The Grumpy Old Artist

Would YOU pose for this man???
Exhibition Poster
Catterline Event, 2011
Oil Painting by Jim Tait

Helford River, Cornwall
Oil Painting by Jim Tait

Full-riggers "Georg Stage" and "Danmark"
Other Recent Works

Fordyce Castle and Village

Hay's Dock, Lerwick

Shetland-model Boats at Burravoe, Yell

Tall Ships Seascape

The Tour Boat "Dunter III", with Gannets, off Noss

The "Karen Ann II" entering Fraserburgh harbour

Summer Evening, Boyndie Bay

1930s Lerwick Harbour

Johnshaven Harbour

"Seabourn Legend"
Greeting Cards!
Now Available in Packs of Five or in Assorted Sets of Four
Showing posts with label seascape paintings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label seascape paintings. Show all posts
Sunday, 24 February 2013
THE "PILOT US"
This commissioned painting shows the 40ft seine-netter "Pilot Us" (LK271) coming in past the Bressay Lighthouse on a fine summer's evening. This boat, built in 1931 at Fraserburgh, is now owned by Shetland Museum, after a long and successful fishing career for the Watt family of Scalloway.
I have a childhood memory of being one of a number of people standing on Blacksness Pier, Scalloway, looking at a huge skate lying on the foredeck of the "Pilot Us" - this would have been around 1960, I guess. At that time, she was one of a number of smaller fishing boats which went long-lining for better-quality fish during the summer months, the "Roost" off Sumburgh being a favourite "hunting ground" for them.
Labels:
fifies,
marine art,
oil paintings,
old fishing boats,
seascape paintings
Wednesday, 5 December 2012
"ST. GILES" (II) IN ST MAGNUS BAY
This painting has been a long time in the making, having stood half-finished, since early summer, in a corner of my studio, while I got on with more urgent tasks. Having "cleared my feet" of commissioned work, I was able to tackle my pending "on-spec" pictures, and this is the last of these. It depicts the second "nort boat" to bear the name "St. Giles", sailing south-westwards through St. Magnus Bay in fresh weather, having completed her day's business at Hillswick. The photograph shows a slightly foreshortened version of the painting, there being more of the Hillswick Ness "banks" to the right of the ship on the original artwork.
The ship replaced the old "St. Giles", which had been lost after running aground in thick fog on Rattray Head in 1902. The new vessel came into service in 1903 and, according to Alastair McRobb's excellent little book, The North Boats, was placed on the direct route, so the ship may never have been in St. Magnus Bay at all. Not for the first time, my depiction could be a "dadbusted lie", as the magistrate said in the Comancheros film!
What McRobb's book does not tell us is what end the second "St. Giles" made. Was she sold for further trading, or did she become a grounding casualty like her predecessor of the same name? She is not in the author's list of north boats sunk by enemy action in World War I. I would be very interested to know what became of this ship.
Last night I updated the website www.tait-gallery.co.uk by uploading the recently completed artworks (including the above) to the Gallery Shop pages. If you live in the islands, come and visit my stall at the Toll Clock Centre in Lerwick on Saturdays 8th and 15th December. The usual selection of prints and cards, including the new stock additions, will be on offer, and commissions can be discussed there too! All of it is also available to buy online through the website. Visit me on- or offline!
The ship replaced the old "St. Giles", which had been lost after running aground in thick fog on Rattray Head in 1902. The new vessel came into service in 1903 and, according to Alastair McRobb's excellent little book, The North Boats, was placed on the direct route, so the ship may never have been in St. Magnus Bay at all. Not for the first time, my depiction could be a "dadbusted lie", as the magistrate said in the Comancheros film!
What McRobb's book does not tell us is what end the second "St. Giles" made. Was she sold for further trading, or did she become a grounding casualty like her predecessor of the same name? She is not in the author's list of north boats sunk by enemy action in World War I. I would be very interested to know what became of this ship.
Last night I updated the website www.tait-gallery.co.uk by uploading the recently completed artworks (including the above) to the Gallery Shop pages. If you live in the islands, come and visit my stall at the Toll Clock Centre in Lerwick on Saturdays 8th and 15th December. The usual selection of prints and cards, including the new stock additions, will be on offer, and commissions can be discussed there too! All of it is also available to buy online through the website. Visit me on- or offline!
Sunday, 4 November 2012
A HAUL OF HERRING AND A PILOT BOAT
I anticipate no gasps of utter astonishment when I reveal that the latest works to appear in the Tait Gallery are both seascapes. They were both commissioned.
One of them is the third in a series featuring the Gamrie dual-purpose boat "Silver Wave" (BF372). She is pictured hauling a good shot of herring, attended by the ubiquitous flocks of gannets, fulmars and gulls, as the crew perform the back-breaking operation of getting the heavy shot aboard.
The other painting is of the Lerwick pilot boat "Knab", viewed from the headland from which her name derives, as she re-enters the harbour after performing another "escort" duty. This was the first of two vessels to bear the name, built in the late 1980s and replaced by a more powerful state-of-the-art version around 2005 (I'm not sure of my exact dates here!).
I'm currently working on a painting of the local tall ship "Swan". I'd originally planned to have prints of this ready for my first pre-Christmas stall at Lerwick's Toll Clock Centre on Saturday 17th November. It now looks as though I'll miss my own deadline by a week or two, but I should have the giclees available by the end of the month. Watch this space!
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