14 June 2022
Doubt is our passion
The weather has changed again, after intermitant weeks of rain the skies are mostly now clear so I’m again allowed to get to the beach. As we approach the Winter Solstice, the afternoons begin to clam up like heavy iron doors each day before 17h. But hey! Soon, enough, I tell myself that by the end of next week the days will lengthen and so will my optimism grow again too.
When I returned to the beach the other night I had a string of good days of work though I did feel like a novice. No problem, it happens a lot when I’ve been away for even a week. But also it feels invigorating. I guess it depends upon how much, or how little sleep I’ve gotten the night beforehand.
So I approached the afternoon with cautiously but with excitement too. The afternoon had been super clear and the air was cold and windless. This was the first of three studies from the other evening which all came quickly. This season at the start of winter often brings bright turquoise and lemon yellow seas at the dusk hour. Sublime lime! But how to capture it?
This one in particular embodies something that surprises me. It may be that I find pure joy that in it, and I wonder where it came from? Surely not me? It seems to sing, and I say this because it’s been so rare that I’ve been able to access this quality. Too much of my work has rarely exhibited love for joyous things. I’m melancholic fella even if people find me somehat affable. I’ve always been drawn to darkness. Sadly, pathos for me, has been a stronger bridge to others than joy. But hey! Maybe I’m changing?
If I were to make titles for any of these paintings I would certainly call this one ‘The Incredible Lightness of Being’, to steal from Milan Kundera’s brilliant book of yesteryear. All I can say is that I am continually amazed and grateful that this motif, like a village fountain, is a gift that keeps giving and giving so generously since forever. Of course, it’s just the same motif I first approached five years ago, and its mercurial behaviour remains the same night after night. What has changed has been me, because it has made me a better painter today, and that’s only because I’ve learned to see better. Over time, this is what a good and hardy motif can teach even a mediocre painter.
Like all work, the quality of one’s paintings goes up and down in the short term, maybe it has to do with the mood of the Muses. I think it’s the same for every painter, whose one great painting session can awaken them and silence our doubts. But for those awful pictures, one needs both resolve and faith that have been stored within throughout all the seasons. After all, isn’t this why all seasoned artists, writers, and musicians keep showing up day after day, to trudge over their own landscape filled with both failure and success? For Henry James once wrote, “We work in the dark, we do what we can, we give what we have, our doubt is our passion, and passion is our task -- the rest is the madness of art.” Henry James (1843 - 1916) What artist could argue with this?
But here, even inspite of myself, the joy is apparent, and I’m so glad for it. I painted it quickly and I even like the wonky horizon line that droops slightly on the right. But even this, is just a part of an organic whole, a creative mishap, not really a mistake, more like a misstep, and these missteps reveal the process of painting and give it its originality, like it or not, and for better or worse.
It’s a flattened picture, compressed like a candy wrapper one might find on a city street. This flat quality is everything I’ve been secretly coveting ever since ‘seeing’ Matisse decades ago. I just didn’t know how to get there authentically on my own. Such a conception of painting one cannot fake. It has to be ironed out slowly from lots of failure. What I also really like is that this picture is not locked to the horizon line but exists beyond it, in a world of make-believe and into the realm art. These are now winter skies and winter seas that sparkle and glow as gentle June calms the ocean down.
In the end, I’m so grateful that I’m the author of all these things for better or worse, even for my most worst things because they’re still like offspring to me, and I accept them all. If I saw this one study somewhere for instance, on any wall, celebrated or otherwise, I would rush over to it embracing it like a young mum to her infant son after school. Is this vanity? pride? or perhaps just foolishness?