29 January 2020
Happy Endings are messy
After a week of rain the skies have given way to rich and colourful Blooms. Whew,,, this is from the other night and it was a bit of a surprise. It’s a long distance from the way I’ve been working recently. Looking at it, I can see that I’ve become a Flat Earther. It’s intrigueing because its compressed design asks me whether or not this kind of abstraction can possess volume and light? Those would be my wishes if it did.
It was the last of four from the other night. But it’s this one that reminds me of a flag and it's decidedly different. In it one can see that the evening had grown dark and the orange bloom was beginning to dissipate as the Prussian Blue from below rises up to displace. It's the last chapter of the day when everything will soon meld together into dusk.
I also marvel at how different it came out than the other two in just a matter minutes. Is it me who is so fickle or the sky? They could have been done from three different evenings, maybe even by three different painters as well. I like them equally, but it was this flat one that started a dialogue in my head. It is also a larger format than I usually use.
Unlike so many painters today, I’m not an adherent of American Expressionism, nor do I have much in common with their painting philosophy though I do love a great non-figurative or non-objective picture when they are sufficiently imbued with enough form and light to keep them alive. But what I really like about them is their need for speed. Many, but not all of these painters worked quickly and without hesitation, as if in an attempt to escape monkey mind. They wished to create a movement, a revolutionary wave that would change not only how we looked at the Arts but in the ways that people looked and thought about life in Post-War America. Despite the sleepy conservative 1950’s, there was a tiny, truly alive, and awake crew of poets, painters and writers who were looking hard at reality and all the possibilities that life offer human beings here on earth.
The Beat Era as it became known, produced lots of movements in the Arts, Sciences, and Philosophy. It was a noble era but looking backwards at it now, I wonder if real movements only become movements after the fact because they are rarely pre-ordained beforehand. In politics perhaps, but hardly ever in the Arts. In Art History, we usually only find out about them years later after the Zeitgeist has already cooled down. After struggling collectively, or alone, we suddenly discover that a bunch of cool artists and thinkers had emerged from their chrysalises to bequeath the rest of us something new and surprising.
But the regarding the Abstract Expressionists, this element of speed and spontaneity has always appealed to me because I’m naturally the nervous type. But they weren’t the only speed demons in the world of Painting. It’s been a long tradition throughout Art history though not with a vast majority of adherents. In the East of course, spontaneity has always had a corner of the market, but in the West too, especially after the Post-Impressionist period. The quick drawings of my teacher Leo Marchutz were naturally an inspiration for me, especially the drawings of Venice. But Albert Marquet became a more practical influence on me maybe because I felt closer to his use of ink and brush. So much of what I learned from them became the inspiration for me in my approach to these paintings by the beach at dusk.
Consequentially, I usually attack this motif with the speed of a scorpion once I’ve seen something. From then on, any further impulses to thinking or rationality generally slip away from me as I focus on the canvas board like it’s a victim to be devoured.
In the end I’ll use any means necessary to make a picture work. Occasionally, though it’s rare, I’ve used my rags and my fingers tips. But something else I do share with the Abstract Expressionists is a feeling that all the messiness left at the end of a short session actually becomes the resulting picture. All is good, by whatever means necessary, a happy ending is usually a messy one.
All that said, in this curious image, there is also a footstep into Minimalism, and this is a new experience for me. I never really got into it before, it was a 1960’s thing, and I was still a teenager and spent my time looking at girls. By the time I got to France and began painting as a student (in earnest), I was already by then swept away into Impressionism. But in fact, Minimalism is still a speciality item for many art enthusiasts around the cool capitals of the world and it holds a place of veneration.
So suddenly, I look at this study and although it’s super tiny compared to the large colour field pictures done already 80 years ago, I can see an interest growing in me for a certain kind of compression. Someone had recently remarked to me that my some of work resembled Marc Rothko. I could understand as I had seen this kind of simple compression in his pictures but I had never really warmed up enough to them to investigate. I should have been flattered because he is a kind of God to most Art lovers, but instead found myself a little annoyed. Then I just became curious, so of course I looked him up online and bought a book about him too. Eventually I accepted all this talk as a compliment. But for myself, I certainly don't compare my work to his, though in this painting I can certainly see the similarities.
Looking at it now, I think I'm most surprised by the faint hints of yellow just underneath the violet band at the top of the picture that seems to help the sky open up like a stove pipe at the top of the roof. Visually speaking, I wonder if it doesn't help to keep claustrophobia away.