painting as text

Some quick thoughts in no order of significance:

  • painting as text.  no need for interpretation, it does not visually represent anything but is, itself contained and signifying
  • support/frame are irrelevant other than historical artifact
  • permanence is a myth
  • ordering of compositional elements is unnecessary except as related to self-contained visuality wherein discourses emerge; again, these are not related to words, or even thoughts, but are self-sustained symbols and signs moving towards meaning
  • art is meaningless...which is why it must be meaningful
  • no one is watching
  • i no longer respect systems of constraint: commerce, dissemination, recognition but rather I am interested in systems of liberation: the spatial, the arena of discourse, anonymity, immediacy.  my work has no need for identity or "style"
New approaches now present themselves to me.  I am once again adrift.


the artist takes an unexpected journey

Tomorrow is a day of planes, trains and automobiles.  As I write this, I will (with luck and no small amount of effort) be in the city 24 hours from now.  I'll hop on a north-bound train with my artist friend and we will make another friend's opening.

I decided to journey at the last minute.  Reservations were made, priorities re-arranged.  The best adventures are often those we do not anticipate; the moments we let go and allow the moment to take us away.  I needed to go and that is that.

I'm pulling the plug on this blog for the foreseeable future.  It will be available by subscription, if anyone cares.  I'm also taking it off my website and unlinking it from Twitter.  Graduate school leaves little time for much else, and rather than write about art and my career struggles, I want to spend that precious time actually making it.

The audience for this blog is very small, and some of you I know personally (or feel like I do in other cases) and I thank everyone for supporting me.

two if by sea

studio wall, August 24
untitled paintings in progress, 30" x 24" (each), Rico '14


Stolen hours Sunday morning, a host of smaller canvases in play.  Despite the intensity of the road ahead, I keep reminding myself of the days and nights I've left behind.  Those days began as these, before the dawn hours.  Then an intense office job all day, a workout mid-day, home to homework/dinner/bedtime routine until 8 or so and then off to the studio until the final hours of each day.  So as overwhelming as it all seems in its newness, I've handled greater.

I am liking these small 30 by 24 canvases.  They are big enough to work with and yet small enough to be portable and (perhaps as important) shippable.  The doubts and agony of my last post are, -at least for the moment, fading.  I must preserver and stay in it.  I have to find the time.  I know now that I will.

My upcoming plans for NYC are canceled.  I had hoped to attend a friends solo show just north of the city, but I would sabotage myself on many levels if I made the trip now.  As much as I need to see those friends, and as much as I need the encouragement I feel in seeing said friends getting shows and the accolades they deserve, I must respect the path I am on and its limitations.  Such is life, we can't have everything we want.

By the end of this month I should have a handle on my schedule and what hours are available for studio time.  For now I do as I have always done, I make time; stealing it if I have too, making the most of the unplanned interval, I have come to understand that it is about what I do and not how much or how often.  If the time is fruitful, that's all that matters.

Self forgiveness is my daily practice as of late.  I'm a person with enormous personal expectations and it is difficult to let myself off the hook when I don't meet them.  Today, at least, it felt as though I did.  


machinations of a distracted mind

I have been in the doldrums in terms of studio practice.  There is no wind to push me onward, my vessel has been sacked by vicious swells, my sails ripped, and I have been floating motionless and uncertain for most of the past month.  Voices in my head are at war: one side is telling me to walk away, the other is pleading not to give up.

After Damascus, I don't know if I have anything left to say.  Recent disappointments weigh a bit too heavy on my soul, and the road ahead (graduate school) seems narrow enough with family, much less an art practice and all that comes with it.  I am still toying with shuttering the studio in January, putting everything in storage and accepting a 2-year hiatus.  And yet hope, that cruel lover, persists in whispering in my ear.  Two decades down the line only to abandon it all, what then?

People tell me it is purely location.  To an extent that is true.  My overtures to NYC were neither unsuccessful nor ignored.  Yet the effort is costly to maintain, and for most of this year I simply haven't had the means.  There is no market for my work locally, perhaps even regionally.  I spent years trying to break into Atlanta with no success.  For the past 2 or 3 years I've simply retreated into the studio and have stopped reaching out altogether.

I am not a person who backs down easily.  Tenacity (and perhaps sometimes pride) has always propelled me to overcome life's obstacles.  When I realized that art was the thing, -the purpose if you will, of my life I dug in and I've never looked back.  Yet human arms can only fight the currents for so long without a lifeline.  Eventually we are consumed and sink into the depths.

The irony perhaps is that the world,  now as much as ever, needs artists.  Real artists who make us uncomfortable and do not merely entertain or provoke for provocation's sake.  There are so very few, and fewer still whose work is truly meaningful and pure and cut from authenticity with sweat and blood and anguish and alienation.  I'm not suggesting artists have to be unhappy people, what I am saying is that artists can rarely, if ever, be satisfied people.  This time is a pivot point where new paradigms are rising.  Art gives meaning and context to these movements, and it offers understanding.

I see our country in a state of unraveling.  Our time as Empire is drawing to an end.  20 years ago that statement in some obscure blog or even in print wouldn't carry much weight or get noticed; now it borders on sedition to even utter it.  So few people possess an understanding of art, partly because of the Art World's intentional insulation; money, power, blah, blah.  Partly because we have purged cultural education from our schools.  We're producing entire generations incapable of appreciating beauty and experience.  They watch reality television yet seldom, if ever, seek any truth.

My time away last weekend was healing and steels me for the immediate road ahead.  Yet there is this numb dissatisfaction that aches in my belly.  If not through art, how will I be?


the road


A road trip in the waning days of summer.  A last blast before graduate school begins and with it a new life.  Two old friends meeting in a great southern city; whiskey and great food, sights and long conversations into the dawn.  There are people in our lives with whom the conversation never truly ends; it seems to pick up where it left off, no matter the time and miles between.

The road trip is about minimalism.  One has to be honest with one's self about what they need and take nothing more.  I am a one bag traveler.  I refuse to check luggage except in the event of an extended stay.  My childhood in the military life taught me how to grab and go, and I've always applied that philosophy to travel since.  I like a clean, empty car with nothing but tunes, a map and a proper camera.  I'll instagram when it's over, memories tend to happen when you're in the moment and not lost in cellular prayer.

I'm taking my time.  I plan to wander, maybe even get lost for a bit.  Summer winds and open road and back road discoveries will people the journal entries and sketchbooks in the coming months.  I'll drink with locals.  Tales of high adventure and good friends, and maybe, if I'm very lucky, new friends too.


Metanoia

Damascus, 120" x 84" (two panels), oil on canvas, Rico '14


I've been in the grip of a significant existential crisis for the past year.  Recent events have forced me to question the purpose of making art to an unseen and largely silent audience.  Damascus feels like a place where I am unsure whether or not I can push beyond.  I'm not even sure if I want to anymore, but that is another post.

"The Conversion of Saint Paul-Caravaggio (c. 1600-1)" by Caravaggio*
I was thinking of Caravaggio's The Conversion of St. Paul when I painted Damascus, and compositionally I think one can see the similarities. There are actually two versions, the other equally as influential for me personally and perhaps more generally known.  The idea of metanoia (defined by Merriam-Webster as "a transformative change of heart; especially a spiritual conversion") is often associated with a psychotic break.  It's the theme, to me, of Saul's experience on the road to Damascus. Without pushing for too literal of an interpretation, I consciously pushed visual associations with detonations and iconoclasm; the described event in some respect being a collision of the three monotheistic faiths.

Metanoia is a title I've wanted to use for an exhibition of this body of work.  I feel it coveys the past year or two of my studio practice.  I'm hopeful the opportunity for such an exhibition will arise soon.


*scan. Licensed under Public domain via Wikimedia Commons - http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:The_Conversion_of_Saint_Paul-Caravaggio_(c._1600-1).jpg#mediaviewer/File:The_Conversion_of_Saint_Paul-Caravaggio_(c._1600-1).jpg

How to say "no" to artists

As one would imagine, I've received many rejection letters and emails in my career.  To an extent, if you're not getting these regularly as a creative person, you're probably not doing it right.  We have to reach, we have to try to date out of our league; because otherwise we will be lost in the crowd.

Artists are perceived as emotional beings and this is not completely untrue.  But we're also professionals and adults.  There's been a lot of bandwidth spilled on the rules of engagement for artists seeking exhibition opportunities (I'm talking to you Ed Winkleman!*) but here are some guidelines for how organizations, galleries and curators should reject an artist's work:

  1. Just say no.  Really.  In most cases that's all we require; yes or no.  Say it politely, say it professionally, but say it succinctly.  I can tell you from experience that we know immediately when we see the envelope or email.  There is a sixth sense that kicks in and the emotional processing begins immediately.  By the time we read the actual words, it's about acknowledgement and acceptance and moving on. 
  2. Don't apologize.  This is business, don't make it personal.  If the art world is like dating, then realize that the longer the rejection lasts, the more it veers into condescension or cruelty.  You may have been out of our league and we knew it, or maybe we simply don't fit the program.  But in the end, we asked you.  You've done nothing wrong.  "Regret to inform" is a phrase that should be stricken from all correspondence.  No one informing truly feels regret in any real sense.  It's an empty expression at best and at worst, it's just a cop out.  
  3. Don't list criteria and tell us our work falls short.  The right to decide is completely yours, but it is not your place to pass judgement on the work or what's behind it, -especially not based on a few digital files.  This may be an effort on your part to soften the blow, but I assure you we are grown-ups and professionals and don't require any qualification for your decision.  If you are a non-profit or public organization, what qualifications do the individual committee or board members have in determining if our work is "socially relevant" or "pushes boundaries?"  Leave this off and stick with the facts.  Keep it professional.
  4. Do thank us for applying.  We have spent time and effort preparing our materials and reading your guidelines.  Most of us have done our homework, and for whatever reason felt that we were a good fit, or we are reaching and very conscious of it.  Even if you personally don't feel the work is up to your standards, or question how on earth we felt our work was a good match for you, please acknowledge that we put forth a professional effort.  We (most of us) don't have interns.  The time we spend putting materials together and meeting deadlines is completely uncompensated time; we don't even get to claim it for tax purposes.  Your organization may be on a budget, but in most cases ours is even tighter.  
  5. If "no" means "not now" then say so.  Sometimes you may like the work, but it doesn't fit the show/season/event.  That's OK and we completely get that.  If something resonated with you, tell us!  Encourage us to reach out again.  
A rejection should be a paragraph long and no more.  Inform us of your decision, thank us for applying, wish us luck if you're not interested and invite us to reach out if you are.  That's it.  Short.  Simple.  To the point.

I'd like to take a moment here to speak to artists.  Do your homework.  If you want to be treated like a professional then act like one.  If you don't have a solid exhibition history in group shows, don't send your materials to blue chip galleries and expect a response.  Don't waste people's time and don't give those of us who truly are professionals a bad name.  Realize where you are, understand your work and what makes it unique and real and relevant.  Don't ever be afraid to walk up to the prettiest girl in the room (metaphorically) but if you are rejected, take it like a champ and move on.  

*For the record, I love Ed's blog.  It is insightful, it's tough, and even though I may not always agree I do feel he does a good job of representing the gallery/dealer's point of view.  Recommended reading for any artist who wants to take their career to the next level.


thoughts on inspiration and purpose

If you've read this blog for any length of time, you know that I often rail against what I consider the widely-held concept of inspiration.  The myth of the artist sitting alone having that "eureka!" moment and then producing one of the world's great masterpieces.  This is not only a comfortable fiction that widens the chasm between artists and those who consider themselves to not be creative, but it is inherently dismissive of the artistic process.

I believe art is a Way.  Like martial arts (my daughters just started karate) it is, in the truest sense, a practice.  One is never done; it takes a lifetime to properly master a practice.  This runs counter intuitive to a product-focused culture, but that is another post.

I am always painting.  Sometimes that takes the form of actively running around my studio working on multiple canvases, and other times it takes the form of reading quietly, or sitting in the back yard sipping bourbon and contemplating the stars.  I look at the sky a lot.  Whatever name one gives the divine, that presence is one hell of a painter.  I've traveled end to end and border to border in this country and I've seen the many skies it offers.   So I concede that yes, I am inspired by not only the sky but by everything around me all the time.  But I say that without discipline and applying oneself to making the idea concrete in some way, inspiration is little more than daydreaming.

I have an active drawing practice as well.  I am always sketching or otherwise getting visual information down in some form or another.  I think visually.  I think spatially and in abstract; and it took me most of my life to understand that other people do not.  I recall meeting with a director when I was doing freelance set design, and he kept asking me for a rendering.  I kept explaining the set, walking him through it and yet he could not see.  I'm capable of envisioning a 3D model and rotating it around in my head, walking through it, looking at it from above, below and inside.  I had to let go of my perceptions and communicate based on his perceptions, and that is a lesson I've always remembered.  In visual communication, the job of the communicator is to make the listener/viewer see.

I once described my paintings as "constructed spontaneity."  They look very spontaneous and perhaps even accidental, but they are consciously constructed.  They are compositions in the true sense, because they are revised and edited and intentional in construction.  It seems provincial to perceive abstract art in the 21st century in terms of "my kid could do that."  Yet many people respond to amateur, flat landscape paintings because they do not challenge anything they believe.  I don't think that's art.  I don't think it ever will be.  Gauguin famously said, "The ugly can be beautiful.  The pretty; never."  Aesthetic debates about the definition and qualities of beauty aside, I couldn't agree more.  I don't dedicate my life to decoration.

The artist's job is to challenge perceptions and to allow us to see things in a different light.  That can be accomplished through representational art, absolutely, but there must be something to it beyond realistic rendering.  Take a photograph if you want documentation.

I was thinking the other night that my goal is to be an artist of my time and to create art of my time; art that somehow comments on this moment of the world, culture, civilization.  I have no interest in making art of the moment.  I told a friend this past weekend that sometimes I feel like I'm making art for 50 or 100 years from now.

One final thought this morning.  I recall the opening reception for the SAM show back in January and what struck me is this; ask an artist what their work means, and they will start searching the room for an out.  Ask an artist about their process and they will talk your ear off.  We are process-oriented beings.  The journey is the destination.

post cards from Istanbul

currently untitled (in progress), oil on canvas, 
120" x 81" [two panels], Rico '14

Progress today as I lost myself in retouching the Moroccan patterns by hand.  There is a sublime beauty in Islamic geometry, and I found what I would normally consider a very tedious process incredibly meditative.  I can't really say why I've suddenly introduced these motifs into the work other than the fact that I've been reflecting on a trip I took to Istanbul with my wife in 2006.  We toured mosques until our eyes blurred and then visited the modern art museum.  I don't think I've ever fully digested the work I saw there, though perhaps this is, at last, an honest attempt to do so.  Seeing AbEx interpreted through a completely different culture's eyes was simply incredible.

I've begun researching more patters for incorporation into new work.  I find the combination of order and chaos (albeit constructed chaos) very interesting.  I have many personal associations, but for now at least I'll keep those to myself and allow people their own.

I think the next logical step for me is to begin mixing patterns and combining them.  It's time to clear off the drafting table; I have a feeling I'm going to be using it a lot in the weeks ahead.

I took a fantastic photo of this with my phone, which caught a lot more of the refracted and reflected lighting on the thinner panel.  If you follow me on Instagram, you can see it here.  I'll be building out the abstract forms over the next few evenings and hopefully emphasizing and expanding those wonderful liquid-like moments.  

Free

N. Main St. studio,  summer of 2014

They say the truth will set you free, and I can finally announce that I'm leaving my day job and going back to school for a Master's.  It may surprise some, but not for an MFA and not even in art.  I recently discovered the world of UX design and it was like finding something I didn't know I was looking for.  I start Clemson this fall, and my family and I are excited and anxious.

I have always maintained two careers; one for money and one for life.  The debate rages on whether having a day job makes one a "real artist" but to my friends and peers at least, I am and will remain the real thing; and that's the only verdict I need.  I suppose I'm multi-dimensional, so perhaps I need more than one thing to keep me busy and finally discovering the opportunity to break down the self-compartmentalization of my personality was a very liberating thing.  I've been in a work environment where there are no artists, no people who perceive themselves as creative.  I've felt the need to hold a big part of myself back all these years, and I can no longer bear it.  

At my highest functioning, I need to be able to let go of persona and focus exclusively on what I'm doing.  So I'm very happy to announce the end of the short-lived life of "Mr. Rico."  

The studio work is exploding.  I've got half a dozen canvases on the way, a bit smaller by my usual standards, and I'm excited about the weeks and months ahead.  I don't know exactly where it is going, but I'm starting to paint in my head again every day almost constantly, so I know good work is coming.

I hope to have more time to blog, and to keep everyone up on the developments and work as they happen.  It was already 90 degrees in the studio today, but I had a smile on my face the likes of which I haven't had in a very long time.  

July will be about the work, and in August I'm taking a road trip to meet one of my oldest and dearest friends in Birmingham, a halfway point between us.  Then it's off to Charleston to hook up with another life-long brother in the CRB.  Looking forward to hearing them play and getting a chance to hang.  


the turning away

untitled sketchbook entry, June 2014, Rico

I've been on hiatus from the studio.  My process (generally) is that I will be in the studio and something will occur to me; something brand new or unexpected.  I will get this information down quickly in some fashion: I'll write about it, lay down some drawings, or even dive right in to painting it.  If it is very good, that is to say if I feel both excited and terribly unsure, I will then walk away.

If after a few weeks of ignoring it I find I cannot, I then embrace it and make it happen.  So painting, working, sometimes happens while I'm doing other things; things seemingly unrelated to painting.  In this case, the introduction of motif into this work struck me through accidentally stepping on my sketchbook.  I wear Converse all stars almost exclusively in the studio and the print from the sole was so arresting on the sketch.  It got me to thinking about pattern and juxtaposition and repetition.  Order, and chaos.

Beyond ideas there is the doing.  One has to make the ideas actually happen and this requires technical planning and practical considerations.  (Stuff we creative types often consider quite boring).  Yet there is tremendous satisfaction in addressing the practical and the technical when one finally drafts them in service to the idea, and that idea is then executed.

I guess I'm saying that sometimes I have to walk away for a time in order to see.  I have to turn away so that I can rediscover.   Painting is serious work.  But it is equally serious play.  It has to be fun, or at least satisfying on a some visceral level.  Paintings need to surprise me in the studio.

So I'm back in it.  I need life to ebb away for a time and embrace the practice.  When I work I am free and when I stay away from the art too long I begin to come undone.

I experienced a personal setback this week.  While these generally don't bother me, I feel as though in this case I was grossly underestimated as a person.  Part of it was the medium through which the interaction happened, and part of it was, I think, my vulnerability at this moment in life.  I couldn't get the people on the other side of the interaction to see me and ultimately I count that as a failure on my part.  I'm going through a great deal personally and look forward to announcing something next week and getting it off my chest.

Until then, the studio and the work.


divergence


when we are tired we are attacked by ideas we conquered long ago
96" x 72", oil on canvas, Rico '14

The journey of my life has been ever towards my true self.  It is a narrative steeped in adventure, disappointment, luck and struggle.  Some will tell you that I've been through a lot, but I tend not to focus on hard times.  I do not allow those moments to define me; the moments when I get back up and fight on are what define me instead.  

For me, painting is about finding my voice.  I don't think I've ever consciously attempted to make something new that's never been seen before.  I've painted the way that interested me, and sometimes I've painted in the style of artists whom I admire for a time to learn about their process and materials. As I became more passionate about painting and as I've painted more and more paintings, I have moved toward a greater authenticity.  As I have concerned myself less with content and narrative, the work has become (at times) more about story in a mythical sense.

I think the world (and the art world in particular) needs mystics.  We need less religion and a deeper communion with the divine.  We need to look up into the stars and clouds and feel our connection to the most majestic things and in that moment understand our own majestic humanity.  If we can recognize it in ourselves we can hopefully begin to recognize it in others.  Rare is the person who is killed for claiming s/he is a god.  Common are those who are slaughtered for suggesting that we all are.  

The past year has been one of profound existential struggle for me.  I've wrestled with doubt and discouragement and even enduring, acute despair.  Last Fall I was questioning everything and wondering if I could go on.  Now I stand on the threshold of my next great adventure.  

As I find my own clear and unique artistic voice, I find that the world around me looks and feels different.  I interact with people differently than I have before.  My day job has been a hard row to plow more often than not, but it has given me the opportunity to develop a personal resilience and fortitude in the face of harshness and alienation that I did not know I possessed.  In my work environment, I am a unique mind and personality.  There are no other artists, no divergent thinkers.

When we see life as a grand journey, I believe we are richer.  I am surrounded by young students who see everything as a means to an end, and I am deeply saddened by the seemingly one-dimensional existence they are resigning themselves to.  There's a joy and wonder in getting lost; there is an inexplicable freedom in not knowing what is coming next in life.  I've lived on that edge for a long, long time and I can't imagine living any other way.  I will never do just one thing.  Life offers too many rich and exciting opportunities and there is so much to know and to experience.  Choosing to live outside of our comfort zone is one of the most powerful life choices we can make.  The rewards are boundless.  Yes, there is struggle and pain.  But those things come our way anyway.

This painting has taken months and taken a lot out of me.  I struggled and struggled with it over the past several weeks; taking entire sections out, reworking them, putting them back in.  How do I know when a painting is done?  I think it let's me know.  


Weird scenes inside the gold mine

My family attended the wedding of a good friend this weekend.  The bride's father is a manager/producer and let's just say he's high on the food chain; not just in Nashville but globally.  The house was extraordinary, the art collection mind-boggling and I'll just sum it up with one image:

A "selfie" by Ringo Starr, taken with a film camera in a bathroom mirror circa late 1960's.  Signed.  To said father.

The photo collection alone was a music geek's wet dream.  Turning to leave the bathroom, up above the light switches...holy shit, a letter press print of sheet music signed by Brian Wilson.  It just kept going.  Taking in the Miro' on the staircase landing, I was filled with many emotions but ultimately I take some heart in the fact that people of that economic level collect art accordingly.  Certainly not all of them, but some.  Chagall, Warhol, Howard Finster, it just kept going; a feast to the eyes at every turn with a decidedly clear aesthetic.  They were hung with appreciation but never in a vulgar, showy way.  These people lived with their art, and I think that is what gave me hope.

It was a window into a world few of us (at my socio-economic level) get to see.  Art that may or may never be viewed by the general public again.  Out of respect, I left my phone in the car and didn't check-in.  Alas, no selfie with the Miro', but everyone deserves their personal space if not their privacy.  Who knows what treasures are locked in the temples of the 1% that will never again see the museums?

And tomorrow night, I will leave all that behind, suit up, and go finish the painting in the studio....

back to black and white


Painting is doing; it requires taking action and seeing it through.  But it is also something more akin to being.  It requires presence and quietness and listening.  For me, the less agenda in a work of art the better.  I'm not saying I'm against political art, but there has to be something else behind it.  Art whose only content is ideas lacks something; it is all-too-often empty.

So the artist paints of his/her time.  We paint of the moment in the hope of connecting to the timeless, and we paint from within in the hope of connecting with the universal.  I make art, in a physical sense, to survive for hundreds of years.  That alone doesn't make it superior, but one must concede it makes for a formidable case as to its intent.

The paintings I am most uncertain about are often the best.  Those which please me, that is to say those that I look at and think, "that's exactly what I want" are generally not as strong as the ones cloaked in ambiguity or ambivalence.  So this state of uncertainty and doubt is a powerful place from which to create.

Proper pics of this one as I complete it within the next few weeks.  I like to snap pictures with my phone for shorthand reads.  It enables me to see the work instantaneously and in an unflattering context.  I need to be able to see the work in the moment, without context or history or the relationship I've developed with the long time spent.

Show announcement

the guarded glance of half solicitude, Rico '14
8" x 10", photo reproduction

My work is included in a group show, Fiction (with only daylight between us) at the University of Dayton, in Ohio.  The show opened this past Friday night.  I'm told it will move to the Neon Furnace Gallery when this run is over.  The show was curated by the artist Jeffery Cortland Jones.  Jeff is an acquaintance and I remember distinctly seeing his work for the first time in Brooklyn at Sideshow gallery.  I love his sparse, open spaces which resonate with a quiet tension.  I was honored to be invited to participate.

The show concurrently runs online at Jeff's virtual project space No Future Projects.  

following the work

I've written many times that I believe work comes form work.  Being in the studio on a regular basis fosters a discipline; a true practice.  I work in series mostly, but I am never afraid to follow the work wherever it leads, even if that takes me off my current focus.

Because I build most of my canvases and stretcher frames, production of new work comes in fits and starts.  The Winter kept me out of the studio, but now that the warmer weather is here I am getting back into the groove.  I laid down paint on a big piece today, one example of following the work.  I was working on the Stations series and an image caught my eye.  I made some sketches and knew it had to be black and white and knew it wasn't part of the current series.

That's the way it is for me; ideas have to survive and endure.  If I experience something that I think most people would call inspiration, I initially ignore it.  An idea must persist.  It must keep me awake at night, be waiting for me in the morning and not let me go.  My paintings take months because I don't paint everything I think of or envision.  Many fall by the wayside and never get past an idea.

When such an ideas survives, I become very quiet about it.  Often that's how I know it is a powerful painting; if I've kept it close to the vest during process.

Mystery of Light at Lyons Wier


Soul String, James Austin Murray, 
2014, Oil on shaped canvas
69 x 72 in / 175.3 x 182.9 cm


My friend James Austin Murray has a solo show up right now in NYC.  Here's a short article with a video interview.  If you're in NYC or heading that way in the next few weeks, do yourself a favor and check it out.  I've watched this body of work from it's seed, taking root at the Bemis Center in Nebraska and reaching full maturity in his new studio (which I haven't been to yet, but look forward to) in the flower district.  

loose ends

I pick up my work from SAM today and the crazy run of this show comes to an end.  It is bittersweet; one the one hand I've achieved something I thought was decades away and yet I question whether my career is altered even minutely from the experience.  I remain an unknown in SC; a place still trying to wrap its head around Modern art, much less contemporary art.  I sometimes think post-impressionism is where most people lose their comprehension of art around these parts.

So the studio will be full this afternoon.  I'm grappling with a very large 3-panel piece that is giving me logistical problems, and I'm climbing out of the Winter paralysis and lockout.  As I re-enter the studio after nearly 3 months of restricted access, I suppose I question the point.  All this time and money and energy spent; for what?  For whom?  And while there is a freedom in the fact that no one is watching and I may do as I please, there is also the discouragement in knowing that my game is so much higher than most of what I see around me; and yet is goes unseen.

And still I keep going.

The large painting is something I have to paint for me.  I hope to return to the stations once I complete it.  I may have to rebuild the stretcher frames as I cannot seem to correct the warping of one seam.  It's frustrating and time-consuming but not unforeseen.  With my wife's show opening next weekend, I cannot imagine being able to get much done this week.

The warmer nights are coming, however.  I'll be back in full swing soon.




creation as an act of sheer will


We build fires in the night and look up into the stars.   We have always built fires, alone, with small groups and in ritual.  Sometimes we are one with the fire and night and stars and one another; but inevitably, someone comes along and wants to rule.  They tell us the fire belongs to them.  We should depend on this person, for our protection, for our quality of life, for our advancement, for our freedom.  Milena have come and gone.  The big man, the chief, the king, the pope, the dictator and all the rulers have tried to sell us the same bill of goods; that they know best, and lining their pockets with our gold is the only way to maintain life as we know it.

It has always been a lie.  It is a lie today.

There is no Art World.  There are small enclaves of very wealthy people engaged in speculation and some kind of visual product happens to be being traded.  It looks a lot like art; and sometimes it happens to be, but none of these people notice.  There are galleries along the streets of Chelsea and the Lower East Side and they are selling something that, sometimes, was made by hand in some studio by someone and these someone call themselves artists.  These big auction houses and large and small galleries and dealers tell us artists that we need them.  That they alone can make our lives worthwhile and we should seek them out and lay our gifts at their feet for judgment lest we risk lifelong obscurity and poverty and madness.   It's a compelling and, at times, seductive argument.  But we should never forget that we built the fires before they came along with their white walls and client lists.  We stared and shouted in the night sky before the glittering lights of SoHo faded into Tribeca.  We will make, long after they can no longer afford the rent.  We will create without their audiences, -in obscurity, and madness and poverty if we must.

For us there is no business plan.  There is only an imperative.  We must make, and we must reach, and we must push out beyond the known and the possible because we alone know in our hearts that out in those regions we will build new fires and find new gods and build new worlds.  That anyone who offers us freedom in exchange for anything isn't actually offering freedom at all.

There is nothing wrong with the art world.  It lives in 200 sq foot studios in the flower district, and make-shift garages, and abandoned warehouses, and storage units, and extra (or not) bedrooms from coast to coast and across the world and it cannot be owned or regulated, and it is immune to your auction houses and soulless collections that collect dust for the sole purpose of making more money.  It lives in the faces of the mad, the obscure and the poor in every city in this country and quite a few small towns and rural hamlets too.  You will never see the greatest painting this nation has to offer.  Those people will die and the work will not endure and great treasures will be lost.  There are many, many things that wealth can never own.  You don't have to be rich to collect art, that too is a lie.

We don't need.  We want; and in our wanting we suffer.  That is why people are given power; because we believe their lies that they can end our suffering.

I paint to reach the possible, which always lies just beyond the impossible, I think.  I paint grand to see if I can do it.  I stretch my physical and technical limitations because I believe that is the whole point of living; and that safety and security and comfort are slow, numb deaths that bring us nothing and surround us with so much that we don't even notice it anymore.

I may never have fame.  I may never sell another painting in my lifetime.  All my work may end up locked away and destroyed without seeing the light of day.  But I will never quit.  I cannot.  I have tried and tried to walk away; there are better ways to not make a living, as the saying goes.  I come back every time because if I do not paint I am diminished as a human soul.  So I speak to every soul, whether they want to hear or not.


47 things I've learned in 47 years

I'm in the doldrums.  Winter lingers and the placid sea merely offers buoyancy; no direction.  I'm feeling introspective and so here it goes, in no particular order of significance....


  1. You can always change your mind.  The road to change may not come easy, but there is no path from which you cannot diverge.
  2. Life is about relationships.  Maintain them with the utmost care.
  3. Always be willing to step outside your comfort zone.  The greatest moments of your life result from the unexpected detour, the choice you wanted to say no to but didn't.  
  4. Buy the ticket, take the ride.  See your decisions through and deal with the consequences.  
  5. Things happen for a reason; sometimes that reason is piss-poor judgement, bad luck or lack of perspective.  Learn from these moments and move on.
  6. Follow your bliss.  
  7. Trust your visions.
  8. No one can give you answers, but seek out people whom you believe can anyway.  You'll probably end up calling each other friends for life.
  9. Every problem hides a kernel of wisdom.  Break it apart.  Use a hammer if you need to, but discover whatever it is you're supposed to learn from it.  
  10. Sometimes we act, sometimes we are acted upon.  There are equal merits to either condition.
  11. Treat every person you meet with respect and dignity and you will meet god many times over.
  12. Everyone should have one shitty job in their life.  A job where you serve people and are made to feel invisible.  There is a clarity from this experience that nothing else offers.
  13. Your relationship with money is just that; decide whether it is a long or short term, honest, caring, abusive or destructive, and act accordingly.  If you don't like the results, learn to have a different relationship.
  14. Buy the best shoes you can afford and care for them.
  15. Become a snob about one thing, but don't be obnoxious about it.
  16. Do something you will never be great at; this is called a hobby.  It should be fun and utterly pointless.
  17. Always take a job to learn before you take a job to earn.
  18. Learn more about money than your accountant.
  19. Be in better shape than your doctor.
  20. Your body is the greatest gift you'll ever receive, treat it well.
  21. Life is an endurance sport, not a sprint.  Watch your friends and peers revolve on the wheel of fortune and you will understand this.  Stick around, it doesn't get easier but you get better at it.
  22. Dress your age, but dress well; how you act is up to you, but own where you are in life.  
  23. Go to New York.  Often.
  24. Ride roller coasters.
  25. Finger paint with your kids and make a mess.  You'll remember why it's fun.
  26. Drive a stick shift.
  27. Keep a journal.  You don't have to write every day, but you should write at least one entry a week.  
  28. Get a really nice pen.
  29. Drink water.  Lots of water.
  30. Exercise as often as you can, no one is too busy to take care of themselves.  
  31. Travel for good friends, good conversation and good experiences.  
  32. If your best friend calls and needs you to come, go without hesitation.
  33. Do not buy into other people's emotional states or drama.  
  34. Read great books.  Seriously.  Even if it takes you a year to read a great novel, you join a society once you do.  You understand metaphors and you get references.  This simple act makes you smarter and opens doors in ways you cannot conceive.  
  35. Have a drink with your father-in-law and listen to him.
  36. Bad things happen to most people.  What defines us is how we respond to these moments.
  37. Discuss religion and politics if you must, but turn the conversation toward BBQ or college football in the South and you should be ready for fist-to-cuffs.  
  38. See great art in person.  Art is meant to be experienced live.  
  39. Cultivate yourself.  Ignorance is a treatable condition.
  40. Take walks.  Don't take your phone, don't wear headphones, don't do it for exercise, just take a damn walk; preferably in the woods, but anyplace outside will do.  
  41. Get out of bed when you wake up.  The snooze button is for losers.  My first hour of the day is an amazing personal time where I collect my thoughts and put on my skin for what lies ahead.  I'd rather get up in the dark than get a little extra sleep and try to catch up with myself for the rest of the day.  I always feel there is something profound about seeing the sun rise.
  42. Learn to cook.  You will never be without friends.
  43. Cultivate one noticeable flaw, but otherwise be your best.  
  44. Make a bucket list and start checking it off.
  45. Eat local food; no matter where you go.  
  46. Love with abandon, live with purpose.
  47. The journey is the destination.

rain and oil

study for Prometheus, oil stick on paper, 2014


My drawing practice has recently returned, largely in part to being frozen out of my studio and my wife's aggressive rehearsal schedule.  I draw in negative; the images I get down are flipped in my mind's eye.  The whites are black and blacks white.  I've tried working on black paper, but over the holidays I started using paint sticks in various shades of black and I've been very happy with the process.

I get images from everywhere, and lately I've been appropriating photographs from the various Tumblr feeds I check-in on daily.  I confess that I've become addicted to Tumblr, I like the idea of scrolling through hundreds of images with little or no text.  It's a feast for a visually-oriented person like me.

I'm taking a break from the stations series to paint another painting or two.  It's not like anyone is busting down my studio door demanding the work for a show anyway, so I am happy to go at my own pace and wander in and out of the series at will.  Maybe I also need a psychological break from the all-black fields, who knows?

That's the way art goes, I think.  Changing one thing makes something else occur to me.  Then I'll go explore that new idea.  I've said it many times, but work comes from work.  Painters paint, actors act, musicians play music.  There are enough waiters and waitresses in the world; do what you have to do to keep your dream alive, but don't buy into the means as the end.  Anyone can keep working if they are successful.  Those of us who work without concern for recognition or money and keep at it are a different breed.  I've been fortunate with getting my work into the world and even selling it.  But I do it because, try as I might some times, I cannot not do it.

Today is a work holiday and I'm off to the studio to smoke a cigar and enjoy the rain.

what we see

7th station, in progress, studio

I've been invited to participate in a group show curated by an incredible artist and acquaintance at U Dayton (I'm big in Ohio, ladies and gentlemen, what can I say?).   The assignment was simple, but it's gotten me thinking about appropriation and images and seeing.  Painting, and really all art-making I can think of, involves an altered perception.  Not the kind you get from substances, but an altered sense of looking/listening/experiencing a thing.  It's taken me decades to fully grasp that I see the world fundamentally differently than most people; that I experience the world around me profoundly differently.  So if I take an image and rotate it and reverse it and filter it, it becomes a thing it was not before.  My active experience and interaction alters the thing itself, and thus forever changes the perceptions of others as well.

It's said that we don't really know what art is, but we know it when we see it.  I'd add to that Jerry Saltz's famous quip, "art can be for anybody, it's just not for everybody."   The viewer has a responsibility in encountering art.  I really don't think a painting is done until someone has seen it.  For me, seeing people see the work gives me closure.  I'm not responsible for what they take away, but I'm very interested in what they bring.

If you think about it, every one of us is alone in the universe.  We are experiencing life and our surroundings in a unique and solitary way.  "Blue" to me isn't necessarily blue to you, and so on.  Artists train themselves to trust this.  We invite it in and use it, and we attempt to bring those perceptions to a table of universality through the personal.  I think artists are sharing people.  It makes it especially hard for us to understand those who do not share.

Over time, I've developed a way of using my medium to facilitate what I see and communicate it to others.  I eschew the common notion of inspiration, but truth be told I walk around in a constant state of being inspired by everything.  I'll stop and take pictures of clouds, or puddles because I find them remarkable.  All that looking has brought about a way of seeing; or is it the other way around? 

I'm long overdue for a trip to NYC.  Good conversation is hard to find in this town.  


the fourth station

Apparizione della Madre (fourth station) [in progress], 
acrylic and oil on canvas, 72" x 72", Rico '14


The weekends seem shorter, the winter drags on.  I work with constraints (mostly time) but increasingly without limits.  I'm fairly far along on four paintings now, and I saw them all hung for the first time in the studio today.  They are strong, and there is a long way to do.

A quiet night fades into a busy week.  More stretchers to build -always we begin, again.

condemnation

condanna (first station) [in progress], acrylic and oil on canvas
72" x 72", Rico '14


A good night last night, the cold winds made it a closed door session.  There are times when I feel that I am so utterly far removed from everyone and everything; that this tiny town may as well be an island or Mars.  Working alone has taught me self-reliance and to trust in my visions.  I am in my place of uncertainty.  Each painting is a sustained effort, a surprise, and provides me brief satisfaction when I'm able to pull it off as I had imagined it.   

The black paintings are incredibly difficult to document.  What looks grey in the photo above is a matte black.  As one moves through the room and views these paintings from different angles, the composition recedes and emerges and fades.  These pieces are painted with a space in mind, and when I have two or three more under my belt, I will begin that process.

I've worked heavily from sketchbooks for this series.  I have an arc of story through the composition of each painting.  I know what they look like in my mind now.




the first failure

il primo fallimento (third station)
acrylic and oil on canvas, 72" x 72", Rico '14

There's a favorite cultural myth that we cling to above all others; that man pulls himself up by his own bootstraps in isolation from the world around him and achieves greatness/wealth/fame by merit and hard work alone.  The claimed rewards proof, -irrefutable, that he alone is deserving of the overflowing cup from which he now drinks deeply.  We worship celebrity for this very reason; celebrity being both our gods and everyman.  It plays into the very same mythos as the impoverished, inner city youth who rises to professional fame and wealth in sports through hours of dedication and practice against all odds.  We need to believe in meritocracy if only to keep us from losing hope in our fragile puritan ethos and desperate belief in fairness.  In reality there are far fewer slices of pie than can ever be enough for all of us, and most; no matter how talented or brilliant or dedicated they may be, will never rise from obscurity.

So we lost an amazing actor yesterday; an artist.  There will be many talking heads paraded across everyone's television screens and op-ed columns saying why we should mourn or why we should pity or condemn.  There were, no doubt, sermons.  There will be "serious" talk about addiction and help for addicts, the victims of their own hedonism or escapism fueled by the overwhelming pressures of their fortune; good or ill.  Many people who have never so much as smoked a joint will decry the wretched cultural scourge of illegal drugs; equating heroin with abusing Adderall, blaming rap culture and immigrants and of course, Obama.

Can we instead take a breath for a moment and recognize that a man is dead?  People die every day,  each death is tragic; each has some back story that, unlike the high-profile death of a celebrity, will never be told.  To some degree, most of us will die with our pants at our ankles (metaphorical speaking).  Death doesn't wait until it's convenient.  Death is the price for life, and everyone pays the same fee when the check comes to the table.  I'm far more inclined to view the death of a six-day-old baby as tragic than someone my age who couldn't wrestle his demons to the ground, but the real truth about addiction is that the users are seldom the victims anyway; the victims are almost always the families.  Those left behind.  It is those people who deserve respect, privacy in their mourning, and compassion.  The dead don't care what we have to say about them, or when we grow tired of speaking of them at all.

I've seen friends go down the rabbit holes of crack and heroin.  It's ugly and deeply saddening, and there is a moment, right before they go under when you're still reaching for them and trying to do everything you can to pull them out.  In the very next moment you realize they will pull you under too, and you salvage what you can, step back and hope they make it; and promise yourself you'll be there when they do.  Sometimes you can be.  But not every time.

The christian's prophet said, "let he who is without sin cast the first stone."  Implicit in that statement is that no stones be thrown at all, because who among us is blameless?  Who among us hasn't failed?  We may have the presence of mind to not shoot horse, but that doesn't mean we won't die behind the wheel for any number of equally-preventable and similarly banal reasons.  It doesn't mean we are superior.  It only means we had the opportunities to make different choices, and somehow, maybe even in spite of ourselves, we acted on those opportunities.  I won't claim innocence when it comes to drugs.  I'm fortunate to have a peculiar immunity toward addiction to some substances that others try once and it seals their fate.  Lucky me; but it owes far more to biochemistry than moral fortitude let me tell you.  And while heroin is a peculiar journey during which at one point everyone knows how it will likely end, when you're in it, it may not seem so clear and rational and clean.  I've overcome some demons, so have many good friends.  But others, equally dear, are not here today, and that doesn't make them weak or bad people so much as it makes them human and frail and more like me than I can sometimes own up to to care to admit.

As I think about the stations of the cross, what intrigues me is that it is the story of a man who knew how his story was going to play out.  He could have opted out at any time, walked away, lived a long life or (if you buy their theology) simply stepped off this mortal plane and onto another.  The most human thing in the world to do is to avoid pain.  The compelling arc of story is that he faced his fate with eyes wide open and in so doing provided an example of how each of us can do so as well.  Some are born to discover new worlds, create research that will forever change the world we live in, be great artists, composers, actors or world leaders.  Some are born to be great parents, courageous teachers, or simply play the supporting role in other people's lives while never seeing the spotlight themselves.  Whatever our path, whatever it is that we were born for, whatever gifts we have been born with, we must grab that destiny and run with it.  Live it for all that it's worth and squeeze every ounce of sweat, blood, spit and sex out of it until we collapse in a lumped, bruised heap at death's door.  I believe we are born to live, even if we cannot escape death.  The when and perhaps the how of dying isn't up to us; but we make our own terms when it comes to how we live.

These paintings are an existential journey for me.  I don't have any answers; I'm too busy asking questions.


one winter more

one winter more before the northward crossing
acrylic and oil on canvas, 2014 Rico

The process of painting passes through dozens of paintings.  For every mark, from the very first one, the pictorial space is shaped and changed.  The artist practices a detached discernment, but must free himself from judgement.  Openness and awareness must be preserved; the act of seeing is paramount.  

Things occur in the process.  Work comes from work.  The simple change from white to black has profoundly changed my perceptions and interactions with the canvas.  As I prepare to take this concept large, I'm reminded that I purposely constricted myself in square canvases.  The square is inflexible.  It is also pure and, surprisingly, spiritual.  I'm reminded of Malevich, from whom I now have a much deeper appreciation.  Indeed the association with the icon is asserting itself in this work, and that was by design but unexpected in terms of effectiveness.  

A quick break and then back to lay down another layer of acrylic so that I can hit these with oil tomorrow.  This modest 10" x 10" canvas retains the large scale.  I'll dive into the 6' x 6' canvases with abandon.

reflections

The sun has just risen over the Atlantic and tide is rolling in.  We took a last-minute beach adventure; much-needed after the harsh re-entry into routine after the long holidays.  What remains of the week is a frenzied roster of events and tasks; that peculiar state of daily life as parents and professionals.  I'll enjoy the drive back once we're clear of the 70 miles of incessant billboard vulgarity which defines so many beaches.  I hope for light traffic and blue skies.

...And later, reflections of the sun in the ripples of the pool as my little mermaids dive and glide beneath the surface.  Skills honed last summer as we dutifully put in our daily hours poolside in Florida.  They grow each day now, shooting up like sprouts after heavy rains.

Reflections on the year past and the weeks ahead, each year accelerating with my daughters ever closer to a day when they will move away and begin their own lives.  If I do my job well, they will do so with confidence and wonder; and yet it breaks my heart to think of that day.  Therein lies the rub of parenthood itself.

Reflections on the windy sea as Helios makes his ascent.  Choppy waves move fast to shore and the artist's mind is lost in contemplating line and surface, form and fluidity.  In a few short days I'll return to Spartanburg for the opening reception of the show.  It still feels surreal and distant.  A friend said she was coming and it made me realize that I had forgotten there would be people I knew there Friday night.  Solitary is the practice and the Way.  So much so it is surprising when it is peopled.

Wave wash sound of water caressing sand.  I'll sit in my library tonight and feel recharged; our spontaneous escapade much needed after the harsh re-entry into daily routine from our long holiday break.  Over two weeks back into it and we are all struggling still.  I question why; perhaps too often. I suppose I wonder what purpose these Industrial Age structures of school and work actually serve any more.  We are operating on 19th century paradigms which are long-since obsolete.  Like the provincial sensibilities which make abstract art a hard sell even 100 years into the uniquely American story of it, as a nation we all-too-often mistake nostalgia and narrow mindedness for tradition.


some nights


I visited the Abstract Invitational exhibit last night.  Seeing my work in that space felt very gratifying and very humbling.  I was struck by how different the exhibition looked at SAM as opposed to the Elizabeth Harper gallery where it previously hung.  The museum, -the Chapman Cultural Center as a whole, is top shelf.  The citizens of Spartanburg should be proud; they are poised to enter into the global discussion of art with this space.

Any doubts about my seriousness as a painter are obliterated with this show.  Any questions as to the significance of my work are laid to rest.  I brought it, and no one can ever take away the moment I had with the show last night.

I'll be back a week from today for the official opening of the exhibit and I'll give a brief artist's talk.  I'm glad I've now been in the space and seen the show, it makes the opening easier.  I met some nice people last night, hopefully I'll meet more next week.  I'm hopeful some of my friends from far away may surprise me and fly in, but the support online has been overwhelming as it is, and I know SC is not a destination for many who haven't been here.

It's before dawn and the house is still and in the darkness I drink my coffee and type these words and I'm still trying to understand that last night was not a dream.  These little (and not so little) validations keep me going, for I know the road will never end for me.

floods

The rains came and my roof leaked, soaking most of the Eastern wall.  The paintings in progress appear be OK, seasoned as they are from extreme temperatures and varying humidity.  Sometimes the primitive nature of the studio gives me pause, but I love working in there when the temperatures climb and in the hot, still nights.

I will see the show for the first time this Thursday.  As part of Spartanburg's Art Walk, I hope there will be some traffic.  I'm curious to see how it will be received, though not having seen the show in the space, it will be an experience for me as well.

The black paintings are promising.  I was able to experiment with some 10" square canvases and the results are powerful.  It's hard to get a handle on what it will look like big, but I feel very positive thus far.  I was able to get down another coat of gesso on the 4 in play, and the surfaces are coming along nicely.  I know I'm onto something.  I don't recall every feeling this way about emerging work in the studio.


higher ground

I met the writer D A Adams for coffee this afternoon on his way through town.  We have been friends for half our lives, having met in a poetry workshop in college.  He's one of those lifelong friends that whenever we meet the time and distance immediately fade.  Our intense conversations always leave me transformed and questioning.  Coffee turned into 4 hours without either of us noticing.   Of him I can say many things, but suffice to say he is a gentleman and a professional.   His writing transcends genre and speaks to me personally and profoundly about the human condition.

Today also begins the unfortunate anniversary of the birth, short life, and death of another close friend's child.  The mother's blog and Facebook posts are often gut-wrenching and brutally real in a way that makes them extremely difficult to read and nearly impossible to respond to.  Years after, the pain remains ever-present for them, and while one tries to be good friend, there comes a point of realizing there's nothing one can do.  I'll never feel what they feel; at least I hope with every fibre of my being that I will not, and this by its very acknowledgement creates a chasm so vast that there is only blackness and the seeming hollowness of kindness to offer.  I feel for them and I think of Ellie through the years and I wish they did not feel alone in their pain and that I could somehow reach through it.

The black paintings are about our humanity.  Seeing and interpreting the last day of Christ within the context of epic poetry, epic story, made me appreciate it anew.  I'm still not religious, nor will I ever be again, but the story speaks to me.  When I saw my first crude efforts I immediately understood how heavy the works will eventually be.  Even those 2 paintings hit me like a Mack truck to the chest; but they were not what I wanted, so I destroyed them.  Whatever spiritual or transformative paintings I may or may not have painted to-date are nothing compared to these.  These are something else entirely. I see it in my head and I cannot rest.  They will not leave me alone.

So maybe the pain I cannot find the strength to speak to in the case of my friends' child is somehow a part of this.  Maybe the eternal conversation between good friends is more than the simple act of reunion and is, instead, a regenerative spiritual process; a rebirth.  Our inadequate distinctions between joy and agony seem to only limit a true experience of either.  Those moments when we allow ourselves to feel deeply and without limits are the moments when our souls awaken from the horrific slumber of daily life.  So I celebrate the writings of a grieving mother even as I sometimes recoil from them.  I embrace the unending love and connection of a friend as I am aware we may not see each other for months or even years.  Our feelings are somehow better when they are inappropriately laid bare, and naked, and present, because we dilute them in our everyday grind.  And on those same lines if art (or Art) doesn't somehow connect with and engage that, then it is not, nor can it ever be art.  It is, to paraphrase the prophet, an empty sound; like cheap tin.



anew


I spent my last day of 2013 in the studio.  Tonight I will drink with good friends and ring in the New Year, safe and stationary for the evening.  Through the magic of the internet, I won't be anywhere near a computer or smartphone when this posts, but I wish everyone a happy 2014.

I'll walk into the studio in the new year ready to do battle.  I know the way ahead, it is clear to me now.

In just over 2 weeks the SAM show will open, and I will see my work hanging in an art museum for the very first time.  I hope this bodes well for the new year, we painters are a suspicious lot.  I remember meeting a fairly famous sculptor back in the Spring at an opening at June Kelly who, finding himself surrounded by a motley crew of painters remarked that painters have to take the hard way.  For sculptors, he said, if it works we go with it.  But you painters have to struggle.  If it comes easy you always reject it.

I suppose that's true.  Knifing those two paintings yesterday was the only option.  I could look at it as 3 months work down the drain or I could see it for what it is; 3 months worth of practice and setting my own bar.  What emerges from destruction is often better than what was before.  In my case, I've never denied the link between creation and destruction.  Indeed, my process is often violent and chaotic to reach the pictures I paint.

I'm glad 2013 is over.  I'm not one for the past.  Today is the greatest day of my life.  This is the greatest time.  My daughters' age now is my favorite age they have been, and this has always been the case.  I can't look ahead too far into the new year.  I have my plots and plans, but in the end I will be where I need to be.  I feel the work is about to go somewhere really powerful and so I want for nothing.

I have a feeling that this series will be accomplished much more quickly than I originally thought.  I can't wait to watch it come together.