24 June 2024
A secret hiding in plain sight
With all the cruel craziness going on in the world at the moment, I wonder against all my usual hope, to what purpose is it to keep making pictures? Yes, I know it’s a hyperbolic complaint with an implicit bit of self-pity but I can't help myself sometimes. Is it pointless to paint under the weight of so much man-made suffering going on around the globe?
So when in these states, I need to consistantly remind myself that I’ve already wasted too much of my life worrying about so much chaos over which I’ve never had any control. This is my own personall issue and yet, the chaos of humankind, with all its cruelty and violence, receives so much attention that many of us can forget that angels still fly in and out of our stormy clouds. Art, through all its guises, has always survived because its creators have laboured through thick and thin finding light during history’s dark chapters. I can too easily forget that when I find myself disheartened. So in these fragile moments when I am saddened by a world overun by greedy and hateful people, it’s easy to imagine that a lugubrious filter shades the light of humankind. Against all odds I think it’s the unseen world of the Arts that have always lit up the world by keeping it brighter. If I lived in a large city I would make a bee-line to any large musem, one, full of historical wonders to replenish my thirsty memories of this fact when I feel down about the world.
An artist, I remind myself, must be resolute and make sure that my heart is as flexible as my imagination in difficult moments when I’m prone to worry about a world overtaken by human cruelty.
Inevitably, when in this line of thinking, I almost always come back to my go-to black hole and think of Germany in the 1930’s, when the onslaught of barbary and genocide rained down upon Europe. My teacher Leo Marchutz went through the second world war living just outside of Aix-en-Provence at the Châteaunoir. Being German and Jewish, he was constantly pursued by the Vichy Government yet remarkably at the same time he was protected by lots of angels in the form of his local French neighbours. For much of the war he often had to sleep in the caves of Bibemus Quarry. So when I worry that the world is falling apart I think of him, so poor, that he couldn’t afford eyeglasses during the war and couldn't read books nor see his own work clearly.
After a lifetime of watching it all and getting way too worked up, I‘ve finally made a saner vow to follow a life of artistic creation wherever it takes me, even to the poorhouse. More precisely, perhaps, I’ve really made a vow to Light. I couldn’t know it for most of my painting life but now I see clearly that it’s always been about luminosity in every sense of the word. Does it derive from my discovery of light in the South of France? Or was it from seeing Cezanne or Van Gogh? Who knows? But my obsession for it finally kicked in conscientiously during this series at the beach in Brunswick Heads. What a relief to finally understand something so evident about oneself, because it’s been a secret hiding in plain sight all this time.
So, at the beach the other night, there was a lovely bloom. A vibrant sea of yellow that slowly went pink. I was lucky enough to bring this one home because I blew the second one. It was a shame for I had a wonderful start on it but went too far and too quickly. I should have stopped earlier. This one is in a rather abbreviated and somewhat unfinished but I decided to keep it as a record nonetheless and today it looks more interesting. Regardless, it was a beautiful evening.
It’s colder these days and the evenings are shorter but I am physically well and I’m grateful. I've been dizzy at times and I'm never sure if it’s Long Covid or the effects of heart medication because my balance is sometimes so poor that I often walk the streets like a drunken sailor. Like my father always said, “When you have your health you have everything”. Amen.