I see the spectacle of morning from the hilltop over against my house, from daybreak to sunrise, with emotions which an angel might share. The long slender bars of cloud float like fishes in the sea of crimson light. From the earth, as a shore, I look out into that silent sea. I seem to partake its rapid transformations; the active enchantment reaches my dust, and I dilate and conspire with the morning wind.
–Ralph Waldo Emerson, Nature (1836)
The Omnipresence from 2024 was one of those paintings that really rang the bell for me. The sky in it really drew me in as did the winding river. I figured that the reason it never found a home was simply because it was, at 36″ by 24″, a somewhat larger painting. The size and the corresponding higher price made it less viable for some folks.
But when it came back to me in May, I began to really examine it. It still clicked all my boxes. But seeing it in person made me realize how poorly it was portrayed by my photography of it. The painting I was looking at didn’t seem like the same painting depicted in my in my photo of it. There was a red pall that hovered over the whole thing, especially dulling the brightness of the landscape and the river in the lower half of the painting.
But while I was berating myself for letting such a poor and misleading image go out into the world, I also began to notice that the landscape that ran along each side of the river had a dullness that didn’t match the title which was I originally felt pointed out the brilliance and harmony of all things. Omnipresence means everywhere in everything. It was particularly evident in the empty flower beds which seemed to suck away all brightness from the bottom half of the painting.
I had gone back and forth when I was painting this piece as to whether the flower beds should be filled with color. At the time, I felt that the empty beds were enough on their own as a structural component and complement to the sky, that filling the beds would be too much. Too busy.
Looking at it after it came back into my hands, I realized my mistake in that choice. While I still thought it was a powerful piece as it was in its original form, I could see now that it was begging for more color, more brightness in its bottom half. The Red Tree in the original seemed to me to be trying to escape the drab landscape in which it was bound. It was like looking at a dance where the partners were dancing at different tempos and rhythms.
That was all I could see then. I knew I had to work on that bottom. And my photography of it. I set to work creating colorful flower beds and was immediately rewarded. It felt like an incredible transformation to me as each bed was filled and when I finished them all, I knew I had made the right decision this time.
I then worked on the photography. I don’t know how I had so missed the mark in capturing this piece originally. I would like to blame it on the monitor at the time since I am getting much better results with my newer current model and am finding a lot of my work from past years that have similar imaging shortfalls. But that can’t fully explain it. I simply overlooked something at the time.
I was probably drunk.
I am, of course, kidding.
I was stoned.
Again, kidding.
Whatever the hell was wrong with me at the time, it seemed a moot point after the changes to the painting and its new photo image. You can see it for yourself in the comparative image at the top. There is so much more brightness throughout the painting now and the two dancers, the upper and lower halves of the painting, seem in joyous harmony. And what I am seeing in person comes across much more, as it should, in the photo now.
Like most artists, I don’t like admitting mistakes made with my work. But as it also is with most artists, some pieces reveal themselves in need of something or other after they have left the studio. Many famous artists are notorious for making changes to pieces long after they have left the studio, some going so far as taking work off the walls of collectors to add a touch here and there.
I didn’t have to take it off anyone’s wall but this was definitely the case here. And while I am embarrassed by not seeing my poor choice made in the original, I am thrilled to see it as it is now.
It feels like it now fully lives up to its title.
All I could ask.
Here’s a song that may or may not have anything to do with subject. It’s a longtime favorite from John Lennon, Instant Karma. I think the connection here is that there is good karma in recognizing and rectifying our mistakes.
Now, get out of here before I say something rude and blow all that good karma…
PS- The Omnipresence is available now through the West End Gallery.











