Fellow travelers
August 22, 2000
Dear Artist,
Two kayakers take particular interest in the
operation of the floating easel. Brothers Karl
and Guenter Schuerer have been on the Mackenzie
and it's tributaries for three months. Grey
bearded and bronzed, these are seasoned river-men
who have shaken off their bindings in Bremen in
exchange for a life of adventure in a wild and
challenging land. Their folding boats are
masterworks of neatness and organization--they
have to be--they must explore efficiently.
It's something to do with the acceptability of
change. In the floating easel work can take place
during purposeful movement. The landscape and its
various motifs unfold so there is not the
inclination for one particular view. The
essentials must be photographed quickly with the
mind's eye, for the next time you look up what
you think you saw has changed. I think we may be
on to something here.
The system helps me with what artists have
traditionally called "the big
picture"-the simplification of complexity.
As I paint in the bow of the Alexander Mackenzie,
slowly powered forward by Sara at the helm, I'm
beginning to think that what I do back in the
studio is too fussy and constipated. I'm not
saying these Mackenzie paintings are
masterpieces, but they are a direction. When it's
Sara's turn to paint she mentions the calming
satisfaction of doing one thing while
accomplishing
another.
The last time we saw the brothers Schuerer they
had drawn their tiny craft on a beach at the foot
of a great mountain. "We are going up,"
Karl shouted across the rumbling river. He
pointed to the top. When I'm painting again I'm
thinking something about efficient
brushwork-meaningful, cursive stroking that gets
to the point.
Best regards,
Robert
PS "Change everything, except your
passions." (Voltaire)
"Efficiency of a practically flawless kind
may be reached naturally. But there is something
beyond-a higher point, a subtle and unmistakable
touch of love and pride beyond mere skill, almost
an inspiration which gives to all work that
finish which is almost art-which is art."
(Joseph Conrad)
Esoterica: In The Underpainter, Jane Urquhart
says that her artist must stop in order to paint;
a writer must stop talking in order to write.
Sara and I are wondering what others might have
to say about producing while on the move.
The following are selected correspondence
relating to the above letter. If you find value
in any of this please feel free to copy to a
friend or fellow artist. We have no other
motivation than to give creative people an
opportunity to share ideas and possibly broaden
their capabilities. Thank you for writing rgenn@saraphina.com
Gets a bang out of
driving
I have often gotten my best inspiration and
clearest mental organization on long drives. I'm
far from the only one that does this. If you shut
off the radio and the music, you have to pay a
little attention to the road--the best time and
place for this is on the great American plains in
the wee small hours, like across the bleak heart
of Texas or the flatness of Kansas, for example,
two or three in the morning--and your hands are
occupied so they can't wander to some
distraction, likewise your eyes.
After while, drifting along hearing the hum of
the tires, occupied just to the level where
distraction is
impossible, you can collect yourself, shuffle
thru all the images and half-built structures,
line up the
known facts and locate the holes. It's really
mechanized meditation, nearly as pure as I think
it's possible to achieve. Lying in the hospital
after a near-fatal injury, steeped in morphine, I
was able to
achieve some shocking clarity and astonishing
clean-slate mental states that have had lasting
value,
but I don't recommend the method. Driving is
easier, and as I said, almost as pure. I said the
injury was near fatal. Actually, for a few
minutes it was completely fatal. The moment of
death, the transiton, there's where everything
really becomes clear. We don't realize the
millions of tiny conflicts we have inside us,
always--tiny troubles like schools of minnows
inside. In death those just
dissolve, leaving a peace so sweet and soft it
far overwhelms any clumsy attempt I might make to
describe it.
Chris, Ohio.
(RG note) Perhaps the car works in the same way
as the "mmm" based hum of a
trancendental meditation mantra. Stuff seems to
bubble up from the subconsciousstuff you
didnt know was there.
Change
All things change, even passions. And in a sense
we are all "producing on the move,"
even if we're holed up in a studio.
Warren Criswell
Entelechy
It is another "sparkling" day here in
Cobble Hill, the sun is lower these days,
creating different light effects and casting
longer shadows that reminds one of the fall days
ahead. It seems to me that it is this exact time
of year when I feel a perfection around me. While
the flowers and plants are reaching the pinnacle
of their growth cycle, almost showing a bit leggy
and with seed pods forming, they all seem to be
reaching their self-fulfillment. It is this
entelechy that I speak of that I feel and sense
all around me. This sensation suddenly arrives
just like that first gust of cold wind that
announces a shift towards the fall equinox.
This time of year I have
a yearning. I used to think it was September that
I longed for, the time of "return to
school", that start of the fall season.
Typically this longing begins in August and along
with it feelings of excitement like butterflies
stirring in my stomach. There is a feeling of
change and of something new about to happen that
comes with it. Now I recognize that this
sensation I have is connected directly to this
perfection I sense all around me; it is this
movement towards potential; it is this vital
force that surrounds and flows through me.
Jill Ehlert
(RG note)
Entelechy is the being or becoming
actual of what was once only a potential.
Energy refunded
My father passed away last spring after a long
and difficult illness, and this year has been a
combination of rest from the exhaustion and
observation of grief and grief recovery...I was
warned it would show in the artwork...a struggle
to keep the light touch while he was ailing, and
a dive to passionate depths I did not know
existed in watercolor when he passed...but there
was also gratitude and celebration for his
release from suffering, and the satisfaction of
seeing the healing of the spirit in the
improvement of the work...my energy refunded, and
life back to normal...they told me to stay into
truth, express it so that someone besides
yourself will want to get into it.....
There is no answer...seek it lovingly.
Elle Fagan
Bumps and all
Yes, yes, yes! I just returned from a month long
road trip - 7500 miles - and the best part about
it was drawing in the car - can't be too fussy -
bumpy roads, pen flying, memory tested by
changing forms. The trick is certainly to
translate this freshness to the studio work.
Cassandra James, Texas
Less fussy
When I travel I am a different person. I am less
encumbered by the everyday. That freer feeling
has to have an effect on the paintingmaking
it less fussy.
Athina Pazolli
Be about paint
I find it interesting that you have mentioned
that your studio paintings seem sterile while the
freedom and freshness you find painting in the
out of doors does not translate to the studio
work. It was a problem of mine as well to capture
the flow and freedom of the medium in and out of
the studio. The solution I find is not in the
subject, that is just the jumping off point, that
is what inspires us to paint. The freedom is in
the paint; one must become the paint, so to
speak, feeling it flow through the end of the
brush. Its all about the paint and how one
manipulates it. For many years I painted
painstakingly photorealisticly taking
months to develop one painting. The subject
matter was a bit odd but just the same realistic.
They dubbed me a surrealist. Now I can paint 7 or
8 paintings when need be in about a month and
they call me a photo-realist. The paintings are
free and fresh, they are about the subject but
the ebb and flow of this fresh approach makes
them more realistic, they are fun and colorful
and my audience has happily responded . So my
advice is be about paint and not about subject,
"as the abstract painter considers the
realist painter to be the abstract painter and
himself the realist because he deals realisticly
with the paint and does not try to
transform it into something that it is not."
- Jimmy Leuders, PAFA-
Phil Carroll
Rapid watercolors
You reminded me of some advice a painter gave me
long ago. In his later years he was doing large
symphonic works in the studio from his field
document drawings and watercolor sketches. His
early work was mostly rapid watercolor landscapes
done in one or two sittings. He said he couldn't
be doing the later, large studio paintings,
without the experience of the many rapid
watercolor sketches he had done in his youth. He
said he had a very "don't care"
attitude about these, but I thought they were
brilliant (well drawn and in tone) obviously put
down in the blot method recommended by English
painter Alfred Rich.
Carol Allison
Encounter
"Creativity occurs in an act of encounter
and is to be understood with this encounter as
its center."
(Rollo May)
Contributed by Tania J
Bourne, Victoria, B.C.
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If you would like to see selected correspondence
relating to the previous letter
"Drifting" please click here http://www.painterskeys.com/clickbacks/drifting.htm
You may be interested to
know that artists from 70 countries have visited
these sites since March 30, 2000. That includes
Norah Borden who told me that painting and
traveling are her two greatest passions, and Elle
Fagan who wrote as a postscript "to heal, to
elate, to correct and adjust the self, to be
courageous, to trust...the Artist has options for
these that others do not." And Sheila Fray
who wrote "I lack the courage of you and the
'Bremen Brothers - I think courage is
easier if it comes in pairs."
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