30 December 2021
Delacroix’s studio, cont
Evening Prayer Brunswick Heads, 26 December 2021, oil on canvas board, 30 x 25 cm
“Even when we look at nature, our imagination constructs the picture. (1 September 1859)”
Eugène Delacroix, The Journal of Eugene Delacroix
Among so many jewels in his studio is a small watercolour, I believe it’s just entitled The Unmade Bed, but it’s something that has haunted me since forever. I’ve had a postcard of it for decades now, the same one that has somehow found a home on every piano I’ve ever owned, always stuck to the left of the sheet music where it can be seen. It is a complicated subject made from layers of linen and yet it seems so fresh that it looks like it has just blown into the bedroom like a leaf through a window. And it’s modern too, unlike most things done in 1827, France. But strangely, if I look at it in a particular way, without blinking, for instance, so that my eyes don’t focus as usual, it can remind me of a Christ figure hanging off Mary’s lap in a Pietà painted by Titian in Venice. One needs an imagination of course, but memory, too, that’s for sure. But then, this is the realm of Art where magic and mystery are twins, . What is important in this regard is always deeply personal, for this private memory cannot ever be transferred to anyone else except abstractly through the alchemy of Art. Marcel Proust, among others, taught me that.
Then again, I have a big imagination and I do see ‘things’ ‘everywhere’. My brother Mark has always confirmed this to me when I tend to forget it. For instance, driving to the beach to paint not 10 minutes away from home in the late afternoon, I take a small stretch of the highway, and for the past month I’ve seen a dead dog on the left shoulder. Every afternoon I swore to myself that I would come back with my truck to remove it and place it in a gentle resting spot on our 100 acres. Every day I forgot, until last week, when one evening I wrote a note to myself and put it next to the coffee grinder which simply noted in magic marker: “today! DeaD doG.”
So the next morning after a coffee I put a tarp in the cab along with some gloves and drove to take care of the ‘dead dog’ on the highway. As I slowed down to approach it I pulled into the shoulder lane and stopped abruptly in front of a faded black tire on its side with a small thin bit extending from the left side. (!) So, anyway, I still take the highway most afternoons, and in my ‘mind’s eye’ I still do see the DeaD doG laying there.
These two studies are from the other day. They sort of remind me of watercolours, perhaps even modern ones yet done nonetheless in the spirit of the late 19th century. And yet they ‘seem modern’ only perhaps because of their composition, unlike anything that would have ever been conceived back in that period. They certainly could easily resemble ‘cropped details’, perhaps taken from larger pictures that wouldn’t have otherwise made a painting complete back when they needed more story content in a painting in those days. Yet I like the light in them and the colours too, but there’s also a freedom in them that wants me to buck the restraint imposed by the composition. In the end though, they do actually make me think of the watercolours of Eugene Delacroix in a certain way.
It was Boxing Day here in Australia, a holiday so there were still lots of people on the beach when I arrived. I had it in my mind to try something completely different that evening. I wanted to just treat the motif with as little referential description as possible; not clouds, but maybe just large irreverent shapes that could rub up against each other on the picture plane. Yes, I’ve done this before, but this night I wanted to see them as large puzzling shapes that might naturally provoke more ambiguity. In the end I didn’t really succeed because the one on the previous page feels like it’s trying to be a landscape. I also dropped it in the sand when leaving so it’ll now be scarred for life, like having a limp. But this one to the right, appears so airy that it hardly feels like an oil painting at all, but what I really like is the pale green sea, so filled with a soft light, because it is so rare that it appears in the late afternoon when I’m there.
These two images are so abbreviated they might appear fragile but they're certainly not. They're just delicate and they live from sheer luck that I didn’t screw them up while painting them because unlike composing music or writing stories, one cannot erase or crumple a piece of paper to begin all over again. Like paper, canvas too, is capricious, especially so with an unforgiving oil paint over it. The mistakes are permanent.
Although they can be painted over, either corrected or manhandled into something new and different, but in my own short time frame at the beach it's not easy and I rarely up for the task. In the studio work, yes all the time, in fact that's all I seem to do. But happily, here at the beach, it's extremely rare that I've needed to perform these surgeries.
At the beach, all these ‘mistakes’ and 'corrections' simply become ‘issues of style’ so when they don’t work, they’ll just fail even more visibly. But when they are lucky to survive post-op surgery they can be surprising. Painting any kind of picture is to take a journey, even as a tourist, there's always work to do, lost and shlepping one's luggage around foreign streets in search of a soft bed.
And like tourism, if a painting doesn’t take me somewhere interesting then I'm less interested with result. The more successful the transcendence of the experience, the more successful the Art work.