light is matched by the eeriness generated by the arresting, black, thorn-like tangle of trees within the hedgerow. This traumatised landscape is a realm that snags, bites and troubles, and yet still invokes the pastoral dream of natural tranquillity. Beauty is envisaged here as William Blake’s “marriage of the contraries”, dependent upon both positive and negative aspects of existence.

The darkness of the setting serves as a representation of the Other, or the Unknown, which subtly imbues the scene with a sense of the supernatural. In subverting the aesthetic certainties of the usual green and pleasant Berkshire countryside, I am simultaneously identifying with both the picturesque and sinister presences within it. Presences which may include fiscal forces churning and poisoning the landscape; evidenced in the painting by tyre marks along the field margin. Alternatively, ‘absences’ may refer to the slow grinding away of our flora and fauna as species are lost; the two sentinel ‘carrion’ crows sent forth by vengeful nature. This landscape may even have its phantoms, lying or waiting where they fell or were taken at some unspecified time in history. And yet, all this darkness depends on the corresponding light of dawn as the beauty of the landscape reawakens.

But ultimately, I shall leave it to your own interpretation.

Tuesday, 29 March 2016

Andrew Cowdell, Clamour over Hermitage, 2016

Andrew Cowdell, Clamour over Hermitage, 2016, oil on linen

In this monochrome oil painting, a clamour of rooks enhances the beauty of the Berkshire landscape made desolate by the damp, overcast weather. 

In the following extract the French poet Arthur Rimbaud describes his affection for these raucous birds:

Lord, when the meadowland is cold, 
and when in the downcast hamlets the long Angeluses are silent.. 
down on Nature barren of flowers let 
them sweep from the wide skies, the dear delightful rooks. 

from The Rooks (Les Corbeaux)
by Arthur Rimbaud, 1854-1891

Friday, 20 November 2015

Andrew Cowdell, Betty, 2015

Andrew Cowdell, Betty, 2015, oil and gold on linen

Betty Grable danced, sang, and acted her way through the 1930s to become the biggest box office star of the 1940s. She had honed her famously gorgeous legs to the extent that her studio reportedly insured them for $1 million with Lloyd’s of London. The same legs were soon captured in the most iconic photo of bathing-suit-clad Grable, back to the camera and glancing over one shoulder. As most of her popular roles occurred in the early 1940's American servicemen voted Grable their favourite pinup, and painted her image on the sides of bomber planes.

Tuesday, 13 October 2015

Rita Hayworth: The Lady

Andrew Cowdell, The Lady, 2015, oil and silver leaf on linen

The Lady is a silver leaf oil portrait of Elsa (Rita Hayworth) in The Lady from Shanghai (1948). Director Orson Welles stars alongside his estranged wife Hayworth before finalising their divorce. In taking the role of scheming femme fatale Elsa, Hayworth’s image was to undergo a drastic change. She allegedly wanted to break from the character she had become so identified with in her previous hit movie Gilda (1946), so she had her famous long hair cut and bleached blonde. Welles was held responsible for the controversial look, as Hayworth later recalled Columbia Pictures president Harry Cohn saying “He’s ruined you - he cut your hair off!”

Thursday, 14 May 2015

Veronica Lake: cabaret noir

Andrew Cowdell, Cabaret noir, 2015, oil on canvas

Veronica Lake exudes a guileless charm as a nightclub singer in This Gun for Hire (1942). 

This classic hard-boiled thriller was adapted from Grahame Greene’s novel A Gun for Sale and made Alan Ladd an instant star. Ladd’s gun-for-hire Raven is a brutal assassin with a benevolent affection for cats; the scene where he silences a stray moggie is particularly portent. Lake’s character becomes a symbol of redemption to Ladd’s murderous anti-hero who holds her captive. United by fate, the singer and the killer form an uneasy alliance to expose a chemical company suspected of treason against their country. 

This Gun for Hire was the first film of several to pair Alan Ladd and Veronica Lake together.

Thursday, 7 May 2015

Carole Lombard: platinum blonde

Andrew Cowdell, Carole Lombard, 2012
Carole Lombard was one of the most gifted women stars during the thirties.

Described as “Platinum blonde, with a heart-shaped face, delicate, impish features and a figure made to be swathed in silver lamé”, Lombard’s movie career was cut short in 1942 when she died in a plane crash aged 33.

After her death, the United States Government commissioned a Liberty Ship named SS Carole Lombard, which rescued hundreds of survivors from sunken ships in the Pacific and returned them to safety.

Friday, 24 April 2015

Andrew Cowdell, The Return, 2014

Andrew Cowdell, The Return, oil on canvas

This monochrome oil painting takes its inspiration from the movie Laura (1944). The concept explores the theme of the ‘magical portrait’ which characterises many noir thrillers and gothic melodramas of the 1940s. The gothic exists in the core of the portrait not only in its classical style, but also in its true representational meaning; it is a ‘symbolic body’ replacing a ‘mortal body’. In choosing this concept I am exploring the same underlying theme of presence and absence as dominates the film’s narrative.

Wednesday, 15 April 2015

Andrew Cowdell, The allure of night, 2014

Andrew Cowdell, The allure of night, oil on canvas


















Hello everybody, and welcome to Art in Noir.

The black-and-white cinematography of the classic era is a mood which still colours my childhood memories of the 1970s. It was both comforting and exciting to bask in the monochromatic glow from our big old television set in the living room. It's of no surprise to me now that those same black-and-white dreamlike qualities are permeating my artworks.

Taking my inspiration from the 1946 film noir The Killers, this monochrome oil painting fuses various elements of the dark narrative to represent a conceptualized image. Ava Gardner as Kitty Collins is the ultimate femme fatale; sultry and sardonic, she at once embodies everything that is beautiful and terrible. Kitty's lover, Ole, takes the rap for her stolen jewellery and is sentenced for a three-year prison term. Ole's cellmate Charleston passes the time by gazing at and studying the stars. When Charleston describes a bright star in the night sky, Ole is thinking of Kitty:

"You see that bright star in the center...brightest star in all the heavens. Only it's so far away, it don't seem like it."

But Kitty hasn't written or visited Ole in prison during his entire incarceration. Kitty dominates the fate in store for those who embark upon nocturnal adventures. Her mysterious attraction corresponds to the unfathomability of the night itself.

Thank you for reading.