
Going painting today.
My truth is found in the paint...therein lay integrity.
This morning I woke with the desire to paint big. In October I'll be bound to a multitude of 8x10's, so now is the time to immerse myself in larger work. As soon as Utrecht opens, I'm headed over to pick up some white and then off to the studio.
Snippets from First Thursday:
An elderly couple walked in the studio about 6:15. They explained they have been attending First Thursday for about 20 years, and have come to prefer exploring our building instead of the galleries because there was more life in the 619 building....more artistic excitement. It gave me warm fuzzies and showed me that I was in a good place.
In addition, and what thrilled me even more, a handful of folks walked in throughout the night and all mentioned to me that our studio space has always been the one they looked forward to seeing because there's always something exciting happening in the room. And that's with an evolving group of artists who work in the space. It seems The Sophia Room beckons a certain energy of artist to work within her.
I chose not to price my work because being all new from this past month, I'm not ready to part with them. In case someone did ask, I mentally had prices set. Two different people inquired about the very same painting. And it's the one painting I almost didn't hang yet made a very last minute decision to show! In addition, it was the one painting I felt wasn't fully complete. Damn...you never know.
What was unsettling to me was that many times throughout the evening I was asked to explain my work. The impetus, what it meant...etc. The unsettling part was that I really couldn't. Last month, even though I was showing abstracts as well, those ink pieces were speaking to my fear of potential ovarian cancer. It was clear and therefore I could articulate a response.
These paintings...all of them...were born of a desire to step into the unknown. I literally didn't know what I was doing, where I was going, what it would look like. I didn't have a vision of their completion. Nothing. It was simply a matter of immersing myself in the blackness found in my belly and allow the brush to move on canvas. Yes, I would begin with a rectangle for one reason: it felt simple...a basic shape...as we all are before we're tainted with the complexities of life, the hurts, the wounds, the abuses.
I couldn't have even written the above while I was working on them. It was just a sense I had...of needing to go back to basic. Stripping myself and my work. Allowing greater vulnerability. In painting each, my head really didn't know where my body was taking it. This was the most unintellectual series of paintings I've ever done. And in being such, they are the most honest and most powerful.
Because I couldn't come up with an intellectual response to their inquiry, I felt at a loss. Where are the words for something so visceral?
People's responses to the paintings thrilled me big time. Yes, quite a few gave a cursory glance and walked past...in the same way I've done to work in galleries. But there were so many who would stop, look, walk up and down the wall. Others would come close, then step back to the other side for a distance view to then return close. Really looking. And a handful throughout the night came up very close...noses almost pressed to canvas, studying them. It warmed my heart.
One man walked into the room and made a beeline for a certain piece. He approached me after and said that painting caught his eye as soon as he stepped into our space.
Another, after doing a microscopic study of the work walked away nodding, with a big smile on his face. I almost cried with joy.
First Thursday is from 6-9pm but apparently it's not a strict time. I had to tear myself away at 10:30 due to exhaustion, and the room as well as the building was still full of folks!
It was a very good evening.
And I've noticed that since then, I've been jacking off like crazy. It's not a sex that comes from running away or distracting myself as I do at times, but a full immersion into who I am.