By Sue Wild
Brian Baxter has taken a serious approach to watercolour for only the last 10 years, but he produces
paintings that impress. That is not surprising. He has been a professional artist for 48 years. In
fact, Brian dabbled in watercolour intermittently over the years but always found it challenging.
The bills needed to be paid, which meant selling paintings. He knew that could be done easily enough
using his normal media, so he stuck with oils and acrylics. Why the change in direction? We trace
Brians story:
Brian became a window-dresser in a department store when he left school, then moved into
sign-writing. At a young age he was influenced by a local artist, Aston Greathead. Aston was a
wonderful old man, an accomplished watercolourist and winner of the Kelliher Watercolour Award in
1966. Brian launched into the art world and in 1973 became a full-time artist. Thats the year that I
wrote Artist as my occupation on my tax return. Im still awed by the idea that I am An Artist. In
1977, he won first prize in the Kelliher Art Award for Landscape. This gave a huge boost to his
confidence and brought him public acknowledgement. Over the years he has exhibited around New
Zealand, in Adelaide and Washington DC.
In recent years the need to sell was not so pressing. At last Brian had the opportunity to follow a
long-time yen to experiment with watercolour. At last Brian had the opportunity to follow a
long-time yen to experiment with watercolour.
Watercolour has a spontaneity, a freedom and its a disobedient, unpredictable medium. At first I
found it challenging to unlearn oil painting techniques, to give up some control and let watercolour
talk. Now I appreciate the fresh looseness and find accidents can be appealing. I have a drawer full
of failures, but sometimes watercolour will create a brilliant passage that you couldnt contrive to
paint yourself. One thing is for sure, it won't be bullied!
Brian says a fellow artist gave him 100 tips for wannabe artists and among are the following
important ones:
To learn to paint, paint; every day. Develop this as a habit because habit is stronger than will.
Develop a sense of humour about yourself and dont be crushed by failure. The only failure is failure
to risk failure. Every failure hides a lesson. Give yourself permission to fail then fight like hell
to succeed.
Dont envy others success. Praise generously and share your knowledge. The only person you have to
improve on is yourself.
Dont state, indicate. Dont try to explain everything. Let the viewers imagination help complete the
picture.
Practise drawing at every opportunity. It is the basis of good art. In spite of what you may have
heard, accuracy is not a dirty word.
Listen to what the watercolour is telling you, and where it wants to go. It will largely paint
itself if you let it.
Never say die until it is dry. Never, never give up.
Artists whose workshops Brian has attended include Melbourne painters Joseph Zbukvic, Alvaro
Castagnet, Greg Allen and Ross Paterson.
Brian admires all of these artists greatly, but also many of the excellent local artists whose work
has appeared and will continue to appear in our own Splash exhibition.
Brian says, That is why being invited as Splash Guest Artist rates as the biggest and most humbling
challenge of my whole career. I hope I can come near to following in the footsteps of previous guest
artists.