Back road Catterline.

 

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Garages and sheds, mixed media on ply.

Doors open into a gloom of stored yesterdays. Gently mouldering boxes of half tins of paint leftover from the days of tangerine and mint green silk emulsion. Toys that cannot be discarded, not yet anyway, because…..A broken deckchair, and a thing for, you know, for…., aye well it might still come in handy. Wellie boots with holes in, hanging basket planters, when we thought it might be nice to look as if we cared, an Atari games console complete with pac man game, a tin of bent rusty nails and a pogo stick.

Wooden garages Catterline.

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Mixed media on paper. 73 x 47 cm

Summer .

Memories of  bitumen and creosote being painted on wood, and the smell with the heat of summer. My feet finding soft, sticky patches of tar on the road and pushing my toes into the black glue. Of course I would walk it into the house and spend days trying to scrub the tattooed molasses from my skin. By August my legs bruised, scabbed, tarred and sunburnt.

Catterline

 

 

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I visited the village of Catterline yesterday, the subject of Joan Eardleys famous landscapes.I am taking part in an exhibition at Wall Projects, Montrose about this place and my response to it. I wandered and sat in the sunshine among the cow parsley and blooms of blue borage and did a little drawing. Grand.

In the evening, a group of 23 of us headed out on ‘the walk’, the line in Montrose I followed. I even managed to take Montrosians to places they had not been before. A brilliant walk full of chat and stories, and a great way to end my involvement in Montrose…. except I will be back next year for part two – another show but walking a different line which is a very exciting prospect – I already have my eye on something….

The bus tour

 

 

A minibus tour from Dundee with the Dighty group I worked with last year to see the show in Montrose. Jokes and banter, and chocolate teacakes before we left. Smells of manure from the farmland and accusations from the back of the bus. Laughter. At the gallery, in the space where the film is being screened, everyone settles in. Chocolate is handed out ‘Who wants a crunchie ?’,’Anyone for a flake ? Spuggie?’ A can of Fanta opened, questions about who’s who in the film, and everyone settles, maybe expecting a feature length, but only getting 8 minutes. Time for tea. With detours and places too expensive to visit we end up in Arbroath for a cup of Earl Grey and a scone and jam. On the bus back into Dundee the conversation is different to the morning. We talk about the film and the fragments and traces we leave behind, big questions about what is important in living a life, quantum physics and the afterlife. Thundery rain splatters the windscreen, black clouds to the north. A good day , an interesting day, and a day of renewing friendships.

 

 

 

 

The Show.

Dominique's exhibition, Montrose4th June, 2016Picture by Gary Doak
Dominique’s exhibition, Montrose 4th June,2016 .Picture by Gary Doak.

A wonderful day, great weather, very busy, half the paintings sold, the film admired and lots and lots of good conversation about art, walking and Montrose. Thankyou to everyone who came to support me and also Kim at Wall Projects making it such a brilliant event.

Baltic Street Notebooks runs until July 2nd.

 

The Scotsman

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Artist, Dominique Cameron drawing in America Street, Montrose, on part of her walk through the town that informs her body of work being exhibited at the Wall Projects gallery. The exhibition comprises mixed media painting and drawing, text and a short film and opens on 4th June. Wall projects is based in the old rope works in Bent’s Road, Montrose. May 2016 Picture by Gary Doak.

A piece about the exhibition in The Scotsman online.

On the buses.

Today has been a day of buses. Lots. And journeys that shouldn’t have taken long but did.And a bus that broke down. So I watch the people. A man who tells me he is a retired confectioner, dresses in a full length camel coat, Oxfords and a cravat.He says he’s been to see his Councillor about the buses to complain, I don’t know about what. I sit next to an elderly woman who refuses to look at me, pretends I am not there. Her hands are age spotted and transparent. Her bottom lip juts out, her pearl earrings jostle . There’s a woman with coral pink lips. She phones someone to tell them the bus has broken down. She says ‘Don’t laugh, its not funny’.She plugs in her headphones and sings along to her songs silently, her head swaying with every intonation, her face relaying the emotion.She gazes out of the window. The bus empties, but I stay sitting next to the elderly woman, partly to annoy her. ‘What a prick’, growls a man behind. A woman says on the phone ‘ So have you been to the Doctors yet ? Aye, well I told you to soak them in salt water…..’ Tired people, want to get home people. Man gets on wearing a cowboy hat and moustache. The smell of beer wafts along the aisle and he gets into conversation with someone about Roland Garros, the French Open tennis venue telling him just how special it is. His words are as fluid as his gesticulations. He stands and asks if we all like fish. I ring the bell. My stop.

Last step.

I have now finished the final work for Montrose. Paintings, drawings, film, soundtrack and text complete. So its a glass of Talisker and a large Cuban tonight. Thankyou to everyone who has helped me do this and to everyone who has read my ramblings and kept me company with this project. Much appreciated, and maybe you might like Montrose as much as I do. Come and take a look , oh and see the exhibition while you’re about it.

Wall Projects – Montrose – June 4th – July 2nd.

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