12 July 2022
The simpleton and the scorpion
From last week came some curious studies as the Winter Bloom has kicked in with a small moon. The light in the Western sky has turned electric, and sometimes I have to pinch myself and wonder if I’m not hallucinating.
At the moment there are so many colourful ribbons cruising overhead that I sometimes dream of hopping aboard any one of them like I’m a cummuter in London catching a double-deck bus on the fly.
So, I work swiftly and the speed of execution might seem frantic to an observer but to me the sky is like a colourful pin wheel spinning in the breeze and it’s just beyond my reach. At the same time for the painter, it’s also a double-edged sword, one that slices through the whole world of both the catastrophic and the serendipitous in one quick blow.
This was one of several, from four nights ago, and it’s my favourite. I like it because its idea is complete, yet at the same time so simple. It’s something whole from which nothing can be added or removed. It says exactly what I saw with little adulteration as if me, as the artist, was invisibly present.
I also like it particularly because it still surprises me even after just a few days of looking at it. I think the point of painting is actually to surprise us, not just once, but continually, forever and ever in fact. A really successful picture is an anomoly, for it breaks Nature’s tenet which says that all things that grow old will also die; fauna, flora, and even us. But a work of Art of any kind, when it really works, it lives on beyond us and it’s something we cherish all the more so because of this fact. Our Art is passed down and protected by subsequent generations. I believe we value it because it teaches us something new about ourselves, and it does so because its creator also learned something new from its act of its creation. Yes, I know, climate change will eventually either drown it, or burn, but hey,,,, I’m not putting a timer on it.
I also like it because it dares to ask a question, another vital sign that a picture is alive and lives out in the the world of humankind. This is picture that does not have an answer for anything. But like A.I, it might possibly have a consciouness all its own and could ponder its own surprising existence. My own search for self-expression, that Holy Graal of creativity for so many artists I think, might just be as simple as painting what’s in front of me because implicit in this action is already a kind of self-expression purely manifested.
I don’t often look at many of these pictures after they’re finished, I put them away in book shelves in my home where they suffocate all together in tight communion. But within this community they’re at least protected from the mildew of this seaside weather here.
In any event, like for any creative act, the goal is to enjoy it always but also improve. Because I love tennis and I play regularly, I learn continually from both on the court and at the dunes where I paint. In both activities I’ve learned to act and react quickly by seizing my subject at once and striking like a scorpion with full trust in my intuition. Though I may still be a crap tennis player but decent painter, I’ve improved considerably in both domains, and happily so, because if having painted or played tennis this long without making progress I would certainly be a simpleton.