Strange and busy period

The past few days seem to have been a blur of activity. I’ve been to photographic exhibitions, lectures on Iron Age settlements, revisited and rewrote some of my research, art classes, walked in the country, took photographs and so on.

The one thing I haven’t done in a week or so is sit down and make a digital painting. Today I’ve got round to that with this portrait of Amy Winehouse. Ok this is just the start but it was actually great to just sit there and work at the problem of making something interesting and different from a photo I found of the great singer.

Simon Marchini
Web: http://WWW.simonmarchini.co.uk

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Walk in the country

A lovely day, sun shining what better ways to spend the day than a walk in the countryside in this case through the Bluebells at Calke Abbey. Better than working for a living that is for sure.

Simon Marchini
Web: http://WWW.simonmarchini.co.uk

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Oh no not Europe again…

I know I know but this is yet another insightful article by Andrew Rawnsley on the issue…

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2013/may/18/tories-europe

Simon Marchini
http://www.simonmarchini.co.uk

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Europe…here I go again…

Well I thought I had put the Europe demon to bed for a while but clearly I haven’t. However, in truth this is more a considered?? rant at how the Tories are eating their own babies or as they were described this morning …’Mad swivel eyed loons…’.

In what universe do these Tory politicians live? Certainly one I’m not aware of. We have a major problems that need to be addressed like, oh I don’t know, the economy yet there seems to be a significant proportion of the Tory MP’s who want to bang on about Europe, Europe, Europe , I know this is ironic as this is what I’m doing but it is my blog so I’m allowed to be ironic. They seem to want a return to a world that we left behind a long long time ago. A world where people knew their place, including Johnny Foreigner, and that the Conservative party could muster together enough votes to get an overall majority. It has a vernier of respectability placed on it by has been politicians who when they were in power and could have done something didn’t, and now claim to have had some misgivings all along. And I haven’t even got onto UKIP.

Lets be clear the EU has a huge democratic hole in its middle – we have elections to a parliament that is almost as ineffectual as local councils with the same level of support. We can expect that the 2014 European elections will be a ‘triumph’ for UKIP just as the recent council elections were a ‘triumph’…that is 25% of the 25% of the electorate who bothered – that is 5% of the overall figure. Which in itself is a good showing for a fringe, or should that be ‘Farage’, political movement but hardly representative of the electorate as a whole.

But back to the problems with Europe. It may be the the idea of a Union of European nations is not what a lot of people want but you have to ask what the alternative is? A very simple scan of recent European history would quickly suggest that without trying to work together European countries very quickly start to not work together with deadly consequences for the millions who have died. I know this is a broad over exaggeration but not too much – the last 70 years have been some of the most peaceful in European history which I think is something to celebrate. In fact one of the most logical reasons why Britain should keep their nuclear deterrent is because the French have the bomb. I am not joking and a quick drive across the fields of Flanders, as I did the other week, demonstrates just how dangerous European countries are when left to their own devices. Or perhaps a more modern event would be Kosovo – we are dangerous people when we don’t make a really hard effort to get along.

Now we in the British Isles can pretend that Europe doesn’t effect us, we are not European and that conflicts across the channel are ‘their’ problems. Well this never happens, from the western Atlantic ‘celtic’ civilisation, classical Greek tin traders, Romans, Vikings, Normans, 100 years War, Dutch wars of independence, Napoleonic Wars, Two World Wars what happens in Europe never stays in Europe. I am reading a book at the moment about how the Johnny Foreigner destroyed the salt production trade in the Fens in the Middle Ages. Salt from Europe, in this case Gascony was much cheaper to import than produce at home and so salt production in the Fens ceased. And the ironic thing about all this was that the centre of this import trade was Boston and Kings Lynn – two of the places where UKIP had a ‘strong showing’ in the recent elections.

So what is the message here? Well the first is that perhaps I shouldn’t get so vexed about such matters – fair enough. The second is, I suppose, that we are not isolated from Europe but a part of of Europe and it is, and always has been, vitally important to our national interests to be involved in what happens on the European mainland because when we are not it usually ends badly for many young men from the British Isles. After all we have much more important historic links to Europe than we do to say, oh I don’t know, the USA where “the special relationship’ was only forged because of, well, a European war that we were loosing badly. Before then both the USA and Britain had a very stand offish relationship.

And the third lesson? I guess Tory MP’s should perhaps be a little more honest with the British people, actually make that the English, when obsessing about Europe. Being out of the EU isn’t going to stop the EU influencing what we do in Britain it just means we’ll have no say on what the EU does and therefore will have to put up with any half baked vindictive measures that may well come our way.

Here endth today’s rant about Europe and the Tory right.

Simon Marchini
WWW.simonmarchini.co.uk

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Busy Busy Busy

Continuing the hot and cold theme I stated a couple of days ago I am now hot…suddenly my historical research has taken on a whole new life and in truth I’m not sure where to turn next. Going out this weekend so this should help clear my head a bit. I haven’t even had chance to think about the art class this afternoon. Where has all the time gone?

Simon Marchini
Web: http://WWW.simonmarchini.co.uk

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Fame at last – Ha Ha

All these hours spent at computer trying to work out where Roman villas might be has finally paid off. I have been able to update the National Monument Register (NMR).

One of the records I’ve been looking at describes a Roman villa in the parish of Sproxton at site called Denton Field. This came from a source dating back to the early part of the 19th century. After much searching I was able to demonstrate that this was in fact near to the village of Denton in Lincolnshire. My source was a book I found on Google Books which described a fox hunt in the 1850’s through the area and ending up at Denton Field.

It turns out that there was already a Roman villa recorded at Denton and no doubt the 1811 book got its parishes and counties mixed up – Sproxton and Denton are around 6 miles apart.

To quote Tallahassee from Zombieland…” you got to enjoy the little things…’

Simon Marchini
Web: http://WWW.simonmarchini.co.uk

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Changing role of the iPad

Once upon a time I only used to produce digital drawings/paintings using the iPad. It was the centre of much of my ‘artistic’ output. However, since December last year this has changed. I no longer the iPad for ‘serious’ artistic works, leaving that to the iMac and Photoshop. Instead it has become something I use to make a quick sketch or drawing.

I think that this has freed me to start to experiment with the iPad, perhaps to be a little freer with how I approach making a painting. It might also be that I’m not using a serious iPad graphics package such as Sketchbook Pro but rather Brushes. However, this does sound like a bad work man and tools excuse rather than anything more substantial.

For whatever reason my relationship with the iPad has changed, whether this is a prolonged hot and cold period only time will tell.

Simon Marchini
WWW.simonmarchini.co.uk

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The importance of field work

Anyone who has spent time in libraries studying will know that sooner or later you really have to get out and actually look at the real thing. This is as true about works of art as it is about historical research. You have to get out and smell what you’re studying. This is especially true of landscape archaeology where you could have look at old maps, google earth etc and come up with a pretty water proof theory – which is what I had done. The only problem was that when I got out on the ground I found that things weren’t the way I had thought. When this happens you have challenge your preconceived ideas and start again.

This image is a case in point. Up until I walked the lane yesterday at Freeby I had thought that this lane was part of a roman road. However, when you get out on the ground you notice that the ‘road’ is covered by ridge and furrows left by medieval farming. This, in itself, is not too much of a problem – there are at least 500 years between the two, plenty of time for the road to disappear. However, it did start me to wonder about the route and I quickly realised that it doesn’t make any sense, from a Roman perspective and what appears to have happened at Freeby is that the original route was distorted by the establishment of Freeby village. There is some archaeological evidence that would suggest there was some Roman occupation at Freeby, although to the north of the current village. It is a puzzle and one which I suspect I won’t sort out anytime soon.

I once had an internet conversation with an academic from New Zealand about understanding Anglo Saxon England. He no doubt has a much greater knowledge of the academic material, it his job after all, but I had the advantage to stand on the land, to feel the wind in my face and see the way the water was running. In short I could easily do the field work which this academic, no matter how learned, could never do.

Simon Marchini
Web: http://WWW.simonmarchini.co.uk

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Hot and Cold

Any one who might come across this blog, first of all welcome, won’t be aware but I blow hot and cold about something almost in the same sentence. Those of you who have been here for a while will already know that I change my mind about many things. Yesterday I was all cold about my historical research and today I was out doing field work all day for the historical research.

It was a real great day apart from when I was almost attacked by a dog! Now I don’t blame the dog but I do blame the owner who hasn’t taken the trouble to control their animal. One of the worse things you can hear is…’ oh he won’t hurt you…’ Today it was a big strong dog who finally obeyed his owner not before coming right up to me barking and bearing his teeth!

Apart from that it was wonderful day, especially standing next to the stone cross at Sproxton. This is over a 1000 year old, covered in weather worn celtic carvings, and when you touch it you suddenly get this feeling of connection with a past you only get the faintest glimpse of. These crosses probably replaced wooden versions that went back to the earliest christianity – so the church yard at Sproxton could have been a holy Christian site since 7th century. Of course Christianity actually went back to the 1st century in Roman Britain but after Roman withdrawal it gets rather murky in our part of the country so it is safer to take about the reintroduction in the 7th century.

I’m really tired and have a lot or work to do tomorrow but it has been a great day. Hot and Cold indeed.

Simon Marchini
Web: http://WWW.simonmarchini.co.uk

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Georgia – an iPad Painting

Been a bit of an up and down day…not sure why. I watched the new Star Trek movie today – which is simply the best movie I’ve ever seen. Before I go on I think I need to clarify that. I am a Trekkie or Trekker of whatever they are called. I love Star Trek, I have done since I was first saw TOS back in the late 60’s. I’ve watched all the episodes, even the really disappointing Enterprise series. So my judgement is not unbiased, whose is?

Given all those caveats I still think this is best movie I’ve ever seen. It had everything any Star Trek fan would ever want from a movie, humour, fantastic special effects, characters that ring out as fully rounded people who are not the goody too shoes of the early TNG episodes. There are loads of Star Trek references, and I mean loads, although they are introduced in such away as to make them fresh and at times humourous. So a great way to spend a couple of hours…am placing my Blu ray order shortly.

However as the day wore on I became less and less enamoured with the way things went. I suddenly started to have cold feet over my historical research, which I do blow very hot and cold over, I’m now tepid heading towards freezing. However, I finally found something to lift my spirits a half hour or so working on an iPad painting.

Oh to have the emotional control of Spock and but then I wouldn’t be human!

Simon Marchini
WWW.simonmarchini.co.uk

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