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    • Hibernia works on paper 2021
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    • Considering Art - interview with Bob Chaundy July 2021
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    • Im Wartezimmer
    • A Cold Wind From The Mountains
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Eleanor Moreton

  • home
  • Paintings
    • Miracles
    • Jubilee Hotel 2024
    • The Stranger 2023
    • WinterFlower 2021
    • Hibernia 2021
    • Hunting the Wodewose 2019 - 20
    • Into the Meadow of Certainty 2018 - 19
    • A Cold Wind From the Mountains 2017
    • California Dreamin' 2015
    • The Gift of Shit 2014
    • Absent Friends 2013 - 14
    • Bones in the River 2012 - 13
    • Hungry Ghosts 2012
    • The Ladies of Shalott 2010
    • Im Wartezimmer 2009 - 10
    • Austrian Men 2008 - 10
    • Queens 2007 - 9
    • My Grandmother's House 2006 - 7
  • Works on paper
    • Hibernia works on paper 2021
    • Limerence 2019
    • Poolside Barbecue 2017 - 18
    • The Ragged Girl 2017 - 18
    • A Cold Wind from the Mountains 2012 - 16
    • Family 2012
    • Watercolours Queens 2008 - 10
    • Collages 2009
  • Texts
    • Considering Art - interview with Bob Chaundy July 2021
    • Artist's statement 2015
    • From 'Picturing People'
    • A Coruscating Eye
    • Hibernia
    • The Ladies of Shalott
    • Im Wartezimmer
    • A Cold Wind From The Mountains
  • CV
  • Contact
Faerie Folke 2.jpg
Madame Bubble.jpg
Walden.jpg
George of the Woods.jpg
Faerie 5ive.jpg
Festival of Love.jpg
A Painting for Alice.jpg
IMG_4282.jpg
Calif ins 1.jpg
IMG_4246.jpg
IMG_4255.jpg
IMG_4257.jpg

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CALIFORNIA DREAMIN’

The murder of Sharon Tate by The Family in August 1969 was one of the first truly frightening events I can recall. I remember trying to banish Charles Manson’s face, looking madly out from my parents’ newspaper, from my mind as I went to sleep.

Faerie Folke 2 uses an image of Manson’s Family at play near their home, Spahn Ranch, California. The change in scale places the family in some kind of enchanted world, as indeed they were in effect.

The work in California Dreamin’ explores a particular period and site of my own history. Brought up in an uneventful Berkshire town, I was schooled in an ugly New Town down the road. There was disused 1930s theme park called California nearby.

Both my home town and the New Town were frontiers between the urban and the rural, and there is a counter narrative emerging in these pieces around people who inhabit the borderlands between town and country (suburbia); ‘civilization’ and wilderness. The painting Walden takes its title from the 19th century American book in which by the author, Henry David Thoreau, chronicles the two years, two months and two days he spent living a simple life in a cabin by Walden Pond, Lynn, Massachusetts.

Whilst the historical facts and my memory suggest that the early 1970s was a dreary period, both personally and nationally, when I revisit it in my imagination, I find it can become a fairyland, full of hope of escape, accompanied by a soundtrack of music I didn’t actually listen to at the time.

My paintings use representation as a way to embody intuitive links, memories, music, trains of thought and feeling. In these works image comes to the fore and mutation and process, whilst still present, are more subtle. Thin paint allows the white of the ground constantly to inflect the paintings, like the lightness and air of my imaginary California.

EM 2015

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