7 minute read

THE EXTON ARTIST Exton’s

PENNY & JOHN RICHARDSON The Exton Artists

Advertisement

From your beloved pet or a family member, to your favourite Rutland landscape, no commission is too challenging to inspire Penny Richardson, the Exton-based artist who works alongside husband John to create portraiture and so much more...

Pet Portraits & Commissions

IT’S A PARADOX, isn’t it. These days we all have reasonable quality cameras in our pockets, built right in to our smartphones.

We take more photographs than ever before and yet – despite our prolific tendencies as shutterbugs – most of those languish on our devices, never to see the light of day.

Perhaps we’ve become complacent as to the power that a really striking image can have, the memory it can evoke or the emotion that it can convey... at least, until we’re presented with a picture too beautiful to ignore or one of somebody too precious to us to overlook.

Nobody knows that better than Exton artist Penny Richardson. Growing up in Rutland, and schooled at Morcott Hall School for Girls, Penny remembers her art teacher John Walton fondly, as an artist in his own right as well as somebody who fostered her prodigious talent. “He then encouraged me Penny is still taking commissions all sorts of IT, printing and to go on to A-Levels on the for pet portraiture as Christmas gifts. other technical skills. next leg of my scholastic These range in size from 8x6 to 16x20 and vary in price from “Growing up on the farm journey, which would be at the Rutland Sixth Form £250, with a typical turnaround of one or two weeks, for details see www.pennyrichardson.co.uk was wonderful, and it allowed me to see animals College in Oakham.” or call 07884 198748. going about their daily busi“When I’d completed my A-Levels ness, which actually gave me quite I successfully applied to the Leicestershire- a keen eye for anatomy too.” based Loughborough College of Art and When Penny and John first married in 1989, Design. I studied life drawing, sculpture in the family had five dogs, plus a clowder of clay, photography, plus 3D work that helped farm cats. Today they have five (“beautiful!”) to direct me onto the path I am still on today.” children and three grandchildren who they’re Penny worked for a couple of years on the family farm whilst pursuing her painting, quickly picking up commissions. immensely proud of, as well as the family pets, Meg & Chutney. Regular dog walks around their village, Exton, provides constant inspiration right through the seasons, and some of A few years later she married John who Penny’s work has seen her paint their own today is an exceptional picture framing street in the snow, as well as local landmarks expert and photographer. It’s a skill set like Exton’s Fort Henry and Normanton which segues nicely with Penny’s work, as he Church. However, Penny’s preferred subjects can frame her images and he also manages and the ones she’s most frequently called on her website too, and brings to the partnership to paint are dogs, horses and cats. >>

>> “I have painted people, of course, but pets are by far the most popular subjects,” says Penny. “I think it’s because young human beings change as they’re growing up, whereas our pets look the same throughout their adult lives. And perhaps it’s because pets, sadly, aren’t with us for as long. We love them and want to remember them.”

About half of Penny’s commissions are of dogs, and she most commonly works from a photograph, even one taken on one of those camera phones. Even if the quality of the photo isn’t terribly good, Penny can still use it as source material. However, if a client is really struggling, the fact that John is a photographer can come in handy. “I’m a mixed media artist, and tend to let the breed of animal dictate whether I work in gouache, watercolour or oils.” “My own opinion is that longer coats look better in oils whilst shorter coats are more suited to gouache, and for the latter I use watercolour board, but for oils and acrylics I paint onto canvas.” Alongside dogs, horses are a common commission, and one where attention to anatomy is even more important. Her cat portraits too, are adorable, and capture the marble-like eyes of an alert feline. People and landscapes are a less common commission but you may soon see more of them. John is a keen runner and a member of his local triathlon club. His previous adventures have included the 66-mile Rutland Round and a 160-mile trip around Rutland’s 50 parishes. Back in January 2021, a nasty case of Covid saw him hospitalised for six weeks, but despite doctors’ warnings that he wouldn’t be able to run again, John has focused on becoming well enough to take up walking and running again, and has enjoyed a summer out in the fresh air. One of the advantage is being able to go out for walks with the dogs and to enjoy the area’s scenery. He and Penny have also been visiting local villages and hope to create a collection of work based on the area’s most beautiful churches... although commissions are always coming in, which necessitates this project being put on the back burner. “Especially around Christmas I’m always very busy, and I think there’s a balance to be achieved between helping as many people to capture beautiful portraits of their pets as possible, but not treating a commission like something to be rushed. I can turn around work in as little as a week around Christmas but I like to quote two weeks.” “It’s incredibly rewarding to immortalise somebody’s dog, their horse or their cat. We know how precious ours are to us, and when you get the sparkle in their eye, or the glossy highlights of their coat just right, it feels wonderful!” n

Find Out More: Penny Richardson is an Exton-based artist who specialises in pet portraits and landscapes, prices from £250/8x10 original, with bespoke framing available courtesy of John. Turnaround is around two weeks, for examples of her work see www.pennyrichardson.co.uk or call 07884 198748. Prints are also available of Penny’s Rutland scenes from £65, including Hambleton, Normanton Church, Exton’s Fort Henry and her Battle of Britain aeroplanes over Rutland series.

Uplifting, evocative and an easy Christmas gift to post!

If ever there was a time to sit down and give yourself permission to enjoy a book that has absolutely nothing ‘gritty’ or ‘challenging’ about it, then surely this must be it! These stories are gloriously gentle; charming, nostalgic and surprisingly insightful. Presented in beautifully crafted hardback books, with original commissioned artwork cover, ribbon marker, soft-tint paper and generous font size...

Book 1: All for Overalls: “Just because you’re out of the way doesn’t mean

you’re not in the middle of it!” The news from Dunkirk in the summer of 1940 finds a small Lincolnshire village adapting to wartime ways and the new RAF hospital, as characters and best-intentions abound! A 14-year old errand-boy called Gertie, is spurred into action and inspires a young gang of Salvage Scamps to join him in ‘The Effort’. Equipped with bicycles, wheelbarrows and buckets, they manage to bring half the village in to their scrapes along the way.

Book 2: If the Sock Fits! “You get them to believe they can fight back … and

they stop feeling beaten.” This second book in the Trilogy moves on to the autumn of 1940 and the harsh reality of harvest time in the countryside as the Battle of Britain rages in the skies overhead, then the news starts coming of the London Blitz and the Greatest Generation rises to the challenge… as determined and inventive as ever!

Book 1: ‘All for Overalls’ and Book 2: ‘If the Sock Fits!’ are available NOW from Walkers Bookshops (Stamford and Oakham) and from purchases@GertiesPath.co.uk

Book 3: ‘Raids, Rallies & Reserves’ (due out early 2023, can be reserved directly through GertiesPath.co.uk).

This article is from: