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Fisherman

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Fisherman

Signed mixed media on paper.
From the 'Fisherman in the Harbour' series.

Media includes textured acrylic, gouache and ink.

Moby Dick was a favourite book of Farrington’s youth, and at 16, on leaving grammar school, he applied unsuccessfully for a position on a whaling craft in Liverpool. Years later, his brother was drowned in a scuba diving accident at Scapa Flow, swept deep into a current where he was forced to cut the rope connecting him to his diving partner. Farrington spent 10 days on a fishing boat searching for him out at sea. The experience informed a great many of his maritime paintings, from seascapes of desperate fish stock hoovered up by legions of fishing boats to the endless trail of a Melvillian white whale, harried by greedy sailors.

Signed mixed media on paper.
From the 'Fisherman in the Harbour' series.

Media includes textured acrylic, gouache and ink.

Moby Dick was a favourite book of Farrington’s youth, and at 16, on leaving grammar school, he applied unsuccessfully for a position on a whaling craft in Liverpool. Years later, his brother was drowned in a scuba diving accident at Scapa Flow, swept deep into a current where he was forced to cut the rope connecting him to his diving partner. Farrington spent 10 days on a fishing boat searching for him out at sea. The experience informed a great many of his maritime paintings, from seascapes of desperate fish stock hoovered up by legions of fishing boats to the endless trail of a Melvillian white whale, harried by greedy sailors.

$1,589.22

Original: $4,540.62

-65%
Fisherman

$4,540.62

$1,589.22

Description

Signed mixed media on paper.
From the 'Fisherman in the Harbour' series.

Media includes textured acrylic, gouache and ink.

Moby Dick was a favourite book of Farrington’s youth, and at 16, on leaving grammar school, he applied unsuccessfully for a position on a whaling craft in Liverpool. Years later, his brother was drowned in a scuba diving accident at Scapa Flow, swept deep into a current where he was forced to cut the rope connecting him to his diving partner. Farrington spent 10 days on a fishing boat searching for him out at sea. The experience informed a great many of his maritime paintings, from seascapes of desperate fish stock hoovered up by legions of fishing boats to the endless trail of a Melvillian white whale, harried by greedy sailors.