The Royal Gazette Living Tuesday, October 18, 1994
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artist finally gets a show he can call his own
by Patricia Calnan
Although he is one of
Bermuda's finest and most painterly of painters, Chris
Marson has never had his own show.
Now the Bermuda Society of Arts has put that situation to
rights by choosing him as the featured artist to open its
new Harbor Gallery. Fifteen of his distinctive watercolors
have gone on view in the new, three room Pitts Bay Road
gallery, just acquired by the society as an additional
outlet for their members work which opened this weekend.
Mr. Marson is refreshingly down to earth about the business
of painting, and modest to the point where he say's he has
never really considered holding a one-man show. He sets the
tone for his first-ever interview by quoting Canadian
painter, Ken Lougheed, "if I could talk about it, I
wouldn't have done all these damn paintings!"
In spite of his reticence, Mr. Marson's track record is
impressive. Besides showing regularly with the Society of
Arts and Dockyard exhibitions, his work is also in demand
in several galleries in New England. In 1991 he was one of
the 13 artists selected to take part in the summer show off
the Royal Society of British Artists at the Mall Galleries
in London. His paintings have been shown in Bermuda's
National Gallery and he is one of the few living artists
featured in Masterworks recently published book on their
Bernudiana collection. The Department of Tourism has twice
purchased work for auctions at charity benefits in the US
and, this year, the Premier chose one of his watercolors
for his Christmas card. Finally, a Chris Marson watercolor
was chosen as one of the first to paintings be purchased by
the Society of Arts for its projected Contemporary
Collection. It is not hard to see why his work is so
instantly recognized as being quintessentially Bermudian
and could never be mistaken for the work of any other
artists. With a few, seemingly simple strokes, brushed in
cool low-key colors, he captures that sense of place which
is the hallmark of the true landscape artist. This is a
quality that was immediately recognized by Georgiana
Druchyk, director of America's oldest art society, the
Copley Society of Boston, when she juried a Bermuda Society
of Art show earlier this year. "He has achieved a mastery
over his brush that allows him to express himself with
utter simplicity -- his handwriting is very distinctive"
she noted at the time. This assessment is one that might
possibly amuse Mr. Marson. Having obtained a degree in Fine
Arts from the University of Manitoba, he stresses that he
specialized in graphic design.
"In fact, I was basically told that I didn't know how to
paint." It was not until about 11 years ago that he took up
his paintbrushes again and, even then, it was to work in
oil and acrylics.
"For a couple of years, I was doing a whole bunch of really
bad paintings. When I switched to watercolors, it took a
long time to get used to working in that medium, since
then, I've never looked back."
In spite of that setback, Mr. Marson has been painting for
most of his life, recalling that when he was about eight
years old, he saw artist Mary Powell's studio opposite
Paget Marsh and announced in the back of the car "that's
what I want to be."
Today, he is a prolific painter who tends to paint the same
scenes over and over again. The reason behind this,
however, is perhaps more prosaic than those governing
Monet's haystacks and water lilies.
"Spanish Point is very close to town so I can go there in
my lunch hour and paint a picture," he explains.
In spite of some fellow artists who tell him, "but there's
nothing to paint out there!" Mr. Marson says the only
problem for him lies in the naming of his paintings. "It
get difficult when all you can say, basically, is that
we've now reached "Spanish Point number 68" ! But the truth
is, the more you paint a place the more you see. You really
get the feel and atmosphere, you see the differences in the
quality of the light, and every day, you do see something
that is quite new."
Warming to this theme, he goes on to explain how he
approaches each painting. "I may go out there and look at
the sky, or the water, or it may be a very gray, dull day
and then perhaps it will be the boats to catch my
attention. My major decision is always about where the
horizon is going to be, and I decide what really interests
me and then it's all very fast. The basics are down on
paper in under an hour -- and the longest part of that is
waiting for my washes to dry. I may work on it some more,
afterwards, but if I hadn't got the core by then, I never
will have."
Admitting that he carries a small painting kit with him
wherever he goes ("even when I go swimming"), Mr. Marson
feels that it is essential to paint just about every day.
"If I paint solidly each day over a period of time, there
is an increased fluency, I suppose this is like doing
scales on the piano every day."
This, he says, sometimes requires a discipline that forces
the artist to pick up his paintbrush when he least feels
like it.
"I've done some of my best paintings when I started out in
a bad, or none painting mood. Basically, I can't imagine
life now, without painting. If I don't paint for a few
days, I get twitchy and in the end, my wife will say, "for
goodness sake, go out and get on with some painting ! "
part of the fascination is that, however much you paint,
you never know how it's going to turn out."
At the moment, Chris Marson feels he is going through a
"new" stage.
"There's a lot more color, stronger colors, in my work at
the moment. I think I need to work on edges for a while and
try to get the values right. I'm working at bigger,
stronger shapes and more structure in them. When Peter
Peterson (past president of the Royal Society of British
Artists) was out here, he told me my paintings needed to be
more constructed and I didn't have the foggiest idea of
what he meant, I do now! But with painting, you have to be
ready for certain information, otherwise it won't do you
any good. One of the great things about painting is that
it's an open-ended thing. You never really reach the point
where you can't improve. It's a growing thing, and you
learn only as you go along."
Asked to sum up his style, he replies that he feels it is a
curious combination of the big shapes of the "California"
style, but without the bright bold colors.
"My coloration is very English, so it's a
cross-fertilization of big American, an early English
watercolors!"
Noting that he was made to do "a lot" of drawing at
University, Mr. Marson emphasizes that, in his opinion,
drawing is the backbone of art.
"That is where the structure is. I draw with a brush -- but
that comes from the fact that I can draw. An awful lot of
artists cannot draw."
It is perhaps this highly developed gift which, more than
anything else, lends the understated fluidity and inborn
sense of rhythm that characterizes the Marson painting.
He enlarges on the importance of drawing by adding, "you
have to be prepared, in the first few years of painting,
for a lot of "misses.". For every 10 or 20 that "miss", you
may get one that sings. Gradually, after years of practice,
the hits increase over the misses., said eventually even
your bad ones are competent. The painting has to
communicate. The technically perfect painting often doesn't
work. If the artist and the painting are talking to each
other that quality will come through. If not, you may as
well forget it, as a work of art"
Full of quiet humor, Chris Marson reveals some of the
pitfalls awaiting the artist who insists on doing all of
this landscape paintings on location.
"People often come up behind me and ask, "are you a real
artists?" Then the next question is, can they sit and
watch. Painting is so draining, and you are so totally
concentrated that, most of the time you are not even aware
of people watching you. I don't really mind. In fact,
there's one guy who asked who I thought was a very good
question. This was, "how'd you get the colors not to run
together?" After we cleared that away and he asked me a
whole lot more, I ended up giving in the painting lesson!
When I told them it took at least a couple hundred
paintings before you start to paint properly, he said,
"well, I guess it's like anything else. It's no use unless
you practice!"
Chris Marson's success finds him anywhere but resting on
his artistic laurels.
"If anything, it gets harder, because the more you know,
the more critical you get, and the less satisfied -- even
with the stuff you've only done a year or two ago. But it's
difficult, anyway, to be objective about your own work.
People sometimes come up and point at some thing in my
painting and say "I really like that bit" and it's
something I've never even noticed!"
Even when he does what he feels to be a good painting, is
reaction, he says, is often one of disbelief.
"Now how did I do that? When I finish a really good one I
think "is that it? Can I ever do it again?" I can often
feel that the picture is working as a painting, because it
somehow feels big on the page -- it has a larger presence.
The ones that don't work are dropping away on the page"
He pays tribute to art teacher Mrs. Jean Rodrigues,
explaining that had Saltus Grammar School did not, at the
time, offer art lessons in the senior school, he decided to
do "O" and "A" levels on his own.
"So I studied with her -- she was the one who got me on my
way. I owe her a lot."
Chris Marson is also full of praise for the Bermuda Society
of Arts.
"They have been very helpful to me and have regularly hung
my work. When I first took half a dozen pictures in, I was
so excited when they accepted them. Then I went back to
have a look at them a couple of days later, and asked them
why they had taken one down. I couldn't believe it when
they told me they'd sold it."