Home page
Leisure Latest
Film
Theatre
Celebrity Watch
Comedy
Music
Events
Out and About
Competitions
Astrology
Ecards
Travel
Entertainment News
Art & Exhibitions
Previews
Reviews
Site Map
Search Advanced Search
Previews  RSS Feed RSS feed | About
EDITOR'S CHOICE
NEWS
Update: Man appears charged with shooting murders
Police appeal after attempted abduction
EAGLE EYE NEWS
BIZARRE LONDON
BROMLEY: Man held over alleged sheep sex
GREENWICH: Car crushes confectionery in supermarket accident
VOTE
Do you think people caught carrying knives should automatically be jailed?
Yes, it’s the only way to stop knife crime.
No, it’s too simplistic a solution.
Don’t know.
GET OUR NEWS BY E-MAIL
Most read Comments
Taylor made art in Twickenham
Wall art: Frank Taylor's work has sold more than 500,000 copies
Wall art: Frank Taylor's work has sold more than 500,000 copies

Most artists are lucky if they sell enough work to keep them in rolling tobacco and clean underpants. Not so Guildford-based painter Frank Taylor.

When Taylor licensed his painting, Cyclades, to Swedish shopping giant Ikea, the subsequent print sold more than 500,000 copies.

And while mass produced artwork comes in for a lot of stick - Jack Vettriano and Brian Sewell are hardly the best of friends - it sure pays the bills.

If you fancy getting your hands on a Taylor original, head to St Margarets and the Karen Taylor Gallery (no relation), where 40 of his paintings and a series of limited edition prints go on display this week.

Taylor's first London show for several years, Travel showcases the colours and themes that have made his work so popular on living room walls worldwide.

But does Taylor himself travel to paint or paint to travel?

"The travelling provides the inspiration for my work," he says. "Although I live in a beautiful place, I find it difficult to do paintings where I live. When you've been somewhere for a while, it becomes normal. See a place with fresh eyes though and everything - the landscape, the architecture, the people - seems more exciting."

Even his artistic process is a journey of sorts. As art critic Ian Courcoux puts it: "When he begins a painting Frank Taylor is unaware of its final form. The less he knows where the process will lead, the more interesting it becomes."

Taylor explains it this way: "Sometimes I work on the spot, but more often that not, I work from memory. My paintings aren't topographical depictions of actual places. I'm making it up as I go along. And as a result, some are successful and some are failures. It's a risky business."

Or sorts. But there is no doubt that Taylor's commercial success has given him a freedom not all artists enjoy. These days, it seems, Taylor's paintings travel as much as he does.

"They pop up in hotels and restaurants and other people's homes and on television," he says. "Someone even told me there is one in Conservative Central Office!

"The way you remember things is not like a photograph. But somehow my paintings seem to speak to a lot of people.

"A few years ago I travelled to Cappadocia in Central Turkey, which has these strange volcanic rock formations called fairy chimneys, and underground cities and churches dug into the rock.

"When I got back I did some paintings that combined the two. They were quite abstract but people who had been there told me they instantly recognised and remembered them."

Frank Taylor: Travel, Karen Taylor Contemporary Art Gallery, 18 Crown Road, St. Margaret's, Twickenham, call 020 8241 2020, visit karentaylorgallery.com.

3:12pm Thursday 21st February 2008

Related Links
Karen Taylor Gallery
Print   Email this
Archive
'
Local Search
Powered by Powered by Fish4
This panel uses JavaScript
Click here to read your local newspaper online
Croydon Champions
Click here to read about the Green Guardian Awards 2008
Click here for more information
SNAP IT AND WIN
Text us your pictures and you could win £100
Have your say
Visit our forum and tell the world what you think
Memory lane
Visit Croydon's past in our heritage section
Terms & Conditions
Privacy Policy © Copyright 2001-2008
Newsquest Media Group
A Gannett Company
This site is part of Newsquest's audited local newspaper network