11 August 2021
The funeral home
Here is something from a few days ago. A strange dark thing. It was the third and last one of the day and so different from the other two which were bright and airy. A storm had gradually arrived after approaching from the North East and it was already getting a bit dark for this picture. I like the sudden feeling in it; lonesome and forlorn after a day of sunshine.
I put it up on Instagram and was pleasantly surprised by the warm reception. It’s a funny thing about Instagram, everybody criticises it and dumps on the the stupidity of so much narcissism present, but after living in a void for most of my life, I like it. I use it only for work, nothing more personal that because basically I don’t have much of a life with much pizzaz that would interest others. Like so many painters and creators of a certain generation, I’ve lived and worked in isolation because that was what life was like before the smart phone. After all, I did come from an era when a telegram arrived to inform me to come home quickly if I wanted to see my father before he died, which I did.
I spent twenty years in the Aix countryside with no means of getting my work out nor to communicate so freely about it. I was part of a whole generation of creative solitaires. Although cities were hubs where one mingled within the exchange of cosmopolitan ideas and friendship, many artists still lived in isolation from a viewing public even in cities. So now that we can publish an image instantly around the globe it's really magical. I still scracth my head over this fact. Imagine Paul Gauguin file sharing paintings of Brittany with Vincent in Arles?
But today, back here on the Pacific Coast of Australia, these small pictures are diffused around the globe with ease and much gratitude for I am no luddite. This study from two evenings ago is somewhat different vis-a-vis so many others in the series. It’s simple in the extreme, and is it because I seem to have several different painters inside me?
Actually, I think I should just be grateful for the large closet of sartorial style within me. These painterly peregrinations lead me all over the shop and they remind me of that good advice from writers who ask themselves in mid-paragraph; Is this what I really want to say? Like them, I’m just painting what is present right in the moment and what appears real, but looking at this image now it makes me think of a funeral home.
I believe this is as important for a painter as it is for a writer, though to be honest (and I’ve shared this a lot) I rarely think much when I am in the middle of a small study. Writers have all the time in the world to think and to fantasise while leisurely smoking cigarettes and drinking wine. The way I work makes any of this impossible, but anyway, what would children think if they saw a painter at the beach next to a bottle of wine planted in the sand?
But as long as I keep working, keep seeing, keep feeling, I cannot complain. It would be horrible to be stuck. Believe me, I know, because I have often been stuck for long periods at a time throughout my life. I think the one good thing about aging is that one seems to care less about all that stuff that previously consumed all my attention. I think artists and writers love what is real at the moment no matter what they are doing or wherever they’re doing it. We’re all like golfers who need to concentrate in the moment while trying to avoid the yips.
As this stormy sky the other night was about to bring sheets of rain I wanted to finish up quickly and beat it out of there in a hurry. Yes,,,, I almost hate to admit it but sometimes a picture looks a certain way just because the painter was in a hurry.