10 October 2019
Morandi’s light and brief shadow
This is a very relaxed painting, almost like a pair of stone-washed jeans. Actually, it also looks like the way I dress evach day; a clean but rumpled white tee shirt and old jeans.
It was the first study of three when the sky appeared as a pale Prussian Blue with a hint of lime to it. The cloudbank has peaked in pink, its state before going warm red and the sea below wass almost black. I was happy because I always look for an occasion to put black and pink together, but the sea and sky aren’t always so cooperative, nonetheless I’m crazy about the Art Deco feel to these colours. The sky today looked soft like when one wears a grey cashmere on a cool afternoon.
I like it the better than the other two. Sometimes I just like something for the feeling in it, not because I think it’s particularly good or not. I am grateful for that because it separates me from the academic mindset. I have a few academic friends who teach and I’m always amazed by their clinical approach to Art. Of course, as a painter, I’m critical but my sensibility is personal. Though I’m equally uncomfortable by just a purely emotional to a painting, it’s still my primary reaction to Art, But from it, I then go off to figure it out, its assets and faults.I may just like something for a few instances, days or weeks, years even, or the opposite, because I’m human. not a binary machine.
But to be fair, I think a lot about painting, most of the time actually. Music too, like any vocation or sport, one execrcises it’s hard to get it out of one’s mind because it’s always there, like the sun despite the weather. Come to think of it, it may be like being a teenager in love. Sometimes it’s intense but I can withdraw when I have had to much of it, yet I’ll always go back to it.
And although I can frequently think about other painters and their work depending on the moment, I generally I don’t think about them or their work when out painting at the dunes. Of myself, yes, like an old flame, I often carry the memory of the previous day’s pictures’ effect upon me, still simmering in my head or maybe others from either the recent or distant past. Curiously, seeing how the sky looks on one afternoon will suddenly re-configure other images in my imagination. I don’t think we never completely forget anything we’ve loved deeply. But do I think of other painters when working? No, never. Not even Turner, and I am glad for that.
Looking at this dishevelled-looking study today in my home, I see that it reminds me of my early love for Giorgio Morandi. That may be a stretch for others to believe but I think it’s the sensuality of it. I think of just how much Morandi’s whole oeuvre has infected my artistic sensibilities over these 60 years or so. He was one of the first painters I immediately responded to as a child. My father had lots of Art books and several about Morandi. I looked with a great wonder at how his intimate oil paintings seemed so alive to me.
I was keenly aware that it was his sensuous use of paint that made them real. In some of his intimate assemblies, the squiglly and unctuous layers of light that cast brief shadows have also managed to long stay with me like an early childhood crush. These are emtional memories, things that possess their own logic and cannot be altered like the present or the future. This is the world of imagination, memory and art.
My father was also a painter, but in a halfhearted sort of way. He had lots of talent but he also had a life apart from it had, and this kept him from the discipline of being a working artist. It demands a lot of time. Maybe one can have a separate life from art but I think its hard, it’s sort of like trying to keep a lover separate from one’s wife and family. It quickly gets too sticky, and it never ends well except in French films, naturally.
But my father did paint wonderful life-like portraits which adorned all the walls of his large bathroom with oil paint. Piero della Francesca, Mantegna, and Masaccio, were among his favorites. From the bathroom walls all these Italian noblemen looked into the intimacies of the 20th century toilet room. It was wild, and I was amazed that he was allowed to paint so freely all over the walls, but then, my parents each had separate bathrooms and unbeknowst to me at the time, they would also soon have separate addresses.
So, in a picture like this and done so far away from Bologna, I guess I still see the calm serenity of Georgio Morandi. I admit it might not be appreciated due to its unfinished look, but personally, it’s a picture I like for my own reasons even though they may change in time. But unlike his pictures of bottles and jars and cups that live in a macro-world like looking through a telescope at the protected and confined environment of his mind, my own are done out by the open sea and under an endlessly expansive sky. The connection for me today, is through the soft light and sensual lens of Morandi.