Alison Hale’s horses

Alison Hale grew up and still lives on the rugged west coast of New Zealand’s South Island. She has painted every facet of country life there and has won high acclaim for doing so. New Zealanders collect her work avidly seeking a glimpse of a bygone era.

Alison Hale 1

Dark of the Night: 70cm x 50cm oil on canvas.

Alison’s formative years were spent riding, rounding up, caring for and dreaming about working horses; no surprise then that horses feature prominently in her painting.

Alison Hale 2

Unfinished Business: 122cm x150cm oil on canvas.

Her horses live. They are anatomically and ergonomically correct. Her oil is liberally thinned and in places runs down the canvas reminding the viewer of the never-ending west coast rain.

Alison Hale 3

Out of the Blue: 93cm x 21cm oil on canvas.

Alison is based in the unlikely mining town of Reefton. Since I met her there in 2006 working in her studio, her theme has moved steadily away from a wet and gritty country reality towards the equine dream-world of her younger days. Now, elegant fantasy horses in fantasy settings step forward onto her canvases. These are beautiful, technically accomplished and captivating paintings. They too will be eagerly collected by her compatriots.

Peter Hobden

Peter Hobden has a quiet demeanour. He speaks little of his important work in computing or of his expertise in digital photography. Early retirement allows him to widen his horizons further. He takes up painting in 2007 under the demanding tutelage of Hélène Burgi. In short time, he develops and masters the loose and relaxed brushstrokes in bold oil colours that become his trademark technique. One would assume he would focus on the natural world but, surprisingly, his forte is the cityscape. On medium-size canvases, his style and chosen theme merge to great effect. The result is atmosphere.

Peter Hobden 1

In 2010, I visit Peter’s studio in Geneva shortly after he and his wife Sophie return from a trip to Italy. He shows me a canal scene in Venice. I fall for it and buy it immediately. But Sophie can’t bear to see Peter’s pictures leave the studio. It is as though a part of him is also disappearing.

Peter Hobden 2

His technique advances. The #TwitterArtExhibit stipulates a post-card size work. Peter’s entry in 2012 is a delightful 16cm x 12cm dash of oil on card creating an evening street scene in Carouge, Geneva.

Peter’s work has evolved rapidly. This evolution is unlikely to stop now. Perhaps in the near future, Talking Beautiful Stuff will blog about Peter reaching back to expertise in other domains to master digital painting. Then his work doesn’t have to leave the studio!

Mercer’s Dance

Joyce Mercer (1896 to 1965) is known from the golden age of illustrated children’s books. Her major works included Grimm’s Fairytales in 1920 and the Classic Fairytales of Hans Christian Andersen in 1935. The Art Deco influences in all her work are clear. She would have seen and admired the work of Alphonse Mucha and Arthur Rackham among many others. This was the post-World War I era in which children were nourished by stories of parallel existences suffused with hope and innocence all populated by wizards, princes, fairies and elves. The good and gentle would triumph. It was an era that would later be dashed away by World War II.

Mercer's Dance 1

“The Dance” was painted sometime in the 1930’s. It has not been reproduced in any publication. The beautifully executed clean ink lines and poster-style composition are what we would expect from Joyce Mercer. Typically, the execution of the expressive hands of each figure is exquisite. However, is it just another beautifully depicted dream-scene of two men vying for the hand of a beautiful maiden? Or does it tell us much more about Mercer herself?

Mercer's Dance 2

The figures are playing out a scene of a play that can only be acted in the dreams of the viewer. The young females are smooth-faced, expressionless, pubescent and innocent. There is a sadness to the way each is posed differently for the beginning of the dance; the scene waits for the central figure in white to accept the invitation to dance with one of her two suitors. The other’s jealousy bites. But there is nothing gallant or romantic here; only an all-pervasive distasteful feeling of cunning. You really don’t want her to dance with this calculating dandy. The older men – the drummer, the fiddler and the jester – have seen it all and know how the dance will be played out. The end of the dance will mark the beginning of the end of innocence.

Mercer's Dance 3

Dare one propose that “The Dance” represents Joyce Mercer’s binary existence? Was the world she lived in spiritually her make-believe world? Could the real world only corrupt and pollute the impossible beauty that she had illustrated and inhabited over the years? Is she the central figure in white?

Joyce Mercer was a contemporary of my grandmother at art school. I may have met her very briefly when I was very young. If I met her now I would have only one question: “Miss Mercer, do you believe there are fairies at the bottom of your garden?” I have no doubt she would answer in the affirmative.

Photos by Ross Coupland