Do you partake in fieldsports?
I don’t come from a shooting background but have always grown up in the countryside. I have shot grouse and pheasants in the past and really enjoyed it. As long as it’s legally done, I’ve got no problem with shooting at all. In fact, being a practical person, I believe the benefits of shooting far outweigh the negatives. I enjoy coarse fishing – and whilst I love eating venison, I think I’m too sentimental to pull a trigger on a deer. I do shoot rabbits, rats and squirrels with an air rifle though, as when you keep birds you have to be prepared to deal with the vermin they attract.
Why game species?
Many of the species under the umbrella of “game” are just very exciting – a glorious pheasant in spring, the cryptic woodcock in winter, the dash and ultra-alive presence of deer, the ungainly proportions of the running hare. A black grouse on a lek is pure drama. Some of the most amazing spectacles I’ve seen have been shivering in a small hide at dawn waiting for black grouse to arrive.
There’s also a lot of mystery surrounding many game species. I love the old narratives about woodcock, such as how they’re supposed to carry goldcrests across the North Sea on their backs. I’d love to actually paint a woodcock flying over the North Sea with goldcrests clinging to its back. This is the nice thing about art: you can explore things that can’t be proven with a photo.
What or who are your influences?
I love the natural history art that stems from the great era of nature discoveries – before the camera ruined the romance of art! If I have any influence, it would be Victorian art, with the ‘truth to nature’ philosophy of John Ruskin, and the artists of the Pre-Raphaelite movement such as John Everett Millais, William Holman Hunt, John Brett and Arthur Hughes.
I believe that content beats technique. You might be the most perfect technician in the world with flawless brushwork, but your work might be deathly boring to look at, whereas something a braver artist might knock out in a naive, unpolished style could be so much more satisfying.