22 April 2018
Monk and Van Gogh at the Optometrist
For the longest time I couldn’t pull this the picture together until, out of frustration, I took a larger brush and began sweeping it with circles as if I were using a small broom like in the Sorcerer’s Apprentice. To my surprise it worked, so I stopped in just time to let it be. What holds this picture together are the small pink bits of open sky in both the right and left hand corners. Like fingers, these fragments of pink space grasp the whole form and appear to hold everything firmly in place. I like that it’s so full of colour because at the twilight hour the sky is usually brimming with luminous pinks and violets.
It’s a scruffy-looking picture as if it had been kicked around like a ball on the beach but personally, I kind of like all these spontaneous bits of slap-dash marks made naturally during its creation. These impromtu scars remind me of how animals, both in the wild and in the deep sea, can appear in old age after a lifetime of survival. Importantly, though for me, this ‘mark-making, as it’s now called, is but a by-product of painting from a motif and never the destination itself. These wounds sometimes skulk around in many of my landscapes. One either likes them or not.
But what I really like in this image is the way that both the sea and sky seem to be glued onto the same plane, flattened as if like dried flowers, compressed into a book of fairy tales by a young girl who locked them into a coffin between two pages of her diary. These flat massive and menacing clouds have been pressed into time immobile, yet still full of ruptured energy.
Honestly, when it comes to a certain emotion I’ve been looking for, I think it is one of the more successful things I’ve made in this series so far. Although it wouldn’t perhaps appeal to a large public, some painters might see something in it. I secretly wish I had the formula to make others as good as this today because I still feel like a beginner all over again each time I go out there to work, but it’s a better gig than that of poor Sisyphus.
Another thing I like is that the effect of the picture is immediate and in your face whether you like it or not. It might even appear ‘ugly’ at first glance but as Baudelaire reminds me in front of such images, “All truly original paintings often appear ugly at first”. F.Y.I. He doesn’t say ‘great paintings’, just original ones.
And yet Baudelaire was also not only speaking of Van Gogh and Igor Stravinsky, but of so many others too, professional and amateurs alike, who linger in the shadows of Art’s long wide road. I feel confident, even arrogant enough, that he may have also been speaking about an image like this one, one hundred and fifity years before it’s creation.
It’s always been in me, this desire wanted to create pictures as things, ‘alive’, almost as if breathing fire if need be. In front of such a picture, I wonder if I don’t simply desire to feel that ‘poof’ of a feeling like at the optometrist when given the glaucoma test. In a fraction of a second the machine punches out air at high speed at your vulnerable eyeball, testing it for pressure on the cornea. In this painting I want that visceral sensation thrown out at the viewer in the same way.; ‘Poof’, either one gets it or not. If one doesn’t get it, then either the picture doesn’t work.
To me it also reveals an unusual aspect of Nature, one from a very particular perspective; close up, and cropped. It doesn’t manifest a concept nor a conventional viewpoint, yet it derives naturally from Nature. It’s a set of clouds mushrooming over a sea at dusk in almost miniature scale as if selected by a 75mm telephoto lens. It evokes for me, Thelonious Monk; off kilter and in your face, primitive and primeval, sloppy even, but maybe in all the right places, ones where Monk’s genius is camuflaged as an autistic child. My brother, who is a pianist thinks that Monk’s penchant for uneven time and off-key broken chords came about through playing so many out of tune pianos when he was young.