The sky was dark and gloomy, the air was damp and raw, the streets were wet and sloppy. The smoke hung sluggishly above the chimney-tops as if it lacked the courage to rise, and the rain came slowly and doggedly down, as if it had not even the spirit to pour.
–Charles Dickens, The Pickwick Papers (1837)
It’s been really interesting, even enlightening, going through my earliest work. I can see points where the work turned and took the next step. Can see the development of my process and my use of color. Can see failed attempts at contrived ideas. Can see pieces that surprised me then a me then and now, some making me chuckle and some that simply make me nod in remembrance.
But the overriding thought I have lately when looking through them is how ridiculously prolific I was then. There are literally several hundred these small pieces dating from 1994 alone. When you consider that I was working a full-time job while also finishing up construction on our home — which is a misnomer since it is still a work-in-progress– it means that I was painting several pieces a day. I look at this production today and am amazed. I am actually tired just considering it now, let alone trying to repeat it. I must have had the energy of a desperate squirrel that had been fed a lot of amphetamines.
Of course, many of those pieces from that time were total crap and should have had a match set to them long ago. Why I hold on to them is a mystery. But they somehow linger.
This one that I like a lot from that era. It was from a short time when I attempted working from photo references, something I never do now. This is called Railroad Ave, depicting a short bit of a street that ran along the railroad tracks as they cut through downtown Elmira. It was once a rough and tumble, bustling area filled with bars when the railroads still ran and stopped at the station just up the street. Here’s an image, a sketch, of that building that I did around this an area around the same time. Though I explored what I could of the closed station many times, it never sparked my imagination, as least in a visual way.
The area of Railroad Ave depicted at the top were just south of the station. It was now in disrepair with boarded up windows and a grimy feel that echoed Dickens’ streets as described above. It felt dirty and a bit dangerous but held an air of stories waiting to be told from its past, which seemed to be caught in its current state of being like a bug in amber.
That the probably the attraction for me when I was in junior high school and haunted this area and the blocks around it. After school, I spent many hours walking the streets, playing pinball at the bus termina or at Newberry’s, a now defunct five-and-dime, where I also honed my shoplifting skills. I am not proud to admit that, but it was part of that time for me.
That area felt like human life to a thirteen-year-old kid who lived in the country. There was a hustle and bustle to it that sometimes bordered on danger, which made it irresistible. I moved through it surreptitiously like rat, seldom drawing attention though occasionally I would draw the attention of someone on the street. I remember vividly being approached by an older guy in front of the bus station.
“Hey, Slim! I only need fifteen cents to get a pint. Can you help me out?”
I did. It was worth it just for the memory of his words in that place in that time.
The thing that strikes me about Railroad Ave is how I was obviously seeking to capture the type of feeling evoked by an Edward Hopper painting, hoping it would have that same moody and somewhat alienated atmosphere so evident in his work. It has that mood, for me at least. I don’t know if it’s the painting or the memories. It doesn’t matter.
I also like the signature, done in pencil. I hadn’t yet adapted the GC in my name. That would come several months later when I discovered in an early internet search at the library, which was only a block or so from the site of this painting, that there were a couple of other artists already going by Gary Myers. Glad I found that info then.
Okay, I have to run. Spent far too much time on this already.
Here’s a song that is about the lure of the railroad for some desperate folks seeking to escape their situation and themselves. Probably many who found their way down Railroad Ave here and in streets just like it around the country. This is BW Railroad Blues from the late singer/songwriter Townes Van Zandt.











