The gantry crane is an old steel structure, about 12 stories high, it used to lift cargo on and off barges from the Lachine canal. A disused train truck runs underneath it, which would have brought or delivered goods from the many factories in the vicinity. Nowadays, its a historical artifact and defining feature of the local landscape. Over the years I have painted it, including a good one done in the
winter of 2022. Today, I tackled the reflection of the crane in the ripling water, with the murky side-walls of the canal visible in the foreground. Looking down, one could see the brown muck decending into a dark blue abysss, with yellow leaves sunk to the bottom, and a few leaves floating by on the surface.
Gantry crane reflection, watercolour 6 x 7.5" cold press, October 2025
The other day it occured to me that I might paint on the front of old paintings. Like the Construction project down on
Dollard street, you can see in the last painting a potato in the background because I did the painting on the front of an older painting. In the example above, I painted over a cutting from an old 'doodleism' painting I did awhile back, in order to make it look like I had put artwork on these silos. Its a kind of fusion painting... In my University days I was quite the
experimental painter, and its fun to bring it back every now and then.
Fusion silos, watercolour 6 x 7.5" cold press, October 2025
This one shows a close-up of the gantry crane with a painting underneath, but the forms got jumbled up creating the sensation of a fourth dimension, or something trippy. I think this style works better with a large surface such as the silos in the previous painting.
Gantry crane fourth dimension, watercolour 6 x 7.5" cold press, October 2025
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