’60s

My interests, in the ’60s, were with hunting for totally abstract shapes as ENCLOSURES, where the boundary of these enclosed positive shapes can be thought of as a negative CONTINUOUS LINE. In the search for these shapes I found etching useful, as resists (in the printing sense) could define a negative enclosure; therefore black and white etchings were often starting points for paintings.
Compositionally, I found the square canvas a very interesting shape to work within; the pictures could revolve, as a sculpture can revolve, because there would be no right orientation, and its four CORNERS required four different solutions.

The title, CONTINUOUS LINE, CORNERS AND ENCLOSURES, omits to mention one thing: a preoccupation with MINIMAL COLOUR.

In the late sixties the Artist Jenny Cowern and I built a studio together which is covered by Mary E Burkett and Valerie M Rickerby’s book “A Softer Landscape” ISBN978-0-9528356-7-7.

Illustrated opposite are three oil paintings on canvas 1.37m x 1.37m.