25 July 2025

Prayer for Sarajevo, 1995, but Gaza too



Untitled, Châteaunoir, 1995, oil on canvas, 50 X 42 cm



They cut off noses in Bosnia, Châteaunoir, 1995, oil on canvas, 55 X 45 cm



Untitled, Châteanoir, 1996, oil on canvas, 50 X 42 cm



Prayer for Sarajevo, Châteaunoir, 1995 oil on canvas, 140 X 90 cm


Untitled, Châteaunoir, 1996, oil on canvas, 50 X 42 cm


      La Honte, Châteaunoir, 1998, oil on canvas, 150 X 150 cm


The Annunciation, Châteaunoir, 1998, oil on canvas, 150 X 150 cm



L'Enfance, Châteaunoir, 1997, oil on canvas, 150 X 150 cm



Untitled, Châteaunoir, 1996, oil on canvas, 120 X 100 cm


Auschwitz Again, Châteaunoir, 1996, oil on canvas, 150 X 150 cm


 Untitled, 1996, oil on canvas, Châteaunoir, 50 X 50 cm


Here are some things I made a while ago back in France in my small studio at the Châteaunoir. It was back during the height of the war in Bosnian war. For some reason I was very affected by it. I had pasted on a wall a cut-out photo from a newspaper of a young boy touching the head stone of his father at a cemetery. it triggered something for me. So I made a few small studies which then became a small series. 

I didn't paint this series centred around the war in colour because I was basically afraid that I wouldn't keep the focus on the brutality of what I wished to express. I was also afraid I would obsess about colour and that I couldn't get it right and this prevented me from working quickly. Honestly, I was worried that my perfectionism would bring out my procrastination. This is something I struggled with most of my life. 

And as many of us know, war is a destructive activity. The shock of the Vietnam War, not only for both the Americans and Vietnamese peoples, but for the whole world. It was a setback of terrible proportions since the start of the United Nations began after the second World War. Was it too naive to believe that humankind might begin to resolve their conflicts through dialogue and negotiation? Up until then, all we seemed to do upon this earth was plunder and rob while destroying everything in our way. Civilians were casually exploited for labor or sex. So indeed, the genocide in Bosnia and Herzegovina at the end go the 20th century came as a rude awakening to all who had committed themselves to practical negotiated settlements of disputes. 

Today, there are wars raging in Ukraine and in parts of Africa and Asia, but in the Middle East too. Israel, a country I've travelled around in for months, full of the most cultured people in the world is starving the population of Gaza as I write these words out of vengeance for what happened two and a half years ago when Hamas murdered one thousand citizens of Israel. Both sides in this conflict are male and full of hatred. Is it ethnic or religious loathing? One could have asked the same questions about the Bosnian war.  

There are idealists, of which I am not one, who believe that Art can change the world. If that were so how could Germany have slaughtered so many people after Johannes Brahms had written his suites Opus 118?

Will civilised societies ever learn? Judging by current wars, it's not likely, but that doesn't mean that poetry and music will not flourish in between foxholes and missiles. Ukraine proves that, and God help them.  

When I was packing up the Belvedere in the Drôme to sell it I put about a dozen of these images around the studio. A friend brought her new beau over for lunch, and afterwards we went up to the studio that was mostly boxed and cleaner that it had ever been. The new boyfriend, who was a therapist, began looking at the pictures. I watched him walk slowly around while looking carefully at each of them. When he turned around he had tears in his eyes which moved me terribly.

Sadly, most of those paintings were later ruined here in a flood in Australia and worse, I hadn't taken any photos of them. But here (above) are a few remnants. 

As I painted them in my small studio at the Châteaunoir, I was also painting out in the landscape and working in full living colour during this time. So I straddled two worlds of image-making; one from an invented memory in my studio making large paintings like the ones above, the other, from colourful motifs out in Nature. Below, are just a few things from outdoors during those years that reveal the stark contrast of sensibilities that lived within me at the time. 



la Chaise, Châteaunoir, circa 1990's, oil on canvas board, 50 X 50 cm



Irises, Châteaunoir, circa 1990's, oil on canvas board, 40 X 30 cm



L'assiette, Châteaunoir, circa 1990's, oil on canvas board, 5 figure


La tasse, Châteaunoir, circa 1990's, oil on canvas board, 5 figure



                  Untitled, Châteaunoir 1996, oil on canvas, 3 Figure



16 July 2025

Who done it? Lois Gibson, the artistic sleuth




Lois Gibson has the world record for the most identifications by a forensic artist. Her work cracked 1313 cases over a long career in Texas.

She worked without videos or photographs and often from the memories of traumatised victims.
She not only appears to have a remarkable talent for understanding how visual memory works but she can do it through the memory of a third person. It's pretty extraordinary.




06 July 2025

Tucker Nichols, the possibility of Art

 


                 Flowers for your friend with a truck

My dear friend Claire de Chivres (another artist) sent me some images and texts from a wonderful book she was reading by Tucker Nichols, an artist, and obviously a bon vivant living a cool life in Northern California. 

These are two landscapes I pulled from his website which sells for $500, which I think is a wonderful price. Not too much for a lover of Painting, but an amount fair enough for an artist who obviously throws these things off pretty quickly. A Win Win, I think. If I weren't watching my pennies, I would jump on these two landscapes myself.  







There is so much I like about the way this artist works that I would need a few weeks to properly absorb all the ideas that pop up out at me while looking at his work.    

I don't know anything about him but I would venture to say that he definitely comes from a graphic place back in his Art education if indeed he even had one. I just love artists who break down the visual world into somewhat of a flat structure. But it's rare that I see many graphic artists who possess such a great sense of light which arrives from the 'Fine Arts'. I say it's unusual, except for the really best ones who usually sell to high end magazines and newspapers like the New Yorker and the NYT because their quality is the best. 

I do have this notion that since Matisse brought Painting down to a flat surface it seems somehow, almost impossible, at least for me, to go back to a Renaissance configuration of depicting reality. This is just me though. I always still struggle with how to represent reality in a two dimensional form. Aren't we painters always looking out for a way to express a verisimilitude in a way that conforms to our own vision of the visual world?

When I go flat, I am secretly surprised and always happier. The golden-coloured clouds crossing the mountain (above) is both childishly absurd but also sophisticated smart. This is the kind of picture from an artist that reminds me of all the possibilities still left to be exploited in this unique human pastime that we call Painting. Tucker Nichols is on a ledge, one with a great view, certainly, but also one of certain uncertainty. A real artist!   

I love the playful quality in these things, because God isn't the only one who knows what a nightmare we are all living at this moment. God must be a trickster to have thought up such a perfidious fool like Trump just to see how we all would react. He is a fun fellow to anoint his work with such clever titles.  

I love his colours. I love the quick spontaneous feeling in all of these things and I'm envious of so much use of florescent colour. Not sure if he uses just gouache or acrylic, or perhaps both, but he appears unafraid of the challenges of using either of these mediums to carve out an original form of luminosity that mirrors the classical mode of Fine Art. But he has a remarkable sense of colour, one which matches his abbreviated sense of drawing. 

I like everything about his work but it's his sense of colour that turns me green with envy. I have been wanting to make a switch over to acrylic for many of my own larger pictures so thus, seeing these things has inspired me. 

His book is entitled "Flowers for things I don't know how to say". Gotta love that. 



Flowers for whoever is DJing the pool music




28 June 2025

Edward Hopper and Louis Kahn by the sea!

 

Rooms by the Sea, Edward Hopper, oil on canvas, 1951 



Although I have a great affection for Edward Hopper, he is far from being an artist who has ever cast a spell over me. 


I think any painter, writer, musician, architect, what-have-you, should be able to articulate the early influences whom previous artists have had over them. Who has lit the rapture in inside them and helped shape their formation into the solid craft of their choosing? 


Although I saw his pictures when I was a child they didn't speak to me the way that many others did. To be fair, I was pretty fascinated with most paintings when I was as a young kid, as I didn't have any way to discern them as either 'liable or not'.


My father had covered his bathroom walls with copies of Masaccio, Piero della Francesca, Ghirlandaio, Botticelli, and I forget whom else. They were lifted from the many books on Italian Art which he collected. For sure, he had a thing about Italian Painting, but he really had a thing about Italy, in all its forms. He devoured everything Italian. 


My father, being a Catholic child, and brought up in a somewhat strict tradition in Providence, Rhode Island of the 1920's wanted nothing more than to escape it all, which he did when he joined naval officer training for World War Two. 


But from what I understood, he excelled in Latin, so that certain languages came easy for him. He learned enough Italian to get around, some French too and he taught me an invaluable lesson when we were in Florence in 1956 when I was four. While walking around town, he would randomly stop people in the streets and in shops to ask directions that invariably led to innocuous questions that initiated conversation. This was an Italy, not far from the war, where people were just so happy to be out in the prospect of a sunnier future themselves and their families. America had helped to save them from a Fascistic chaos after all, and so the attention of a charismatic American with floppy colourful clothes who posed an incessant stream of questions about their lives, about the war, about art, was extremely seductive. He had a kind, friendly manner that drew people into him easily so consequently everything about him was an invitation to be equally open and friendly. He stopped the Carabinieri often for directions and once got us both a ride on a giant Moto Guzzi, me scrunched in between him and my father in the middle of Florence. The priests in their long black robes were always good for a 'stop and chat' as Larry David, of Seinfeld fame calls it. Taking me by the hand after each of these encounters he would quietly explaim that he had just had an Italian Lesson. Later on, when I went to live France years later, I employed the same tactics and it worked just as well. 


Could he have been an artist? Should have been a painter? Who knows? But he loved it and he painted periodically. It's hard to become a painter unless it's almost full time I think from experience.


He painted the picture below back in the 1960's, in Providence, Rhode Island, where he regularly returned to visit his sister, my aunt Maddie. His father had emigrated in the late 19th century from Ireland as a boy of fifteen. He was the eldest of eight or nine children who arrived by boat. It was a tough time.


I think he must have been influenced by Edward Hopper to make such an picture like this. It has a decidedly 'cool' Northern Light to it, very New England, I think. It's an efficient picture, which is to say that it visually works well, where everything is in the right place. I have never really warmed up to it despite the fact that it was painted by my father. This is strange because I have so little left of his and I've always felt a little guilty about this. And yet, it has beautiful parts in it, nice abstract resolutions, especially in the foreground, both on the right and left sides. 


Thomas A Coffey, Smith Street, Providence Rhode Island, circa 1960, oil on canvas, 60 X 50 cm


The Edward Hopper painting (top), is a curious image unlike anything I've ever seen of his. At times his pictures possessed a solid kind chunk of Americana; lighthouses, New England farmlands, roof tops, American streets of large empty-looking homes. These are not pictures by Monet or Pissarro, and peopled with figures hurrying along streets or holding their hats and bracing the wind. No, Hopper's paintings are devoid of humanity in a weird way, almost as if after a plague had removed everyone.


But his famous urban pictures are those inversely peopled with solitary lives. The 'Night Hawk' the corner cafe at night with a few lone figures in it. There are lots of women too, alone, looking out windows from their beds or cafes sitting in silence like mannequins. He tapped into the quiet, dark, and restless soul of America at about the same time as did also many American writers like Sinclair Lewis, Henry Miller, John Steinbeck, Richard Wright.    


His dystopian imagination led him to paint these bleak American pictures but not without a sense of humour. This painting (top) is unusually Surrealist in spirit, and I like it for that. A door opens up on the sea outside with no explanation. 


I also love the colours and the way it's been constructed, its strong natural light pours into an interior like it's a still-life. It's a hard Northern white light that gives it the feel of a film set. It's a strange and beguiling picture, one I would easily live with here in my small home. It makes me think of what the architect Louis Kahn once said about Light. "A room doesn't know itself until light enters it." 


Here, below, is another kind of light, one from the Southern Hemisphere. There is little reference except a sea and a sky at dusk.




Evening Prayer, Brunswick Heads, 21 January 2025, oil on canvas board 30 X 25 cm





21 June 2025

EO, and the state of humanity




A few weeks back I watched an extraordinary film entitled simply EO, (2022) by Polish Director Jerzy Skolimowski. Disclaimer, it's a very difficult film, one which may not reach many people because it lacks all the shiny action-packed violence and gentrified beauty that attracts most people, but hey! 

This is a film unlike any I've ever seen seen. Its star is a donkey and the film follows it through its odyssey to re-unite with a young woman in a circus. We know nothing of their lives before they were separated but we follow the donkey's search for her. This takes it through several chapters (and countries) throughout the film. 

It is a remarkable film but not an easy one. It will speak to animal lovers and maybe leave them indelibly scarred, I will say no more.  



15 June 2025

Vanessa Bell and Gabriel Yared



The Pond at Charleston, 1916

This quiet and unexciting landscape was painted by the Bloomsbury icon Vanessa Bell, and after some twenty years of looking at it, it still drives a painter like me, crazy. It's an image one could aimlessly walk right by in a museum because its discreet sophistication is hidden behind such subtle simplicity. It's from photo of an old postcard that I've had tacked up behind my stove for years, a little beat-up, but it's something one can ponder when boiling water.

Looking at it now I suddenly realise just how Cubist it appears to me. I had never actually put that together in my mind. I also hadn't recognised that it was painted in 1916 at the very height of Cubism in Paris. Vanessa Bell and her painter-husband, Duncan Grant, being the jet setting  bohemians they were for the day, would have been very aware of the going-ons just across the Channel in Paris. It was after all, a close, cultured world of literati and erudite amateur artists. From their cozy farmhouse, Charleston in West Sussex, they might have even been able to watch bathers on the beaches of Dieppe had they had a high-powered pair of binoculars. But what I like about the idea behind the image, is that this was a Cubist picture painted from a motif outdoors where Vanessa Bell both lived and worked.

She and Duncan had several children yet they both led a very creative and fruitful life while at the same time churning out work incessantly. I've always remembered something she had once remarked to a journalist about her painting life. She said that with so much to do around their farm, she generally managed to get three hours of painting done each day, then adding that one could still get a lot of work done as artist with a family life too, one day at a time.

Here, below is an 'abstract' picture which she painted just two years earlier in 1914. This leads me to believe that she worked in several different 'styles' concurrently. She and her husband Duncan Grant made lots of designs for their own home; tables, chairs, lamps, screens, rugs, etc, etc... because they were a very creative couple. Almost every surface of Charleston vertically, horizontally, and otherwise, was decorated with lots of paint and love, it seems. 

`
1914

I've come appreciate that artists work in vastly different mediums and 'styles', as if to say to the world: "I will not be pigeon-holed into just one idea or another. I can actually walk and chew gum at the same time. That said, I can also love entirely different artists like Giorgio Morandi, who strayed very little from his small orphaned family of bottles. He did make many very beautiful landscapes around his family home in Bologna, Italy, too. 

But these days, the creative crowd work in many different fields simultaneously because this is the turbo-charged age of both multitasking and money-making, one where only the 9-5 workers seem to need a rest. 

All this reminds me of an interview with a French Soprano whom I heard about ten years ago on France Musique. I cannot recall her name but I remember that she was originally from Marseille. (I've looked in vain on the net but no luck finding her name, so far). She had worked with with Gabriel Yared, a celebrated composer of films (The talented Mister Ripley, The English Patient, etc, etc,) among so many others. His 'style' is particular, and at once recognisable through his abundant use of minor keys. I 'knew' his music through my memory senses from all his film inimitable scores, but I knew nothing about him before this interview. Now, I listen often to all his scores through Apple Music. When I'm writing comfortably at home, he is my go-to mood swinger, and I can listen to the same film scores over and over again. It's as if they've fused with the DNA of each sentence I write.

But what I wanted to really express, was someone that this soprano, this lovely young woman had evoked about her life. It had been one of the those relaxed interviews that they are so clever of doing on France Musique. She had spoken about her work with Gabriel Yared on a project but then she began talking about what Singing, as a metier, was like for her and her contemporaries in today's ever changing digital world of music.

Being a soprano had brought her in touch with many different kinds of music, but as well, a great variety of musicians and lots of different kinds of music from Renaissance, Baroque, Mozart, Puccini, Webern, Jazz, etc etc,, She also sings 'scat' (an Improvised version of mimicking Jazz riffs at high speed with wordless syllables). 'Scatting' is a club of great musicians; Ella Fitzgerald, Anita O'Day, and Louis Armstrong, who is acknowledged as being the guy who began doing it on stage and consequently popularised it so many years ago. 

I understood that in the old days, opera singers were always just opera singers. They may have indeed sang dirty ditties in the bathtub for their lovers, but essentially Opera was Opera; and Jazz was Jazz. Men were of just men, even if they were closet gays; and women were women, (ditto for being secret lesbians) A mere eighty years ago it would have been unheard of for an opera singer to sing Jazz or anything of a popular nature. The Western world of yesterday appeared to be an uptight world where segregation and control acted as unwritten rules that coded everyone's colour, sex and work.   

Fortunately, our contemporary life today has freed most of us all up in a messy but creative way (and also freaked out all those leftovers of yesteryear who cannot handle it). We have been released from the rigid labels and categories that had frozen us into statues of both high and low culture. 

So, not only did I hear about Gabriel Yared for the first time, but I also heard something important about myself, a truth heretofore hidden to me and walled off by my fear of the unknown. It was a truth hiding in plain sight, for my own painting (and my own thinking), had already bifurcated into different ways of working almost unconsciously.  

It had never really occurred to me that I could work with such 'seemingly' different notions about making pictures. In essence, I didn't believe that I could actually walk and chew gum at the same time in this Painting life that I was leading. And yet, I there it was, I was doing it nonetheless. It felt to me as if I had been happily married for most of my life despite secretly carrying on an affair for years.

So, this interview had apparently really gotten inside me and I began to finally accept that such different parts of my own 'painting mind' could all live comfortably together inside me simultaneously. It was a revelation to see that I wasn't mad, I was just being creative.

Then I saw that what links both these worlds together both one of Non-Figuration and one taken from a motif out in Nature, was light light itself. If a light was unified in either case, a picture could always work aesthetically. Naturally some would work better than others depending on other factors.  
     
 
So for example, like Vanessa Bell, I can paint the following picture as easily as I can paint the one below it. They reside in my painter's mind yet they both express different parts of it.



Elephant, February 2018, Myocum, oil on canvas, 150 X 150 cm



Evening Prayer Brunswick Heads, 23 December 2024, oil on canvas board, 30 X 25 cm


 


05 June 2025

Colourman, the tinny tubes and walls of colour, and grandma Moses too









Here is but another universe of creativity of which I've been oblivious all these years. While researching Colourman recently into  the origins of the first 'tinny' oil tubes for my book project, I erroneously came across this small paint company in London until only just a few weeks because after forty years of producing colours, it closed shop. They fabricated ready-made cans of colour for decorators of all kinds. Just from looking at the instagram account which is still up, these colours look sumptuously scrumptious for any hungry painter. What a shame it no longer exists. 

But as I said, I was led down a path into a world of which I had never ventured; wall murals and hand-painted wall paper. And I know why I didn't know of it. It's because I've seen so much mural-painting both inside and outdoors, that didn't appeal to me over the years, that it kind of turned me off the whole thing. I really hate bad painting no matter where, or by whom. 

But what I didn't know was that there was a whole world of wonderful artists (mostly women, it seems) who painted really fabulously original work and much of it fanciful in that truly British tradition of eccentric beauty that many of us artists (world-wide) adore. 

For instance, except for pockets of the very absurd within France, the French generally just don't possess an eccentric gene. Neither do the Americans, and ditto for the Germans, nor the Scandinavians (I think). But yes, I think the Japanese definitely do in a wildly clever infantile way. 



 
FYI, the tin tube of oil paints that set off my side trip into this world, was invented by an American portrait painter, John Goffe Rand back in 1841 in London where he had installed himself looking for work. He came up with the idea, copyrighted it, then made a small fortune which he then lost investing in a novel new idea for an 'Aeolian' piano (don't ask me what it was supposed to be). But having lost everything, he returned to America and continued his portrait-painting business with no regrets. Personally, I love that about Americans, those adventurous ones of yesteryear who dared to take risks and when it didn't work out they just keep plugging away at life with little resentment so unlike the current guy in the White House, hmmm...

But anyway, Winsor Newton bought the copyright and the rest, as they say, was history. FYI, before 1841, painters who went out into Nature to work (like Turner), used pig bladders which were stitched together. Yuck.

But my real point was to showcase this wonderful world of wall painting hitherto unbeknownst to me. I love these things, really great stuff, and typical British. I confess that I plucked many of these images from the internet and they don't have the proper acknowledgement. But, anyway, here are some of my favourite things. 











lamp shades too





                           Melissa White


I've been to Charleston (West Sussex) several times over the years. It's the cottage where the Bloomsbury crowd crowed together to make hay and a bit of scandal back in the day. Duncan Grant, Vanessa Bell, et all, etc.. etc... Every surface of the house was painted, happily but happily they had pretty good taste.
 


And finally, If you have ever wondered if Grandma Moses was ever a real person or not, she was! Read about it below. 





31 May 2025

Judith Scott at Rolland Garros



This is a re-post from 2014. I stumbled upon it today and thought to celebrate this last day of the 31st of May, 2025, a day soon to be lost forever. It a reminder that flies by, and when a day whisks by us, no matter what we thought of us, whether it was a 'good' or 'difficult' one, it was a day rich with possibilities. 

This also reminds me that 'Art', in all its forms, is still one of the greatest obsessions to possess. Unlike Sports, another wonderful obsession, it is not constrained by one's age nor one's physical condition. It's an endless voyage of self-discovery that offers the adherent profound pleasure. 

Just a reminder of how Art and Culture take the back seat to the world consumerism, I was watching a brief Court-side interview with the winner of a match at Rolland Garros tonight when the winner of the match (an American) was asked by a French man, no less, if she would go shopping in Paris on her days off from the tournament? She replied, "Yes, of course I will go shopping in Paris".

There you have it ladies and gentlemen. 

In Paris, the capital of culture with more museums and exhibits than almost anywhere else in the world, the guy doesn't ask what museums she might visit while here for a few days off?  

Alas, the life of human beings has been reduced to going shopping instead of visiting a museum. I understand it, but it's an awful damn shame, as we used to say back in Kentucky.      

But anyway, here is the 'produce' of such an adventurer in the world of art.  

I had never heard of this incredible story of woman who died a few years ago. Her acceptance and success in the Art world asks many to think hard about what it means to 'be an artist' or 'to live creatively'. I haven't a clue, but I love that she made these strange and personal pieces, and I am moved by her. There is so much 'Art' made by so many 'overly-educated' yet, under-cultured and eager people wishing either to make a buck or find meaning for themselves in a complicated world. Judith was shielded by all those complications.

30 May 2025

Robert Motherwell,,,, oh well....




I cannot even remember how I came across this painting by Robert Motherwell but it has found a discreet place on my desktop and there it has lain like an old flag for months now and has continually drawn my attention.

I am surprised by my own attraction to this picture to be very honest. But I am. There is something that pierces through all my ideas about what I think defines a painting and it goes straight into my taste buds. Maybe it proves that I really shouldn't have any bright ideas about what defines a painting in the first place. But hey! Everyone else has ideas about painting; the artists, the critics, the galleries (though it's purely about bling), the public, the everyday Joe at home with a few pictures hanging about on the walls of his home. Art engenders ideas in fact, and isn't that cool enough? But it also shocks and enrages, as well as it reassures, especially those lucky ones who own expensive pieces hanging on walls in large homes around the world.

So, what is it with this picture? And why does it have a hold over me? Am I superficial enough to just like it because of its Ultramarine blue, a colour of which I am extremely partial? I have only a slight idea of what the context is around this picture from looking through the Google's collection of Robert Motherwell. He appears to have made numerous works that vaguely resemble boats and sails so it seems likely that this is one of those. 

Honestly, any frequent reader in these pages will recognise that I have pretty discerning taste when it comes to looking at Art, so they wouldn't be surprised that I'm not crazy about the oeuvre of Robert Motherwell. He was an early Non-Figurative American Expressionist who had big ideas about a lot of big things just like so many of us arty types. They say he was an intellectual and wrote a great deal.

He was an experimenter, like all from the American Expressionist School, because they were up to something pretty novel in a way. They wanted to explore non-figuration as an art form. I call their attempt 'pretty novel' because they were bucking several thousand years of artistic traditions concerning Form and Content. But hey! Why not? This was the Post-Freudian world of analysis after all. It was an epoch that  put everything up on the chopping block for both investigation and self-examination.   

But like we see in this the current political upheaval in America, if you want to break things of value, it behooves you to have a replacement for it because as we all know, Nature abhors a vacuum. And I know it's not fashionable to harbour this idea but honestly, I'm not really convinced that the American Expressionist school left much of a legible legacy for those of us who came afterward to surf the next set of waves.

Judging from what I saw on Google I found Robert Motherwell's legacy to be untidy, unspooled, arbitrary, and lacking in much cohesion. 

Sooooo, why am I crazy about this picture above? I am happy to say that I learned a long time ago to judge the artwork, not the artist. Picasso, for instance, made lots of junk over his lifetime and he squandered his enormous talents by making kitsch. Yet nonetheless, he painted Guernica, an iconic masterpiece. I'll take back for saying this but only  5% of his oeuvre was truly great. So, when someone asks me "what do you think of so and so, I'll respond; What work are you specifically asking about?"

This is how I've come to navigate the tricky pathway into art criticism. This is just my own way, one that suits my own intellectual and aesthetic disposition.

In the end, all painters make duds here and there. I've made many but like Tennis, it's all about the statistics; the more matches one wins, the better one's ranking but that doesn't mean that the thousands of magnificent points over a career, now long forgotten, were not magnificent on their own. 
 
So, I haven't even answered my own question about why I feel something so intimately strong about Motherwell's picture. Maybe next time.