There is a certain type of artist who will pursue landscapes like a storm chaser tracking a tornado. Oliver Akers Douglas is one of them. The more remote the location, the more monstrous its topography, the more likely you are to find the British painter driving down byroads in his 4x4 studio, a converted Land Rover, to try and seek it out.
Just a few months ago, Oliver was crossing the low-lying grassy plains of Connemara with his easel packed into a golf trolley. His aim was to reach the Atlantic tip of the Ballyconneely Peninsula, a stretch of land that pierces the bit of ocean between Clifden and Roundstone.
The point is so westerly, he could see the weather beginning to thicken on the horizon above the water. All the while he stood inland, trying to capture the crisp, coastal light before the harsh Atlantic conditions really began to kick in.
Oliver is, by definition, a plein air painter, but there is not much sudden, spontaneous painting going on here. Setups like the one in Ballyconneely are no accident. The artist selects his locations carefully, and he prefers the kind that makes him work for his reward. In anticipation of his next solo show, Land Sea Sky, he has spent much of 2020 travelling alone to find his desired coastal and countryside scenes in Dorset, Connemara and Scotland’s west coast, as well as the chalk downland of Wiltshire, a county that the artist and his family have lived in for more than 10 years.
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Esta historia es de la edición November 2020 de Artists & Illustrators.
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