
Acrylic on Reclaimed Wood by Christine Durrant
Walking the Hills
Christine Durrant
I chose not to retire but to become a full-time artist. After 40 years of fitting art into my life I now fit my life around making art. This is pure joy. A day without making some sort of art feels like a day wasted.
After three months working on cityscapes of Tokyo on my return from a visit to Japan in January, we started walking on Dartmoor in the spring and I turned back to landscapes, revelling in the different colours and textures these required.
The paintings, 'Approaching the Tor' 'Glowing Gorse' and 'Walking the Hills' were inspired by these walks. I was captivated by the fields of bluebells and the glowing gorse. The moors are full of contrasts. 'Paddling the Dart' is from a photo that my husband Tim took when he was paddling the Dart in the autumn.
I have just finished working on a series of paintings based on sketches I did during a trip to Leicestershire, returning to the theme of ‘Harnessing the Wind’ and incorporating man-made structures into my landscapes.
In November last year, my husband and I held a successful joint exhibition at The Projection Room in Paignton in aid of Rowcroft Hospice, raising almost £600. I regularly exhibit with Baycat artists.
I work on rescued plywood and MDF. As scrap pieces of wood, they do not lend themselves to being framed. Instead, the wood is mounted on blocks which hold it, as if floating, away from the wall.
I like using reclaimed wood as its dents and flaws add to the texture of the painting. It is unframed but mounted on wooden blocks so it can be easily hung but lies flat as if floating against the wall.
Acrylic on Reclaimed Wood
32x30cm
Unframed
















