Painting in a strange way is a type of soliloquy—communicating with yourself—oneself. There are times you do something on a surface that you recognise as something you have held or looked at—a seashell perhaps, or a softness of something—a bit of fruit—you're not actually going out and setting up a still-life situation—you're working through a process where you actually recognise something as it appears.

—John Firth-Smith

Exhibition Dates: 29 May – 5 July 2003

Let's talk about this notion of EQUIVALENTS. When did the idea occur to you?

In the whole process of painting a picture, you find yourself sitting back and looking at the work. As you apply the paint you're reminded of things.

In this present show, you seem to be conjuring in paint the equivalent of a place or an object or an emotion—a kind of parallel experience.

Some experiences are fleeting—amazing moments of happiness or sorrow—or amazing realisations, memories. A tragedy, a bushfire or an incredible dawn—a whale leaping out of the water—you're not there to whip out a camera—sometimes these experiences creep back years later—they suddenly reappear.

So you're having this constant conversation with the work?

Painting in a strange way is a type of soliloquy—communicating with yourself—oneself. There are times you do something on a surface that you recognise as something you have held or looked at—a seashell perhaps, or a softness of something—a bit of fruit—you're not actually going out and setting up a still-life situation—you're working through a process where you actually recognise something as it appears. It's a strange way of putting it all.

The whole point of making these paintings is to share something—I imagine.

Exactly—of course—you want the viewer to have a visual link—t's open to interpretation—like music. In the process of painting the picture, putting paint on and taking it off, working it up… the painting goes through a sequence. When you see film footage of clouds that are sped-up—suddenly the clouds are moving quickly over the landscape—t's almost as if you're painting like that. It's quite a good analogy that frantic thing of getting the painting to move—go thru' its processes, like that sped-up film of a cloud—otherwise it's rendering.

So what is it about painting?

Sometimes you want the painting to come up front like a brick wall—at other times you want to achieve atmosphere and distance—thick paint or thin paint. It's the limitation of paint that I find the biggest challenge. I find the complication of painting on a flat surface really difficult—trying to make a visual type of poetry. At times there is no joy really. The great effort is just relying on yourself—instinct and intuition and knowing—and that bit of information the gods have given you to pull these things off. I suppose the pleasure is forcing the work out of yourself—the exertion has a lot to do with it.

When do you think a painting is finished?

Well, funnily enough, after all this movement I've been talking about, really, a painting is finished when it gets to some static point, a kind of joggle fit, an equilibrium—you are exhausted by it, and it exhausts you. Inspiration is the catalyst—solitary working in the studio—groping with the ideas—the finished work represents a solution.

Tell me about your interest in photography.

I like taking photographs--it goes back to New York in 1981—images of snow and graffiti—but I don't use photographs as ideas for paintings. Recently, I took a photograph of some cracks in a roadway because they reminded me of one of my paintings—that's the reverse of that normal thing of working from a photograph.

You continue to find inspiration at Hill End.

Yes, the colour of the earth, the atmosphere--the unpredictable things you notice around you for the first time. I like the colour in my paintings to be as realistic as possible and, through the colour, suggest and evoke a reality. But location is only as important as the information found there—it's an ingredient. The studio is where it happens.

VOICE FROM NEXT ROOM: Anyone like a cup of tea?

Gavin Wilson and John Firth-Smith in conversation
Abercrombie Street Studio, Chippendale
31st March 2003

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John Firth-Smith Apparition, 2003; oil on canvas; 5 x 15ft; enquire
Apparition, 2003
oil on canvas
5 x 15ft
John Firth-Smith Nevermore, 2003; oil on linen; 5 x 15ft; enquire
Nevermore, 2003
oil on linen
5 x 15ft
John Firth-Smith Spanning, 2003; oil on linen; 5 x 15ft; enquire
Spanning, 2003
oil on linen
5 x 15ft
John Firth-Smith Venus, 2003; oil on linen; 5 x 15ft; enquire
Venus, 2003
oil on linen
5 x 15ft
John Firth-Smith Distance, 2003; oil on linen; 4 x 12ft; enquire
Distance, 2003
oil on linen
4 x 12ft
John Firth-Smith Lights, 2003; oil on linen; 4 x 12ft; enquire
Lights, 2003
oil on linen
4 x 12ft
John Firth-Smith Wavelength, 2003; oil on linen; 4 x 12ft; enquire
Wavelength, 2003
oil on linen
4 x 12ft
John Firth-Smith Reef #1, 2003; oil on linen; 2ft 6in x 6ft 7in; enquire
Reef #1, 2003
oil on linen
2ft 6in x 6ft 7in
John Firth-Smith Breakwater, 2002; oil on linen; 2ft 6in x 6ft 7in; enquire
Breakwater, 2002
oil on linen
2ft 6in x 6ft 7in
John Firth-Smith Reef #2, 2003; from the series 20.; oil on linen; 2ft 6in x 6ft 7in; enquire
Reef #2, 2003
from the series 20.
oil on linen
2ft 6in x 6ft 7in
John Firth-Smith Fragment, 2001; oil on linen; 4 x 8 ft; enquire
Fragment, 2001
oil on linen
4 x 8 ft
John Firth-Smith Silkie, 2003; from the series 13.; oil on linen; 4 x 8ft; enquire
Silkie, 2003
from the series 13.
oil on linen
4 x 8ft
John Firth-Smith Whitewater, 2003; from the series 14.; oil on linen; 4 x 8ft; enquire
Whitewater, 2003
from the series 14.
oil on linen
4 x 8ft
John Firth-Smith Salome, 2003; oil on linen; 6 x 8ft; enquire
Salome, 2003
oil on linen
6 x 8ft
John Firth-Smith Surprise, 2003; from the series 11.; oil on linen; 6 x 8ft; enquire
Surprise, 2003
from the series 11.
oil on linen
6 x 8ft
John Firth-Smith Outline, 2003; oil on linen; 6 x 8ft; enquire
Outline, 2003
oil on linen
6 x 8ft
John Firth-Smith Seen and Gone, 2000; oil on linen; 8 x 8ft; enquire
Seen and Gone, 2000
oil on linen
8 x 8ft
John Firth-Smith Dancer, 2003; from the series 15.; oil on linen; 6 x 3ft; enquire
Dancer, 2003
from the series 15.
oil on linen
6 x 3ft
John Firth-Smith Find, 2003; oil on linen; 6 x 3ft; enquire
Find, 2003
oil on linen
6 x 3ft
John Firth-Smith Points, 2003; from the series 17.; oil on linen; 6 x 3ft; enquire
Points, 2003
from the series 17.
oil on linen
6 x 3ft