Reveal Big Skies: Anna Kirk Smith Open Studio
Port du Moulin Arch by Anna
Kirk-Smith
Anna
Kirk-Smith will be opening up her house in
Bridlington and showing new work during Reveal
2011 Open Studios.
She is open over the weekends of 1st/2nd &
8th/9th October, from 10am - 5pm each of those
days, and all are welcome.
Estuarine Forms
by Anna
Kirk-Smith
She says:
"It has been diverse and exciting times for me,
so you will get to see works from my Artists for
Nature trip to Sark, artworks drawn underwater
from a collaboration with Yorkshire Wildlife
Trust, the showcase of a piece in progress for
Ghosts of Gone Birds London exhibition, and other
pieces conceived outside from often blustery and
wet excursions around the coast of Britain."
Geological Medley -
Dixcart Bay by Anna
Kirk-Smith
For more information about the event you should
visit www.reveal-art.org
Anna's address to visit is:
6 Mayfield Road, Bridlington, East Riding of
Yorkshire, YO15 3LE
Google Map YO15 3LE
David Measures 1937-2011 RIP
We’ve just received
the very sad news that David
Measures has died. I was fortunate that
David was my accessor at the RCA and that he
was a selfless supporter of myself
and Debbie,
our work and our gallery, and many other
artists and students. I've had many
interesting and amusing conversations with
David, including the story of how his pet barn
owl would bite his ankles whilst he was trying
to use the loo. I last spoke to David in
February and I was going to ring him to talk
about his wonderful butterfly drawings, but
alas have left it too late. We're both feeling
very sad.
David's obituary in the Telegraph.
WWT Slimbridge: Peter Scott: Bewick's Swans by Dafila Scott
Bewick's Swans at
Dusk by Dafila
Scott
Peter Scott’s daughter
Dafila
Scott is exhibiting Bewick's Swans at Dusk
at WWT Slimbridge. The
exhibition runs from the 7th of August to the
9th of September, and features work by the
Scott family. Including Peter Scott, Nicola Scott
and Dafila
Scott.
After training as a zoologist, Dafila
turned to drawing and painting. Most of her
work is inspired by landscape that features
animals or places with which she has become
familiar. As a member of the Society of
Wildlife Artists, she has exhibited regularly
at their annual exhibition at the Mall
Galleries as well as at regional shows. She
has also illustrated books and articles.
Working mostly in oils, sometimes water colours
and more recently pastels, she paints either from
life or from a combination of field sketches and
memory. She has taken courses with painters and
art teachers and is especially grateful for the
inspirational teaching of Robin Child.
Recent work includes both figurative wildlife
paintings and abstract landscapes inspired by
visits to Kibale Forest in western Uganda and to
the South Amin Kalahari. However, she is equally
happy to gain inspiration at home in the garden
or on the surrounding fen land.
Bird Art by Fiona Clucas
Greengate Garden, Autumn by Fiona
Clucas
Fiona Clucas has provided the Land Gallery with three new pieces of work. Click here to see bird art and landscapes by Fiona.
Artists for Nature: Art for the Love of Sark
The artists participating in the Artists for
Nature Foundation’s Jubilee Project
4th to 16th May 2011.
The international
non-profit organisation Artists for Nature Foundation,
ANF founded in 1990 in The Netherlands, have
chosen the beautiful and unique, car-free
Channel Island of Sark as the location for
their fifteenth project. The ANF are a unique
organisation who draw the attention of
policy-formulators and decision-makers to the
natural world by enabling groups of
influential and talented artists to capture
the spirit of endangered landscapes and
species in their natural habitat through art.
Since the summer of 2009, Sarkee and artist
Rosanne Guille (a graduate
of the Royal College of Art) has been
working with the ANF, planning and fundraising
for a project which will bring 15 of these
“Artists for Nature' to paint, draw and sculpt
in Sark for ten days from 4th May 2011.
The project named 'Art for the Love of Sark'
will involve the artists recording all aspects
of island life from its rich and unspoilt
natural history to the human aspect. The
artists will come from all parts of the world,
from Russia and the USA to Germany, the
Netherlands and the UK, and among them the
award-winning President of the Society of
Wildlife Artists, Harriet Mead. A full list of
the participating artists can be seen at
www.sarkpaintings.com
under 'current projects blog'.
During the artists visit, from the 3rd day on,
there will be daily showings of their work to the
public and some of the artists will work with the
children of Sark school encouraging their own
interest in art and nature. As with other
ANF projects around the world,
it is hoped that there will be sufficient
funding for a project book to be published,
and a film and travelling exhibition to raise
awareness of what a special and unique, though
fragile island Sark still is.
Donations from the residents and businesses of
Sark and Guernsey have enabled the first artists
visit in May to go ahead. The artists will be
staying at Stocks Hotel where rooms
have been kindly donated for their stay. What
better way of celebrating nature than through
the eyes of some of the world's most talented
contemporary artists.
KIM ATKINSON (UK)
Studied at Falmouth School of Art and The Royal
College of Art in London. A painter/printmaker
and member of the Society of Wildlife Artists.
She lived for many years on the island of Bardsey
off the coast of Wales and her work has been
exhibited widely in Wales and England.
PETER GABRIEL BYRNE (IRL)
Singer/songwriter living and working on the
Island of Sark. In the ’90s he played regularly
on the London folk scene, including gigs at
Ronnie Scott’s and the Twelve Bar Club. His work
has featured on albums along side Martin
Stephenson and Clive Stubblefield (James Brown’s
drummer)
JAAP DEELDER (Netherlands)
A self-taught artist working in wood and stone,
his carvings are inspired by nature, especially
birds. Jaap was awarded the best sculpture prize
by the Society of Wildlife Artists in 1991.
PIET EGGEN (Netherlands)
Studied at the Art Academy of Maastricht. Works
as a freelance illustrator for nature magazines
and advertising. Lives in the Netherlands where
he runs a gallery specializing in art inspired by
nature.
ROSANNE GUILLE (UK)
A graduate of the Royal College of Art in London.
Works mostly in watercolour. Published work
includes English Nature, Usborne children’s books
and BBC Wildlife Magazine. Teaches art and runs
La Maison Rouge gallery on the island of Sark.
ANDREW HASLEN (UK)
Works as a painter of wildlife and domestic
animals. During his career Andrew has won several
awards for his work. He runs the Wildlife Art
Gallery in Lavenham, Suffolk.
ANNA
KIRK-SMITH (UK)
Anna Kirk-Smith, a graduate of the Royal College
of Art, takes her inspiration from the natural
world particularly from coastal and marine
environments. In 2010 she won a grant from The
Wildlife Trusts in association with The Society
of Wildlife Artists to learn to scuba dive. She
is a director of an arts development company and
lectures in Fine Art at Hull School of Art and
Design.
DAVID LYNN-GRIMES
(USA)
Writer and musician living and working in Alaska.
Has worked on films as co-producer and wildlife
film guide with the National Geographic, Survival
Anglia and BBC. He has participated in ANF
projects in Alaska, Spain and Israel.
HARRIET
MEAD (UK)
Has won major awards for her sculptures of
animals and birds which she makes from scrap
steel and disused tools. Elected President of the
Society of Wildlife Artists in 2009. Works mostly
to commission.
BRUCE
PEARSON (UK)
Worked for RSPB film unit and British Antarctic
Survey before becoming a full-time artists and
illustrator. He has written and presented two
television series. Former president of the
Society of Wildlife Artists.
XAVIER PICK (UK)
”I have been diligently keeping a visual diary
for 15 years now, everyday a page or two of notes
and drawings. These books have been a passport to
many worlds, a living portfolio for others to see
who you are. Unlike taking a camera which shuns
people away, folk are drawn to someone working in
their book.”
JOHN THRELFALL (UK)
John has worked with the British Geological
Survey, he paints wildlife and birds ‘in the
field’ and has undertaken commissions for the
RSPB, The National Trust for Scotland and
Scottish Natural Heritage. His book ‘Between the
Tides’ documents his response to Britain’s
estuaries in pencil, paint and poetry.
MATTHEW UNDERWOOD (UK)
Matthew Underwood produces eye-catching works in
collage, mixed media and oil. He finds that it is
often a tiny piece of information, which may
trigger an idea for a work – at the 2002 SWLA
exhibition, Matthew won the RSPB Fine Art Award.
WOLFGANG WEBER (GERMANY)
Draws from his personal encounters with wildlife,
travelling often with just a sketchbook. Has
exhibited widely including London, Frankfurt,
Berlin, Zurich and Nairobi. Two successful films
have been made about his work, ‘A brush with
nature’ and ‘Drawn to the Wild.’
DARREN
WOODHEAD (UK)
A graduate of the Royal College of Art in London
and one of Britain’s leading watercolour artists.
His work has won many major national awards
including ‘Birdwatch magazine artist of the year
2009′
JONATHAN YULE (UK)
A self-taught painter inspired by nature, birds
in particular. Most of his work is privately
commissioned. He has been involved in several ANF
projects and narrated the film for Pyrenees and
the promotional film ‘Unspoilt Sark’
Abernathy by Chris Rose now sold out
Katrina van Grouw née Cook: Metal Plate Engraving
Katrina van
Grouw née Cook discusses
metal-plate engraving, and its use for natural
history illustration, for London’s
Natural History Museum
New work by Jane Paige-Leycester

Rock
Cleft on Skye, watercolour by Jane
Paige-Leycester
The Land Gallery has just
received a new watercolour by Jane: Rock
Cleft on Skye.
Jane
is a watercolour artist with a special interest
in wild plants and the landscape they inhabit.
She trained as a teacher with art as her main
subject and continues to teach art in general and
botanical illustration in particular.
She is a Founder Member of the
Society of Botanical
Artists and a Fellow
of the Chelsea Physic Garden
Florilegium Society, London. Her
work has been shown with the Royal Institute
of Painters in Watercolours and the Royal
Watercolour Society open exhibitions. She has
illustrated books for the RSPB and BBC
Publications. She participated in the
Artists for Nature
project in
Extremadura in Spain and also the New Forest
project "Drawn to the Forest". Always
interested in natural history, she prefers to
work on site, very rarely finishing paintings
in the studio.
Licensing @ The Land Gallery
Please visit the home page of Bees in Art for bee inspired art; photography, painting, print, drawings etc. Images are available for licensing for editorial or commercial purposes.
Clients include:
• AC & Black
• BBC TV
• Country Living
• Gardens Illustrated
• Plantlife International
• The Royal Mail
• RSPB
• Saga Magazine
• The Wellcome Trust
• Yorkshire Wildlife Trust
The Land Gallery and Bees in Art are able to put you in touch with over fifty leading wildlife artists to find the right image to suit your needs. We have sourced images for use in national and regional TV, magazines, newspapers, private clients and Royal Mail stamps. Please telephone today: 0044 (0) 1430 810 239 or Mobile/Cell: 0044 (0) 7930 400 405 or fill in our contact form and we will get back to you.
Gary Woods updated work
Mount Cairo, photograph by Gary Woods
Gary Woods
has provided The Land Gallery with updated
photographs. Including Mount Cairo,
above. Scene near
Lewes, Highgate and 1st Step Pyramid, below.
Sark: Artists for Nature: Jubilee Project
CHANNEL ISLAND OF SARK TO HOST
JUBILEE PROJECT
ARTISTS FOR NATURE
FOUNDATION'S
The international non-profit organisation
Artists for Nature Foundation,
ANF founded in 1990 in The Netherlands, have
chosen the beautiful and unique, car-free
Channel Island of Sark as the location for
their fifteenth project. The ANF are a unique
organisation who draw the attention of
policy-formulators and decision-makers to the
natural world by enabling groups of
influential and talented artists to capture
the spirit of endangered landscapes and
species in their natural habitat through art.
Since the summer of 2009, Sarkee and artist
Rosanne Guille (a graduate
of the Royal College of Art) has been
working with the ANF, planning and fundraising
for a project which will bring 15 of these
“Artists for Nature' to paint, draw and sculpt
in Sark for ten days from 4th May 2011.
The project named 'Art for the Love of Sark'
will involve the artists recording all aspects
of island life from its rich and unspoilt
natural history to the human aspect. The
artists will come from all parts of the world,
from Russia and the USA to Germany, the
Netherlands and the UK, and among them the
award-winning President of the Society of
Wildlife Artists, Harriet Mead. A full list of
the participating artists can be seen at
www.sarkpaintings.com
under 'current projects blog'.
During the artists visit, from the 3rd day on,
there will be daily showings of their work to the
public and some of the artists will work with the
children of Sark school encouraging their own
interest in art and nature. As with other
ANF projects around the world,
it is hoped that there will be sufficient
funding for a project book to be published,
and a film and travelling exhibition to raise
awareness of what a special and unique, though
fragile island Sark still is.
Donations from the residents and businesses of
Sark and Guernsey have enabled the first artists
visit in May to go ahead. The artists will be
staying at Stocks Hotel where rooms
have been kindly donated for their stay. What
better way of celebrating nature than through
the eyes of some of the world's most talented
contemporary artists.
WATERCOLOUR PAINTINGS OF UNIQUE AND EXQUISITE ORCHIDS and other plants of the Himalayas by HEMLATA PRADHAN

WATERCOLOUR PAINTINGS OF UNIQUE AND EXQUISITE
ORCHIDS
and other plants of the Himalayas
by HEMLATA
PRADHAN
17 March - 1 May 2011
Opening Reception Thursday 17 March 5:30pm -
8:30pm
Serindia Gallery
O.P. Garden
Soi Charoenkrung 36
Charoenkrung Road
Bangkok 10500
Thailand
Tel: 02 238 6410
serindiagallery@gmail.com
Botanical
illustration is a genre that reflects the
development of art and science for over 500
years. In the Renaissance there was an interest
in naturalism and expeditions that left Europe in
search for new lands led to new discoveries of
plant species. In the 17th and 18th century,
botanical art gained popularity in the west,
especially England and Scotland where gardening
became popular among aristocrats who began
collecting and cataloguing exotic and native
plants. Sadly, this painting genre has begun to
fade in modern times.
This exhibition features watercolour paintings by
India's foremost botanical painters - HEMLATA
PRADHAN. A gifted child in the Pradhan
family that has run orchid nursery for three
generations in the hills of Kalimpong, Sikkim,
Hemalta Pradhan graduated with a diploma in
botanical illustrations from Royal Botanic
Gardens, Kew, with scholarship from the
Elizabeth Greenshields
Foundation, Canada, and a Master's Degree
in Natural History Illustration from the
Royal College of Art, London,
with scholarship from the Association of
Commonwealth Universities, London. It is rare
in modern days to see such a talent in
botanical illustrations: orchids and plants
are alive in her paintings, which also are
scientific records of vanishing species.
Amongst some large works of orchids in habitat,
other paintings in the show include Bailey's
Himalayan Blue Poppy, studies of Himalayan Cobra
Lilies, and also a painting of Himalayan Blue
Bamboo from the collection of her father Udai C.
Pradhan, one of India's renowned botanists.
Pradhan's works have been exhibited at the
British Museum and are in
the collection of Royal Botanic Gardens,
Kew, England. The Kingdom of
Bhutan also commissioned her for its orchid
stamps.
Land Gallery Links: today we added...
Birds
• Birdwatch: The Home of British Birding.
• Birdwatching: The UK's favourite birding magazine.
• Bird Fair: The British Birdwatching fair is the world's first and largest International birdwatching event.
• Bird Life International: Cross-border conservation vital to protect birds in a climate change world.
• British Birds Magazine: British Birds is a monthly journal for all keen birdwatchers.
• British Ornithologists Union: Volunteer surveyors, members and staff working in partnership to provide unbiased information about birds and their habitat.
• Surf Birds: The World birding website.
Museums & Galleries
• Artist's for Nature: Bringing renowned international artists to endangered locations where artwork is made based on nature conservation.
Other Interest
• BBC Wildlife Magazine: Welcome to BBC Wildlife Magazine: the best wildlife and nature photographs.
• Butterfly Conservation: Saving butterflies, moths and our environment.
• Fauna and Flora International: Fauna & Flora International (FFI) is a proven conservation innovator that continues to make a lasting impact on global biodiversity.
• The Wildlife Trusts: Protecting wildlife for the future.
• The Woodland Trust: The UK's leading woodland conservation charity.
• Wildlife and Wetlands Trust: Saving wetlands for wildlife and people.
• Wildscape: The Journal of Wildlife Art and Conservation.
• World Wildlife Fund: WWF protects endangered wildlife and environments, tackles climate change and promotes sustainable use of resources.
New Land Gallery Links
Organisations
◦ Painted Dog Conservation: Working to conserve and increase the range and numbers of the painted dog (Lycaon pictus) in Zimbabwe and elsewhere in Africa.
Other Interest
◦ Bees in Art You Tube Channel
◦ Surf Birds: The World birding website.
◦ Sark Paintings blog: Regular blog by Sark (Channel Islands, UK) artist, Rosanne Guille.
◦ UK Moths: UKMoths is the definitive online guide to the moths of Great Britain and Ireland.
◦ Wildlife Art Journal: The Art of Nature Connecting the World.
Professor John Norris Wood: Southampton University
Toad Walking by John
Norris Wood
The Land Gallery would like to extend its warm
congratulations to John
Norris Wood who has been awarded a
Professorship by Southampton University.
Formerly the visiting Professor of Natural
History illustration at the Royal College of Art, John
celebrated his award by running a drawing
class at the University. Seven birds of prey
were brought into the studio to be drawn by
students, according to John's keen desire for
artists to know wildlife through drawing. Some
of the birds of prey were allowed to fly
freely in the drawing studio.
Seabird Drawing with John Busby
John Busby
Seabird Drawing Week 2011
Gannets by John Busby
A field sketching and painting week based at
North Berwick on the Firth of Forth
18th - 25th June 2011
Course leaders: John
Busby, David
Measures, Anna Kirk
Smith and Darren
Woodhead
This is an
opportunity for enthusiasts with experience of
field sketching to gather for a week of drawing
and painting among many seabird sites in the
area: Bass Rock, Fidra, Dunbar, St. Abbs Head, Tyringhame,
Aberlady Bay. Artists can opt
to do their own thing or join others on visits
to seabird sites. John Busby, David Measures,
Anna Kirk Smith and Darren Woodhead will all
be on hand if anyone would like help or
guidance with drawing or painting in the
field, and we hope to offer optional evening
activities.
Contact Mark Boyd for more information.
Tiger Tiger Burning Bright: David Koster's Tigers
Limited edition Tiger woodcuts by David
Koster
The Tiger
William Blake
Tiger Tiger. burning bright,
In the forests of the night;
What immortal hand or eye.
Could frame thy fearful symmetry?
In what distant deeps or skies.
Burnt the fire of thine eyes?
On what wings dare he aspire?
What the hand, dare seize the fire?
And what shoulder, & what art,
Could twist the sinews of thy heart?
And when thy heart began to beat.
What dread hand? & what dread feet?
What the hammer? what the chain,
In what furnace was thy brain?
What the anvil? what dread grasp.
Dare its deadly terrors clasp?
When the stars threw down their spears
And watered heaven with their tears:
Did he smile His work to see?
Did he who made the lamb make thee?
Tiger Tiger burning bright,
In the forests of the night:
What immortal hand or eye,
Dare frame thy fearful symmetry?
Alexis Rago @ Opem: Lincoln The Collection
‘I Tremble at the Sound of Your Footsteps’ by
Alexis
Rago on view at Opem: Lincoln The Collection 05
Feb 2011 to 03 May 2011
Links @ The Land Gallery
If you would like to exchange links with The Land Gallery, please feel free to contact us for consideration.
Frogs & Newts @ The Land Gallery: John Norris Wood

Frogs &
Newts @ The Land Gallery: Smooth
Newts by John
Norris Wood
John was formerly a Visiting
Professor at the Royal College of
Art,
within the Natural History Illustration and
Ecological Studies post graduate course, which
he founded over 30 years ago. He trained at
the East Anglian School of Art &
Design, Goldsmiths
and the RCA where
he gained a degree with honours and a silver
medal for zoological drawings.
He has exhibited his works of Art throughout the
UK including the Victoria and Albert
Museum, Redfern Gallery,
Natural History
Museum, Royal
Academy, and the Society of Wildlife
Artists.
Alongside producing beautiful books for children,
John has worked as a freelance illustrator
for London Zoo, the Post office
and the
Radio
Times.
Apart from his outstanding artistic abilities
John is also a tireless enviromentalist.
Bees in Art has been updated
The Land Gallery’s sister gallery: Bees in Art has been updated.
Please visit to see art inspired by
bees.
Beetle Queen Conquers Tokyo: Jessica Oreck: Myriapod Productions
Beetle Queen Conquers Tokyo:
Jessica Oreck: Myriapod Productions
In this guest post,
filmmaker Jessica Oreck answers a few
questions about her documentary Beetle Queen Conquers Tokyo.
The film, which delves into the ineffable
mystery of Japan's age-old love affair with
insects, is currently playing in theaters
around the world and will air on PBS's Independent Lens
series in the U.S. in May 2011.
Beetle Queen Conquers Tokyo Trailer from Myriapod Productions on Vimeo.
Where did the idea
to make Beetle Queen Conquers
Tokyo come from?
I was helping out in a classroom where a guest
speaker, a young Japanese woman, was talking
about different elements of Japanese culture. She
mentioned, in passing, that people in Japan love
insects. I have loved insects since I was a
little girl, so my interest was immediately
piqued. I studied filmmaking, biology, and
ecology in university, and I knew I wanted to
make films about ethnobiology (the way
human cultures interact with the natural
world), so this was the perfect film with
which to start.
I raced to start my research but there was
nothing about this phenomenon in English.
Reluctantly, I set the idea aside. But only two
days later, my sister is sitting in an airport in
Baltimore, and she and the young man sitting next
to her strike up a conversation. He is a
bicultural Japanese American entomologist who
travels around the US giving talks about Japanese
love of insects. Um, providence? During our first
phone call I told Akito Kawahara that I wanted to
make this movie. He said something along the
lines of, “Cool. We can stay at my parents house
and I’ll introduce you to all of my beetle
collecting friends.” It wasn’t quite as easy as
that makes it sound, but it really feels like the
stars aligned for this particular project.
How did you produce
this film, and what are some of the challenges
you overcame in the process?
Thanks to Akito, most of our subjects were chosen
far in advance. We were also a really small crew:
myself (recording sound), my boyfriend, Sean
Price Williams, as camera, and then my best
friend Maiko Endo as translator. So the actual
production was, well, a blast. But determining
the structure of the narrative, that was a bit
more complicated. I knew I didn’t want main
characters – I was more interested in the
movements of social masses. I also had no
intention of a formal narrative arc. I had a
mystery, and I wanted to solve it, but I wasn’t
going to force it into the conventions of a
‘story.’ I wanted to move backwards through time,
uncovering clues that would point to how this
cultural phenomenon came into being. I started
with that idea and eventually the form of a
filmic spiral shaped itself in my head – one that
would move three-dimensionally around the subject
(insects in Japanese culture through time), while
allowing the periphery (history, philosophy,
religion) to inform the framing.
I did extensive research before traveling to
Japan – I drafted a 20-page essay containing
pieces of Japanese history and philosophy that I
wanted to include in the film. As the editing
process progressed I continued to refine the
‘essay,’ skimming off outer details. That
shortened essay (at three and a half pages) was
translated into Japanese and became the voice
over. Between editing the footage and writing and
editing the narration, it was a very organic
process. Everything just seemed to fall into
place.
In general, what
kind of relationship do Japanese kids have with
the insect world, and how does this compare with
the relationship most American kids have?
A Japanese child’s relation to insects isn’t that
different from an American’s child connection –
if you catch them young enough. Most young
children don’t have an innate fear of bugs (from
my experience watching thousands of them pass
through the butterfly vivarium at the American
Museum of Natural History). It isn’t until they
see the dad flinch or the mom scream that they
learn disgust or fear. What’s different with
Japanese children is that they are encouraged to
explore the insect world.
They keep them as pets, their dads take them on
insect collecting trips, and they travel halfway
across the country to watch the fireflies emerge
at dusk. Of course I am really generalizing – but
the phenomenon is generally quite widespread. I
think that an individual’s understanding of the
natural world is still mostly directly absorbed
through the behavior of the people he or she
admires, and that that is one of the reasons why
this connection to insects continues to thrive in
Japanese culture.
Did the people you met think it
was odd that you, an American filmmaker, were so
interested in this particular aspect of Japanese
culture?
Everyone seemed happy to have us, though they
were often confused by why we were making this
film. We got a lot of, “What? They don’t sell
beetles in America?”
What can this film
teach Westerners about Japanese culture and
values? What do you hope will really resonate
with your viewers?
Those are big questions. What I have learned from
Japanese culture that I think about most often is
the concept of mono no aware. Essentially, mono
no aware is the appreciation of beauty that is
transient. For instance, to the Japanese, cherry
blossoms are the most beautiful when they are
falling. But mono no aware has implications
outside of this definition. It isn’t necessarily
limited to beauty – it is also about focusing on
each moment as it passes. It sounds hackneyed to
say “appreciate the moment,” but making Beetle Queen has helped me
do that (at least more often than I used to).
I hope this is something viewers take away from
the film as well, but I don’t want to limit the
potential influences it could have. I have seen
many diverse reactions. Plenty of people have
been surprised by the loss of their fear, or by
newfound knowledge, or a novel appreciation of
beauty in unanticipated facets of their lives.
But my favorite story is of a World War II
veteran who approached me after a screening of
Beetle Queen. He said
something to the effect of, “For fifty years I
have thought of the Japanese as my enemy. And
in the past hour and a half, you have changed
that.”
Happy New Year 2011
Happy New Year
2011 from the Land Gallery
Ringed Plover Quartet by Robert
Gillmor
New limited edition
linocuts supplied by Robert
Gillmor, available in The Land Gallery.
Please visit Robert’s page here.
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