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Born in Rochdale in 1969, Scott Tetlow developed a passion for art as a young
boy. During his late teens Scott spent his free time sketching punks and
designing album covers. It was this body of work that earned him a
place at Cheltenham University, where he gained his fine art degree.
In 2002, his much-loved studio burnt to the ground and he lost
everything. Unable to continue both practically and emotionally, Scott
threw himself into teaching, believing that his art career was now just
part of his past.
In 2011, Scott Tetlow moved his family to Verona and, ironically, moved into an
apartment directly above an art shop. Feeling inspired to pick up his
brushes once again, he began to draw the stunning architecture. With his
passion rekindled, he returned to England and built a studio in his
garden. He hasn't stopped painting since.
Whilst living in Taiwan, I studied calligraphy and discovered that this
beautiful form is valued as high art. The art of calligraphy is used
to express the inner beauty of the soul and spirit. Chinese calligraphy
focusses on two types of beauty: the obvious aesthetics and the hidden
beauty: the soul and life of a figure. Often, Chinese painters will say
they are writing a painting and this concept has influenced my work
heavily over the years. I want my works to tell their own story, for the
viewer to read their energy.
Each of my drawings is almost a manifestation of the frame of mind I am in at the time that I create it.
As Henry Ward Beecher said, Every artist dips his brush in his own soul and paints his own nature into his pictures.
Somewhere along my path, I became engrossed in the need to convey
movement, to create the illusion of life. Knowing how to create
something in the line, how to find the light and the life in a figure is
considerably harder than the layering, rendering and re-rendering I do
when Im painting with oils.
I have to learn and understand the lines before I can make them work. It
has taken years of practice, of feeling like Im walking through a
maze; making mistakes, going down the wrong road and learning whether to
turn left or right. Ive had to practice and practice to be able to
create a piece in one go, its almost like doing it in one breath.
Each time I pick up my tools, I am running out onto a tightrope I
cant stop. I have to keep going to get to the other side. There is no
time to question myself or correct mistakes because I have to get the
marks down with confidence. I dont get a second chance. I cant rework
it; every mark has to flow out of me to give the figure movement. If I
havent studied the lines, if I dont fully understand them the drawing
just wont work.
Every single line on each of my drawings is inspired by a living object,
the result being that every line has the energy of a living thing.