Saturday, January 7, 2012

tattooed virgin.






I take photos.


This is one from Monte Carlo, Monaco.


I also draw, paint, sketch, design, and like most other impoverished creative people today, I have ceased being a specialist. Currently I am working on luxury yachts doing simple mechanical maintenance and painting engine rooms. This work is frustrating because the scope for expression is so limited.


This is me in a bilge, in a cramped Italian bilge. looking for nuts.



However while working away on these tubs of total debauchery, I also have many projects on the boil at home.

My friends at Kina Ink Tattoo have asked me to do a sketch for their new t shi
rt design. The idea was to create a respectful version of the Madonna (Virgin Mary) in prayer with tattooed arms. This is a challenging and enjoyable task. Being strictly non-religious myself, I have drawn my inspiration from some of the more lovely iconographic and early renaissance images of the Madonna.

Recently when I was visiting Florence I made sure to absorb as much as possib
le of the Uffizi Gallery and one particular image of Mary stuck with this borderline atheist it is Giovanni Battista Salvi da Sassoferrato's

'Madonna in Sorrow'

Sublimely Baroque, it manages to avoid the bodily awkwardness of the early icons, whilst maintaining a faraway, if not obviously pensive or sorrowful gaze. If I'm honest though, I did overhear some English speaking tourists saying something like, "man, she looks bored!" and I can't help
but feel relief that in today's day and age we are so much more free to express (in progressive societies) an open opinion on religious characters. The artist as well as audience is now free to open dialogue on what would have once been taboo or offensive examples like Mel Gibson's Passion to Jylland Postnan's cartoon's of Mohammed. Poor Giovanni was so limited by the acceptable custom in the 17th century that he could only paint Mary with such an almost impersonally disinterested expression to avoid potential condemnation and prosecution.

Anyway I am grateful for these beautiful celebrations of peoples experience of religion and respectfully I present my version for the local tattoo parlour titled "non sono vergine di tattoo" or "I am Not a Tattoo Virgin":

"non sono vergine di tattoo"


Please don't be offended this is a tribute to two of my favourite things, art and tattoos. let me know what you think...

Wednesday, January 4, 2012


I decided to make blogging one of my many new years resolutions this year, so every week i'll be putting up a new post. Happy new year everyone, here's a photo:

It's a photo from the light house at the benetti shipyard in Livorno, Italy. It is a fairly mundane view, i'll admit and was shot back in July, so it's not exactly current. The reason for uploading this photo is that on Friday i'll be going back there to jump into a bilge and slave away at some more back breaking work on board a luxury private yacht. I'm not particularly excited by the prospects that such grind will offer, but at least it will enable me to save up and buy a new camera body - or get my 1Ds repaired.




Monday, March 28, 2011









Welcome to the French Riviera! Here's a local spot next to the International Dock on the Antibes Harbour. A fantastic spot for a basketball hoop, I loved this rustic setting - behind which sit some of the most luxurious private yachts in the world.


A smashed JCDecaux bill board with lovely Southern French blue sky and a picturesque palm tree.


I thought of Jeffrey Smart as I composed this shot, and subsequently edited it. All of his lines and colour and mildly abstract scenery exist around every corner in the south of France.


Here's the Antibes life boat, sadly in France it's almost completely funded by donation, and the crew are all volunteers. These guys are truly admirable, and a real boon to any recreational/commercial seafarers around Antibes.


Some of the curves around Monaco. An amazing place. I'll be travelling around there a bit, and uploading more images as my time here unrolls.



The view from our hotel room.


Monaco from the docks, with a splash of blue sky through the low fog over the principality of Monaco. This town fails to ever be anything less then spectacular.

Jaume Plensa's Sculpture 'Nomade' on the harbor walls in Antibes, this is a very successful and original sculpture, at day it faces the sea, at night it faces land, all with the aid of light. A fun game is to sit inside it and search for words... there aren't any.