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+Tuktoyaktuk
July 31, 2001
Dear Artist;
Here in the
Mackenzie Delta the wildlife enriches--Arctic terns, Loons, Scoters, Trumpeter
swans. The tree-line ends and the
tundra begins. At a deserted place called Reindeer Station where the reindeer
experiment flourished in the early part of last century, we remain only
briefly--repelled by a thundering herd of mosquitoes.
We pass volcano-like "pingos" and move out into the shallow
Beaufort Sea. Here and there
Inuit in small metal boats dash back and forth hunting Beluga whales. We shut
off our motor and hear them before we see them.
It's a powerful, uncannily human gasp for breath as they briefly
surface. The Inuit hunting method
is to artfully drive in a harpoon with an attached float to stop them from
diving--then shoot them a couple of times with a rifle.
Successful hunters head for the village of Tuktoyaktuk with their catch
tied alongside.
"Should we
be killing whales?" I ask 70 year old Laura Panatalok when we are safely
ashore.
"Every
family needs to survive the coming winter," she says. "It's how we
live. You have your way of living and we have ours."
I'm looking at the fresh blood and guts spilling as the women flense
the animals on the beach. They
have a use for virtually everything except the large intestine.
The prize is maktuk--a delicacy that looks like square wads of lard
mounted on white leather. A few
feet away my modest sketches--records of a gentle travel--are on the bow of
our boat. These will be exchanged
down south for someone's cash, I'm thinking.
I will be able to pay some invisible person to butcher my steers; to
kill and pluck my chickens.
A little girl
with a chunk of blubber in one hand and a lollipop in the other is looking at
my paintings. "What are
those good for?" she asks.
"Nothing,"
I say.
Best regards,
Robert
PS: "Art,
being quite useless, except to the soul, is the highest of all human
endeavors." (Bruce M. Rogers)
Esoterica: We
are all hunters and gatherers. When
you feel Beluga blood sticking to your gumboots you tend to have an idea of
your place in the order of things. And
in more ways than one you know you are not very far along.
The following
are selected responses to the above letter.
Thank you for writing rgenn@saraphina.com
+Pingos
I have no idea what "pingos" are, let alone know how to translate
them. Another couple of trips on that river, and you speak fluent Inuit... and you'll have to
change your translator! I'm kidding. I'm alone in my room, in front of my
laptop and thinking of your adventures slipping in beluga guts makes me measure the cosmic distance there is between
people living regular lives and the ones who just open their eyes on life
wherever and whenever that can be. The day after to morrow, I'm off to the
Alps. The letters in French may be delayed!
Sophie Marnez, Lyons, France. SophieMarnez@aol.com
(RG note) Pingos are a geological
feature unique to the arctic. They
are small mountains, often several hundred feet high, which appear here and
there on the tundra and are caused by the buildup of permafrost ice under the
surface over a long period of time. In
some places the Inuit put doors on the sides, hollow out icy caverns, and use
them for summer refrigeration and long-term freezing. It's estimated that the
Inuit have been using this kind of refrigeration for 7000 years.
+Our
job
We may be sophisticated and "highly evolved" in the way we earn our
daily bread--but we artists have an obligation to stay in touch with the
basic forms that make the family of man the proper subject of art.
Writers and artists are the eyes and ears of all civilizations and it
is through us that the greater world can be brought into focus for all.
We are only limited by our imaginations.
Dick Stollery,
NYC, USA
+Sad
vision
When I read Mary Ann Mountain's letter in the last responses I was jolted, and
a sad vision of the future struck me. While it is so exciting for us to have
the world opened up to us, learning about other cultures, travelling, so
readily from one and reading of others, my fear is that 100 years from now, we
will slowly meld together, losing our exciting separate identities and
cultures. While location and climate will force some things to be separate,
how sad it would be to lose the total uniqueness one finds in travel to
another culture. How sad, to get there and find a Micky D's or a Dunkin'
Donuts.
Elzire, Princeton, MA elzire@mac.com
+Hard
to sit down
I have relatives I correspond with via email that live in Finland. What a
different lifestyle my
cousin there has in a village of 600 people. Their mornings start very early
with tending their cows, chickens and what have you before sending kids to
school. She lives on a small inlet lake and their house is very modest. I envy
her at times that her life doesn't seem to be on fast forward like mine. This
has been a very rough year for me and inspiration is not coming easy. My
father passed away last Fall and I just spent the last week in Michigan with
my mother since my stepfather passed on the 21st. My mother just turned 80 and
is telling me she will be fine living in the middle of nowhere and not
driving. I'm hoping she will come to visit and maybe rethink this idea that
she needs to be around family. It seems our adult lives are becoming more
complicated as we get older. I am finding it hard to sit down and concentrate
on doing a painting. Maybe its time for me to schedule a sabbatical.
Pattie Schey, road54@voyager.net
+Wrong
attitude
I can understand your answer to the little girl when she asked "What are
they good for?" You are correct in one context, but very wrong in
another. Paintings (not all, but some) are very valuable when they give
pleasure to the owner looking at them. And the thought that I am giving
pleasure to others with my effort is worth more than the monetary pleasure
that lasted only a little while for me.
Russell W.
McCrackin, Corvallis, OR rusty@proaxis.com
+Loosen
up
I doubt that you have been harmed in any real way by someone else using
acrylics on canvas as you do. It
has all been done--so what's left? It can only be small variations, twists and
turns on what has been done before. When I studied Impressionism I found that
although the French can claim the name for the movement that that style of
painting was simultaneously happening all over the world. Did the fact that
the French coined the name for the movement give them the right to go out and
shoot the Italians, British or anyone else that was doing the 'same thing'
with the same materials in the same fashion? For the record, I am not a
'copyist.' My work is based entirely my own vision. However I would imagine
that somewhere there is someone who looks like me and another someone who
paints just like me, that's life and I accept it. As for the rest of you who
can't accept that I say that your egos and insecurity need adjustment. If want
to base your life on being 'unique' you are going to have to use something
other than paint and canvas. And
by the way, did you invent paint or canvas? Should we all start painting with
various shades of mud now that bright colors are being appreciated? Or
eliminate the effects of light, now that one artist out there is claiming to
be the 'painter of light'? Of course I think 'he' should be known as the
'master of pink sky's and the king of saccharine' but nobody asked me, however
I have to believe he laughs all the way to the bank. I say, get over it, get a
grip and live and let live! True imitators are always seen for what they are
in the end in any event, as the cream always rises to the top.
Alice Smith,
Kent Island, Maryland
+Tighten
up
Thank you for taking a hard stand on the club plagiarism issue.
The artists who are most in favor of laissez
faire tend to be the most imitative.
Jurors these days have a particularly difficult time figuring out who
the originators of a style or a process are.
This is particularly true for jurors from another area. Juries ought always to include someone from the locality in
order to point out the imitators. We
are talking hard core imitation here--not just influence, which is
inevitable, but the juror homework must be done.
Harold H Horwood,
UK
+Evolution
It's incredible and its very exciting, the girl carrying the maktuk is
seemingly out of touch with our system but in fact right in touch! As we
humans assume the top of the food chain we make food out of all below us and
manipulate our talents to produce worth. Its corollary that some of us will
change the top of the food chain so that it no longer is based on the food
unit. Some humans are always creating and finding new ways to express
feelings, needs and, of course, value. Artists paint and exchange paintings
for money which they then can exchange for food, or if they wish, directly for
food. That evolution is what Darwin was able to show us on the Galapagos
Islands, we even more than the finches have evolved to fill a niche so that we
not only survive but we prosper. Our ability to change that system of exchange
is what makes the human race unique. That little girl is proof. It's exciting
to be reminded that our place is constantly evolving--but there are still
vestiges of ourselves that permit us to be one with the natural sequence.
Artists make a living exchanging something that has no value for something
that might--and others exist doing the same things man has been doing since
Lucy first walked here nearly three million years ago.
Stewart Turcotte,
Kelowna, BC, Canada, hambletongalleries@home.com
+Hugh
Brody's north
Hugh Brody was being interviewed today and he spoke of his travels in the
north, particularly the High Arctic. He spent time with the Dene and Inuit and
also lived among the Beaver Indians of northern British Columbia. He was also
promoting his latest book "The Other Side of Eden". His other book
"Maps and Dreams" gives a fascinating portrayal of these people
historically, economically and socially. When he made the comparison between
hunters and gatherers and artists my ears perked up. He claimed that each
person in their own way sought out and retrieved the most palatable to be put
it to the best use.
Marilyn Crosby, m_crosby@canoemail.com
+What
I am is what I paint
I am an artist and a vegetarian. I feel most people are addicted to meat like
other things in our society. I was a big meat eater at one time. Not because I
really liked meat but to change was to buck the society that brought me up
with the notion that I could not live a healthy life without it. Not only do I
feel healthy I also feel I have integrity in my eating habits as they now fit
in with my beliefs of not killing or using others for my benefit. I feel so
much stronger now that I am living this belief and not just mouthing it. I
feel this comes out in my paintings also. How could it not? What I am is what
I paint.
Judy Aldridge,
Victoria, B.C. chittin@hotmail.com
P.S. It's not
invisible people killing and butchering those steers and chickens. They are
real people like you and me.
+How
do you send my letters?
I can't figure out how you get an email letter from a remote place in the
northern arctic to my inbox--and on-time. (Brian Wallace, Perth, Australia)
(RG note) The
letters are written in the usual fashion -these days often in the cramped
quarters of the "dog house" on the boat.
The laptop can be recharged from the boat's motor.
When the letters and clickbacks have been figured out Richard Thompson
sets up on the boat's roof and connects my laptop to our Globalstar satellite
telephone. Transmissions are
somehow made into the marvelous sky and then to Ken Hu and Bryce Jackson in
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, and half an hour later they go out to you
in Perth. Thus we send and receive. We
check our email once a day. The
farther we are from civilization the better the satellite connection seems to
work.
Muddy-footed Robert trying to think of something to write about. The
can on the copy of Bartlett's
Familiar Quotations contains "bear mace."
Emily wears "bear bells."

Richard Thompson in the midnight sun sending the Twice Weekly Letter.
The satellite telephone is the black thing on the left--cel-phone
size--with
a larger antenna.
þ
Please feel free to comment on anyone's remarks.
If you include your email address right after your name at the end of
the letter, we will include it. If
you wish to write incognito we will honor that too.
Readers really appreciate it when you tell us approximately where you
are located. We edit most letters
for clarity and brevity. rgenn@saraphina.com
The twice-weekly
letters are in French at http://www.painterskeys.com/fr
Selected
responses to the previous letter "Something's happening here" are at
http://www.painterskeys.com/clickbacks/happening.htm
If you think a
friend or fellow artist may find value in these letters please feel free to
copy. This does not mean that they will automatically be subscribed
to the twice-weekly letter. They
have to do that voluntarily at subscribe@saraphina.com
or at the official subscribing place: http://www.painterskeys.com/robert_genn_creative_inspirational_weekly_letter.htm
If you have someone you would like to personally sponsor as a
subscriber you might want to send their names and email addresses directly to
me at rgenn@saraphina.com
Any ideas or recommendations as to how we can improve these letters are also
appreciated.
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