The following review is taken from the
Royal Gazette Lifestyle Section Tuesday, June 29 1999
Marson's
watercolours are simply dazzling!
By Gareth Finighan
Christopher Marson, Artists Up Front Street -
Masterworks Gallery, Front Street, Hamilton.
Watercolour can be a pretty cruel medium. Unlike oils,
every stroke that's put down has to be the right stroke,
every tone, every hue in harmony
The transparency of the medium leaves few hiding places for
the inept painter to shield behind.
As a pretty inept painter myself it's never been my
favourite medium. Furthermore I often find that the results
can be a bit insipid, a bit,, well, wishy-washy, even in
-the hands of somebody who knows what they're up to. It
seems not many artists are brave enough to really grab
their colours by the throat.
So it's indeed a rare delight to wallow in the work of
somebody who not only has complete control over their
chosen medium but also uses that skill to the most dazzling
and brilliant effect.
This exhibition features 19 of Marson's watercolours, all
landscapes depicting Bermudian scenes.
Marson has an easy loose informal, technique. There is very
little underdrawing to help guide Marson's brush, instead
he seems to go straight for the kill, laying down rich
washes of shimmering golds, cool purples and rich, luscious
greens a sign of an artist brimming with confidence in his
own ability - and quite rightly too.
Not that all of his paintings worked for me. There are one
two beach scenes where he does fall into that trap of
failing to bold enough and the results look a little washed
out, with little happening, but these are exceptions rather
than the rule.
Where Marson does seem to excel is in his depiction of
buildings and the differing effects that changing light
plays on their surface.
"Gibbs Hill' is an unusual take on a subject, so familiar
to many painters. Marson chooses to ignore the towering
stack and instead just focuses on the base of the
lighthouse, - which is splashed with the shadows of
surrounding structures. It was a pretty hot morning on
Front Street when I reviewed this exhibition but just
looking at Marson's soothing shadows had a cooling effect.
The work that perhaps best typifies Marson's style is
'Evening Light', a group of rooftops shimmering, in the
setting sun, glimpsed through a crop of evergreens. Like a
lot of Marson's work -the composition is reduced to a few
blocked-in shapes. With, just a few strokes, Marson is able
to create something so solid and real while his colours are
pure and clear yet bold. Like anyone on top of his game
Marson makes the whole process look so easy and so simple,
which is part of his appeal.
Not surprisingly a large number of the works on display
here have alread been sold. One shouldn't be surprised for
two reasons: first and foremost because Marson is a
wonderfully gifted painter who produces works of
astonishing beauty. Furthermore, while his ability may be
sky high, his feet are firmly on the ground when it comes
to valuing his work.
Most of the paintings here will cost you around $800, which
is an absolute bargain in my view. Although Marson is not a
full time painter he really should consider upping his
prices a bit at the very least. Then again, maybe that
would only encourage the droves of talentless artists to do
likewise and we wouldn't want that would we?
Unfortunately this show doesn't have much longer to run
but, if you, have a chance, I recommend you pay it a visit.
You won't be disappointed.