15 April 2020
We’re dead already
This picture came out of a very frustrated painter who could not decide how to treat the vast mess of clouds in the sky. From the start as I set up, I decided to grab a small idea and run with it, but as usual, I couldn’t keep up with the movement going on as the light kept changing.
Unless one is Bonington, (Richard Parkes , 1802 - 1828) or one of those magnificent Flemish painters of the 18th century, a sky full of clouds can be a hairy operation for an amateur like me. There are just too many problems with them. It’s a lot like the difficulty when drawing hands. Unless one can render them with the grace of Van Dyck or with the rustic truth of Van Gogh, one must be prepared to fail. Or maybe, one could try to think like Picasso employing his graphic audacity which spins the attention of the viewer away from his mangled hands like a magician distracting his audience.
Clouds can overrun the sky, distorting the distances and making it hard to push the horizon back into the painting. When floating above us, untethered clouds will run amuck like children at recess, oblivious to discipline. Overhead, they roam casually at random confusing the poor painter below. When I found myself lost in this study I decided to just let go. My goal, hence, was not only to fail in this picture but to fail successfully, as Samual Beckett advised us, “Fail, and fail again even better”. Or as the smart-aleck buddhists proclaim; “No problem, we’re dead already.” This is also something I will say to myself before playing a very strong tennis player.
And so the other night, just when I let go of all expectations, something wonderful happened. Skating on thin ice I suddenly felt weightless and finished this small study with a certain joy that surprised me. It’s a very simple image, and like many of these small studies it might appear boring if one looks with a surplus of expectation. Yet everything works in it. There is distance in it and the pink cloud bank squats on the heavy dark sea like it's a wall. There is a faint hint of foreground at the base of the picture that represents the closest thing to the viewer like a doormat outside the home and which is the first stepping stone into a new place.
All too often, I find too many pictures uninteresting wherever I look, everyone's, but mine too. And yet sometimes if I look more carefully and see that they're unified within their own chosen mode of abstraction, there is a chance they'll get better and better with time like the cliché of an ageing bottle of Bordeaux. But when a picture doesn’t come together, no matter how dazzling or sexy it may first appear, it will turn to vinegar over time.
Though it might not dazzle, I like this painting anyway. It’s a billboard for myself only, one reminding me that it’s just a another study, another successful failure.