The master at work
Moving image: Explore cultures and art making around the world
Moving image: Explore cultures and art making around the world
The master at work is an intimate portrait of artist, Peter Churcher, as he becomes an Australian war artist and contemplates a move to Spain. Filmed in 2005 in his studio in Prahran, Melbourne.
For me every time I look at one of those great masters, Velázquez, Goya or Rembrandt, it is like a reminder, they just remind me how it should be done.
Peter Churcher paints people, the street kids, the scientists, the business people, the great breadth of the characters that form the canvas of Australian society.
Peter Churcher receives a phone call at the beach:
"Can you be the next Australian war artist? In the film we discover what happened in the Persian Gulf and Afghanistan".
Peter also discusses his adventures in Tuscany as he paints a portrait of fellow artist Jeffrey Smart.
It was during this period that Peter began to think seriously about making the move to Barcelona where he now lives. The master at work records the period prior to Peter’s departure and gives a glimpse of the artist in his Melbourne studio.
"In the old days when I would travel to Europe once every two years and cram a lot of old master looking into a few short weeks, I would try and take note of all these reminders and lessons I was learning and bring these back to Australia with me. Now, because I am living in Spain, I am having a more regular and continuous access. I am being reminded of this on a more constant level and what they are basically reminding me of is, you know, that less is more, don’t fuss around with the peripheral things but get to the heart of the matter. Paint with real conviction, real acuity, with that sense of sharpness of the eye. And every time I see these pictures, I am reminded of this and I can go straight back to the studio and apply it to my own practice”.
What is it like to have your portrait painted and why do people commission these paintings? How is the portrait constructed and how does the artist capture a likeness? How does history influence the art of portraiture?