9 October 2024
When asked what his definition of music was, Igor Stravinsky replied that “... music is an organisation of tones, an act of human mind. I remember a phrase of the great philosopher Schopenhauer who spoke in the same terms about music, and the musical tones that inhabit and form a universe of their own in which the human mind has created the materials and reduced them to order.”
When I saw this in a clip taken from an old documentary I was reminded of how it related to the organisation of a painting. Similar to ‘musical tones’, drawings, are for me, like bones that build the skeletal frame that allow a painted image to be assembled from random and disparate ideas through brushstrokes, all of which are assigned an order by the human mind. Whew... I hate getting so pedantic, but hey!
For myself, I see a painting’s colour harmony acting like all the muscle, flesh, and the skin of its surface. But within that structure there also lies the drawing that either holds an image together or lets it float undisciplined around the picture surface. There are a zillion different kinds of paintings out in the world today and all of them take us on different kind of journey. Like with musical harmony and melody, drawing and colour are both equally important, yet a predominance of one over the other will naturally dictate the kind of painting it becomes. But without either of them, I’d say just to abandon ship.
Every painter (or musician) finds their own personal form just as water finds its own level. Today more than ever, the world of Painting offers so many different ways of creating, both order and disorder, that it can make me dizzy at times. In many ways I’m glad that I’m no longer a student faced with so many of these vast choices confronting me.
When I look at this picture from a few evening's ago I see the effort I made trying to walk a tightrope between my attention to a solid idea and one to an ephemeral free-wheeling colour structure. Is there enough delicate form within it to hold this colourful surface together? With such limited time in these sessions it’s easy to get it all wrong. These are precious moments when I sometimes feel like a wizard summarily ordained to transcribe a fragile sacred text in the sky.
This picture is a precarious image but I hope it stands up on its own. But as always, I trust that if it doesn’t, then maybe tomorrow, or the next day, I’ll get closer to getting it right. I always believe in this hope, that I’m on the right track at least in this series because I have faith in the motif to lead me there.
Hope is a funny thing though. I still secretly hope for a lot of things actually, despite the wise Buddhists who tell me that hope is a useless idea. I’ve always wrestled with that because hope is one of those American ideals I was brought up with. Like apple pie, it has a whole narrative all its own, and which comes with a melody that can nudge me gently whenever I feel blue. I have lots of melodies in my head, but my favourite is ‘Pick yourself up’ with lyrics by Dorothy Fields and music by Jerome Kern. BTW, Diana Krall plays and sings a great rendition of it, and it still always cheers me up.
But a world without hope is indeed a bleak one. Many of my friends share their despair to me about the state of the world (but mostly about America at the moment). I commiserate with them but I don’t feel the same way somehow. Yes, it’s bad over there, but it was worst in the 1930’s. We can never forget that awful chapter. But I try not to rub it in because when we’re really blue, we feel what we do. Though each of our pains are unique, like snowflakes they fall equally upon us all.
Though I would never say this to friends who are in a deep funk, I do secretly wish for them to paint the sea in front of a twilight sky, but if not the sea, then anything and everything at any time of day. Creative acts change our thinking. I say this because, although most of my pictures may never see the light of day, the joy of painting, as any amateur knows, is its own remedy, and it can steel one’s heart from the onslaught of sadness and despair.
These fragile images from the beach that give me such electric bliss, might also be my own small lamps I light in this darkness.