24 August 2020
It’s as if I yearn to somehow reduce all of Nature right down to the snug size of a small canvas board. I wonder if this desire haunts other painters as much as me because no matter what the abstract proportions are, this reduction is truly where the magic ferments. Despite the sheer dimensions of something unknowable, like the sky in this instance, form is within reach if one's vision is as good as one's craft.
But what really permits me to attempt this feat of scaling down the sky must be wholly due to the fact that it’s been done before by so many other painters. I cite J.M. Turner (yet again) because he managed to plausibly compress his own colossal skies and squeeze them into pages the size of small sacred prayer books.
In order for a painter to re-create the unruly nature out there (yet born within his own imagination) an artist must find the practical means to naturally reduce the infinity of this unruly world such that it fits neatly into his own prayer book. It takes a certain geometric magic no doubt, but it basically comes down to the craft of painting. One has it or one hasn't yet learned it. It's not for the faint-hearted, for like any craft, it requires lots and lots of failure which can leave a bloodied field of dead and wounded pictures.
"Be persistent!", was the best advice I ever received from artists, both alive and dead. All it took, they said, was just "lots of failure and buckets and buckets of humility".
I think it also requires a foolhardy belief in oneself to become a painter because Art is a cruel game, and any budding artist must possess enough fortitude to breach the gates of this realm which can slay wimps faster than a sharp sword.
This study from the other night is an example of my own desire for order and form. And, I admit this, in contrast to all the obvious signs of disorder in the rest of my own parallel life as a bachelor.
Only lately have I come to see that it may be precisely for this reason that such an ardent thirst for order shows up right now in my painting life. Despite all this grand talk of an ordered form, I’m still as messy a painter as I am in every other area of my life. My home and garden are in such disarray that I haven’t invited anyone over for tea in years out of embarrassment.
But funny enough, there are many days when I arrive to find the sky looking so polished and clean that it looks like a butler had been out there all day. Those afternoons when messy clouds are absent I say to myself with hubris: “This is going to be a piece of cake!”
But, the downside to clean and well-formed skies like these is that left to my own devise, and in front of such visual clarity, it’s too easy to resort to painting what I've already done many times beforehand, for this is the curse of a clear and happy sky.
The truth is that without a challenge I'll never change. Every artist, indeed, everyone, needs hardship or they'll never grow into a craft. Isn't there an ancient myth somewhere that warns about the terrible ennui of getting everything too easily?
Immodestly, I admit that I like this picture, it's not great, but I feel grateful that it isn’t just like every other one that was started from a clean and polished sky. Its tactile construction and its colours are appealing. What I really appreciate are the transitions on the painted surface. In this one I love the way the layers of colour in the upper half of the sky seem to glide over one another other, barely touching. In fact, this is why I still work with oil paints.
The French have two wonderful words for this effect; frôler and effleurer. Of course, because they’re French, they are often used to great advantage when speaking about gentle kisses, and caressing a loved ones hair like it's the wind. But that's exactly what I mean here in this sky. So despite its small size, this bleached area of light, high overhead, that fences in the top of the picture, also beckons the illusion I'm always after, one of an empyreal region that's just beyond my reach.