29 September 2020
Sisyphus stumbles, and phoenix rises
This is a very curious image but because it caused me such strife the other night I like it. So fleshy! It’s a strange and unusual colour harmony even for me. Despite the pink and orange hue of the sky overall, it has a muted cool harmony that can’t seem to warm up the picture. The sea is a frigid bed like a love affair long past its expiration date.
It's been a very long while since I've wanted to throw a tantrum and flip a canvas board into the sea or forest behind me while working but I did come close to it the other evening. In my previous life as a snowflake when I took my feelings way too seriously, I used to act out a lot but I've calmed down thankfully over the years. Now, at least, I’m supposed to know better, so I’m calmer in theory, more reasonable, and at least measured. I became a grown-up! But, truthfully, when a painting has gone South, it can turn even an adult into a lunatic in minutes. So remarkably, this is a study that I nearly murdered, but somehow it survived to tell the tale.
Over my lifetime, I have jettisoned canvas boards over cliffs, thrown them into ditches, into trash bins, and even into the Grand Canal in Venice. Only rarely, did I possess a hint of guilt for my recklessness that I selfishly inflicted upon poor the Mother Earth. Each time I'd find myself in such wilful rage that I felt like a tennis player at Wimbledon destroying his racquet after losing a match. But it's funny thing isn't it, that it’s always the guys that do this, never the gals.... Just sayin.
How to lose anything with grace, isn’t that our problem in this competitive modern life? Facing failure in anything is tough, just ask Donald Trump. When the Muses laugh at you from high overhead there’s really nowhere to hide. Fortunately, my own tantrums were always exercised in private. But, like I said, I’ve changed a lot of over the past few decades, indeed, so much so that now when I’m on the cusp of losing a picture I take a breath, step back, and assess the situation like a real grown-up. This is that poignant moment when I decide that I have absolutely nothing to lose and I need to let go. As the Zen Wise Guys in the East would say: “We’re already dead, so what’s the problem?”
A friend always used to remind me of Sisyphus when I complained about problems. At first, I didn't mind, but after a while it annoyed me. But then I got it. To come back from the brink of any kind disaster, as anyone knows, is a wonderful thing to witness. Isn’t that why we all love sports?
These days, mostly, when struggling with a picture, I find myself pushing and pulling at an image. It's a battle at times, but not one I run away from anymore. I can honestly say that I’m no longer tied to fear in this painting racket, my brushes just comfortably go to work on an picture like a cat kneading a wooly sweater. And funny enough, like the fear of failure slips away, so does the idea of success. This is a sweet by-product of the process.
Sometimes in a flash, I can still see that young child in the corner of a classroom trying to pound a square peg into a round hole because after all, it was always me. Yet today, out of all that furious frustration, a phoenix has arisen. When problems arise with a picture, my brushes in hand, find an easy pathway back into the painting, punching it at times but kissing too, in a confused passion. And though the sky, like in this image has lost its rosy ‘bloom,’ I motor on, on the fumes of memory because just like for a writer, memory is also everything for an painter. After years of both failure and success, intuition is born, and it's one’s boundless grace.
Like with this somewhat scrappy-looking image, so many of my studies are scarred with uncertainty, and although it may not be visibly apparent, in my head at least, they always live on like clumsy answers to the great problems of Painting. Suddenly, I think of an image of a Great White Shark that one might see these days in countless videos everywhere. If the shark is old and big enough, and it's been around the block a few times, it'll also be scarred and beaten up because like Art, that's life and death.
All creative acts for me had always seemed to have been like a final exam, one to be feared, one for which I was never prepared and would invariably fail. For me today, they're just workbooks full of ideas and messy notes, some that work, others that may not. In truth, whether or not they pan out is less relevant than the direction to where I'm headed. Again, wouldn't these Zen Wise Guys from the East, declare it was always irrelevant from the beginning?
Curiously, I've learned a lot about all this stuff just from tennis. I may be a crap tennis player, as the Brits would say, but I'm always improving. Isn't that the whole point of learning anything? Isn’t it the skirmish with one's self that's the issue, not one against an opponent? A tennis coach might disagree, but hey! At the end of any friction I might rub up against in life, can I ask myself if I was brave, or just a cowherd?
So I admit it, this painting was touch-and-go to finish. It was a particular sky, and what I mean by that, is that I didn’t get a clear idea of the colour harmonies. Normally, I would fake it and get on with it, but for some reason this sky confused me. And yet, here it is finished, and I only hope it's alive enough to be plausibly real for someone to see, then feel. I’ve kind of warmed up to it, but we’ll see in a year or two. "You never know about paintings"... my Aunt Maddie would say, and she knew a thing or two about Art.