29 May 2023
Museum shelves
It’s the late Fall here, and yesterday, though not too cool as I was putting the laundry on the line, I heard the faint drone of the cicadas telling me that summer is almost gone. But in this Painting game that occupies my mind, each season offers up its own varied response to the angle of the sun.
The other evening was magnificent with such rich possibilities that I was able to made six smaller studies. This was the fourth one after the sun had buried itself behind me in the West. By the end of the session, the sky had looked like an inferno for the my picture, a hot spicy set of clouds that left wide scarves of pink and purple overhead. Below it, the sea glowed like embers in a fireplace.
When I took the studies from the boot of the car the next morning to shoot them with my old i-phone 7, I suddenly had the feeling that I’d really like to see them all lined up around several long walls in a white gallery space in a renovated ‘Hotel de Ville’ somewhere in France. In these lovely old places there is an unusually large respect for how artworks are spaced around white walls of different sizes and configurations. They are often broken up discreetly by misshapen walls and indentations from the many broken centuries long ago. Marble fireplaces stand their ground in the grander rooms which are usually connected throughout by either six-sided tile floors in the South, or worn, creaky wood floors up North. I've known such places in cities and towns around France, and I still dream about them.
Of course, these are just dreams and mostly desires which live on the highest shelf of my own personal bucket-list, because they always appear just out of reach. I’m sure that everyone has these dreams too, ones which they secretly yearn for but appear unattainable. Would they be for a better home or to be a nicer neighbourhood? Would they be for a loving partner? A family? Or just for a lover, a cat or a new car? Maybe it’s just a pile of money in a big bank account somewhere in the Caiman islands. There’s enough room for everyone up there in dreamland on the top shelf. I'm sure of it, because somewhere, in all of us, is a Don Quixote. I do believe that in everyone’s head there are bucket lists also that live on several shelves. Some are high up and maybe out of reach to most of us, but lower down there are others accessible with a stepladder, but only those well balanced and poised. Still others are easily at hand and achievable like just reaching for a pair of socks to wear. Can anyone of us be patient enough to obtain of any of them? But what then? What would we actually do with our dreams and desires once they are within reach?
Today, in this chapter of my own life, I would for reach an exhibition space large enough for one hundred, no,,, lets go with one hundred and fifty, small pictures that fill an entire 'Hotel de Ville' somewhere in France.
I must be really old-school and/or somewhat traditional because I hate these shows where all the works are coupled together on a large wall and where it's impossible to see any of them individually. Of course, the whole point of this type of hanging is to obfuscate each independent work but impress us by the giant assemblage of all the work. I much prefer a linear approach, one by one for a measured meeting with an oeuvre. If I really like it I can pause and linger in its aura of truth and beauty sort of like old school Speed Dating or the new equivalent of Swiping a potential date to the right and out of my life in an instant.
In the culinary world of restauration I’d be a chef advocate for Slow Food. When I digest a picture in a show or museum, I like a space in which to appreciate what it is I am taking in. It’s also in this space of time I reserve to contemplate something with an unhurried star of mind.
But it’s also the space between pictures in which I can breathe easily as I move along a wall full of images, each one just out of reach. I only need to put my attention upon the painting in front of me, not on the next one further down the wall nor in the next room. In this impatient digital world, where do I ever have this opportunity to just be slow and present in front of something? Luckily, for those with access to a park or forest, nature certainly does the trick for a lot of people, but then so does art. I really love museum exhibitions in France where they take all this stuff very seriously. Museums there, are like churches where everything is rather sacred and people speak in hushed tones in front of pictures.
Normally, I’m not someone too constrained by time like so many people today, but when I go to see a big popular exhibition and I'm running a little late, my habit is to enter into show but quickly zip right up to the end of it in order to size it up and see what's in it. I need to know how many rooms there are, and what’s at the end, so I don't miss anything I know I’d like to spend time with for there is nothing worse than finding diamonds at the end of a show when the guards are pushing you out the door. So thus, I have a system that returns me to the very beginning of the show where and I begin again, and it works. If it’s crowded I cruise leisurely into the slip stream of the crowd while hunting for open spaces and works that catch my eye. I’m not such a linear or chronological kind of guy when it comes to many things in life, but like I said, when it comes to art, I’ll take space anytime.