TAG- tubes artists gallery TAG#4 Tubes Artists Gallery | Page 34

Ian Fallace I first saw Ian’s work on a visit to Bridewell studio and Gallery in Liverpool (UK) a few months ago and was immediately taken by them. The painterly abstractions seemed to be so inviting and a feast for the eye and the senses. In my opinion this is quality abstract painting by an artist who really knows how to turn the ‘power’ up on the visual expression. My intention is to persuade Tubes to make a full feature on Ian’s work that will go deeper into this artists well of creativity. Here is a extracts from Ian’s writing about the painting above, which gives an insight into the artists thoughts and sense of history and place. “...I had a small show recently in the Bridewell Gallery, which was initially supposed to be for one day only but ended up lasting a week. I wasn’t certain even the day before that it would happen, as I had injured my back and could barely walk. One piece was shelved as it involved me walking to make it and I had to rely on others to carry the paintings from the studio to the gallery. There were only three paintings and over the whole week, footfall was in single digits, so why did I bother? I grew up in a village. We moved there from a town in autumn 1975. Events were based around the church and it’s various festivals or the village hall and it’s interest groups; Book club, Art club, flower arrangers and growers of outsized vegetables. There were many pensioners living there, all of whom had experienced life during the Second World War and some who had experience of the first. WW1 began sixty-one years before we moved to the village. This meant that anyone sixty-six and upwards would remember something about it and would have been affected by it. Any male seventy-five and upwards may well have fought in it as boys lied about their age to enlist and the authorities did very little to discourage this. Ninety-eight served. Fifteen didn’t return. Today the village has a population of seven hundred and I imagine that hasn’t changed very much since 1914. The impact of this mechanised carnage was huge on this village and every other village, town and city in the land. The memorial was in the middle of the village with the names of those who served and died carved into stone. There were repetitions of family names. One of my friends, had a representation of five of his family, another had four. What had seemed like a great adventure to many volunteers soon became a nightmare and those that returned were changed forever. At secondary school we studied the war poets and as my knowledge of the subject grew, so did my anger at the pointlessness of it all. It was always difficult to watch the survivors, Harry Patch and the other centenarians break down before the cameras, remembering something that happened eighty years before; men who lived long lives and suffered for their longevity. Harry Patch, the last survivor who experienced the trenches, died in 2009 ages 111.  So what is the relevance of this back-story? Well, I felt that it was important for me personally, maybe as some kind of exorcism, to mark the Centenary of the Armistice.