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A big thanks to Bicester Community college year 11s art group for these questions and good luck with your still life project. I thought it might be interesting for everyone else, so here you go!

Did you like art at school?!

DY: Yes, very much, on my first week at secondary school I got lost on my way between lessons and was found by my future art teacher (Mrs Byrne) where I was given a lovely antique pearl handled gun to draw. A great way to make friends with the Art teachers.

Are you naturally good at painting or did you learn it?

DY: I have always drawn and painted so, it is probably a healthy mix of lots of practice and enough natural ability to keep me practising.

Have you got better by painting/drawing everyday?

DY: Yes, definitely! That was one of the things that started me on this project, I wanted to see how good I could get at something by doing it everyday.

How do you select your objects?

DY: Lots of different ways is the quick answer, but I have a set of rules which I break every so often but that’s what rules are for (especially if you have made them up yourself!)

One key rule is the objects have to be a certain size, for the first year of oil paintings the size had to fit your hand so I would be able to paint most of the objects in a similar scale. But this year I have made the paper different sizes, which has allowed me to paint slightly larger things and smaller things! Another important rule is that the objects have to have something to do with the day they are painted on, even if it’s just that the object caught my eye and I wanted to paint it on that day. Another rule that I haven’t broken is that the object has to fit entirely on the board/paper. Which means I never paint a small section of a larger object.

Lots of them are food related/half eaten why is this?

DY: I eat food everyday. The half eaten aspect is a useful device that allows me to include other textures into the painting, for instance the jam doughnut painting would be a squashed brown ball with no jam visible if I didn’t half eat it. So by taking a bite or two I can reveal both the jam and the fluffy pale inner dough of the doughnut, helping the painting tell the story of what it is to be a jam doughnut! It also stems from an early painting in year one when I suddenly realised as I bit into a rich tea biscuit that I had found my subject matter for the day! Plus, I get to taste what it is I am painting while I am painting it.

When do you paint them? Same time daily or not?

DY: It does vary a bit but, during the week I tend to paint in the evening around 8 to 9 o’clock but the weekend can be very different.

Do you have a proper job?

DY: Mmmmm sort of! I work as a Fine Art Technician at The University of Gloucestershire and also teach evening classes in painting and life drawing

Have you ever missed a day during Dan Young Daily? If so why?

DY: No, I am hugely proud of the fact that I haven’t missed a day in the last 465 (and counting) days. I have had two close calls however, one evening I was working late, got home about 9ish had something to eat and relaxed into the evening then suddenly realised at about 11 o’clock that I hadn’t painted so, very quickly made a painting of a lime and just got it listed at I think 11:55. The other close one was a few weeks ago when Debbie (my partner) cut her finger and we ended up in casualty until 11, we rushed back and I made a painting of a dressing and micro-pore tape.

Do you allow yourself to paint the same object twice in the year?

DY: No that’s another rule! I do allow myself to paint the same thing in different years, although a few days ago I did paint an elastic band and the next evening I painted the same elastic band but incorporated into my elastic band ball. A minor infringement of the rules.


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part two:

How long does each painting take?

DY: The oil paintings took anything from 5 mins (I think only one was that quick) to a couple of hours but most took around an hour at most. I think it got quicker throughout the year and could paint and post in under an hour on a good night. The watercolour paintings are very different because I need to wait for some areas to dry before I can move on to other areas so they can take a bit longer to finish but I am probably not working on them for as long. I am lucky enough to have my studio at home so I have a developed a great technique where I nip upstairs to paint in the ad breaks during TV programmes and allow it to dry while I watch tele. Other times I will make several other paintings at the same time and rotate which one I am working on.

Are you inspired by any other artists?

DY: Yes all the time, just thinking about that way of working by painting several watercolours at the same time is something that JMW Turner did! I have always been inspired by Velasquez, I love the way he uses lively brush-marks to describe things, the impressionists for similar reasons as well as their use of colour. There are a whole load of other daily painters I look at who are a constant source of inspiration and competition.

Who is your favourite still life artist? Why?

DY: I love 17th century Dutch still life paintings, Eduard Manet, Jean-Baptiste Chardin, Georgio Morandi, Lisa Milroy, Claus Oldenburg…

But favourite I think has to be Van Gogh mainly because of the everyday nature of his paintings especially the still lives. I like the honesty of them, like the famous painting of his boots – possibly made because he has just taken them off, or painting a bowl of potatoes because he has them in his kitchen and will eat them later. I love the way he shows us the things (and places) he has around him and tells us so much about him and his life, and those around him.

Do you take suggestions on what to paint each day? Can we influence your decision?!

DY: It all depends on how good the suggestions are! How about you give me three ideas and we will see……


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