Arts in Provence

ARTS IN PROVENCE
Welcome to the Arts in Provence Blog. This is a blog about life in Les Bassacs, a small hamlet in the South of France, where we organise summer painting courses. You can find out about the courses by going to our website.

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

American Watercolour Group

We have a group of American watercolourists here for the next two weeks, most are from Washington DC although their tutor is from Vermont.  She is posting her paintings (both oils and watercolours) everyday while she is here.  You can see her fabulous paintings and follow her day by day on http://susanabbott.blogspot.com/

Spring to Summer--Vignette 6

Oil on linen panel, 27" x 81", triptych (detail)

Sunday, June 19, 2011

Dibbs and Liz go scrumping



The cherry trees are laden with cherries which no one is going to pick.  The rain in the last few weeks has come at the wrong time and all the fruit is split.  Dibbs and I spent a happy half-hour this morning scrumping in the cherry orchards and returned with our hoard of slightly scarred cherries to put out for lunch.

Friday, June 17, 2011

Jessica's success

We got news this morning that our eldest daughter Jess has passed her Diploma in Architecture with a Distinction. 

Six years of hard graft, inspiration and perspiration have been happily rewarded!

A week of hard painting rewarded by beautiful weather and the first lavender.

Paul's week 11th-18th June

Paul is freshly back from Australia where he is living for most of the year now.  He comes back to Europe at about this time to take care of the Jerwood Drawing Prize which he and his wife Anita founded. We are lucky enough to grab him for a week's teaching in Les Bassacs.

Monday, June 13, 2011

If its Friday it must be Bonnieux

Anyone who has painted with David will know this stand of trees is a favourite subject.


Perfect picnic spot

Oppède le Vieux provided David's group with a perfect picnic spot on a sunny and windless day. 









The decline of the village started in 1731 with an earthquake that destroyed part of the castle.  In 1793 revolutionaries pillaged the village and the church and little by little Oppède was abandoned.  By 1936 there were only 12 people living there.  In the 1960's a group of artists and intellectuals began to re-inhabit the village and the restoration of the houses has continued since then.



Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Inside out at the Pompidou Centre Paris

The French photographer JR has an exhibition entitled Inside Out at the Pompidou Centre Paris until September.  He has set up a photo booth which takes a black and white portraits and then prints them to A0 size.  The poster floats down through the entrance hall.  The idea is that you then paste your poster up somewhere in the world.  Isabelle, who is studying in Paris stopped by and queued for an hour to have her portrait taken in the machine.  A bindi is superimposed digitally on the photo.  The woman operating the machine was called away, and left Isabelle to take her own photo.  She wasn't sure where the lens was, and was captured whilst still trying to work it out! 

You can upload your own black and white portrait and receive a poster to paste up by going to http://www.insideoutproject.net/

The point of the project is to challenge everyone to use black and white photographic portraits to discover, reveal and share the untold stories and images of people around the world.  He always works in poster size images and his projects are often political.  Read more about him at http://www.dragolab.com/en/books/catalogue/wrinkles-of-the-city-shanghai

And then the rain came . . .

Nearly a week of stormy weather and a daughter visiting from Paris has meant that the Les Bassacs Blog has ground to a halt.  There were some spectacular sunsets though, this one captured by Dibbs from her bedroom window, note the thickness of the cloud !



















During the thunderstorm that followed this sunset,  our neighbours set fire to their chimney and there was great excitement when the Sapeur Pompier turned up to put it out. 


























We needed the rain though as everything was terribly parched.  Today the skies have lifted and the clouds are being blown south by a moderate Mistral.  Tomorrow is picnic day and the group will be tucking into a tomato and tapenade tart at Oppède le Vieux.