We do not ask for what useful purpose the birds do sing, for song is their pleasure since they were created for singing. Similarly, we ought not to ask why the human mind troubles to fathom the secrets of the heavens. The diversity of the phenomena of nature is so great and the treasures hidden in the heavens so rich precisely in order that the human mind shall never be lacking in fresh nourishment.
–Johannes Kepler, as quoted in Cosmos (1980) by Carl Sagan
The painting shown from 1998 is titled The Way of the World. It hung for a number of years over my desk in my old studio and for the last 18 years had been on a wall in my back bedroom in my new studio. I guess after 18 years, it isn’t really new anymore. but that is beside the point.
The Way of the World was painted during my transition to being an artist on a full-time basis. I had recently completed a large commission for Corning Inc. and my work was showing and selling well in three galleries. This piece is very representative of my work at the time, done as it was in transparent inks on untreated paper. I had not yet begun to work on surfaces with underlying textures created by layers of gesso.
It also represented an upward trend in the size of my work, even though it is not large in relation to what I consider my bigger pieces. It is 12″ by 28″ in a 16″ by 32″ frame. A substantial piece but not really large.
The piece only showed for a short time before coming back to reside in my studio. It was with me for so long that, as I recently realized, I began to not see it. Looking at it just a few eeks ago, I tried to understand how this came to be.
It didn’t take long to figure out.
At the time, as I was saying, I was showing more and more work in several venues. Up to that point, I was dependent on framing my work in store bought frames. I had found a couple of outlets that sold frames that were just okay but limited in sizes. They added nothing aesthetically to the work. They were neutral at best. Plus, it was quite an outlay of cash for me given the number of pieces that were going out to galleries then. I needed to figure out a way to obtain a frame that was affordable, unique, and complemented the work in the way a good setting highlights a fine gem.
I enlisted a good friend of mine who was also a woodworker. It took a couple of iterations before a suitable and effective frame emerged, the one that came to be recognized as my frame. A simple profile in poplar, stained an orange/yellow color that highlighted my work beautifully. Well. at least in my eyes it did.
However, some of the early attempts at finding a frame came up short. And The Way of the World was always in one of those early frames. It was– is–a horrible pine frame stained in blue that has the appearance of dirty pair of blue jeans. It is ghastly on every level.
I took it off the wall recently and freed it from that frame and for the first time in probably 28 years, saw it for what it is without the specter of that awful frame impinging on it. It was no doubt what I saw in it before I imprisoned it back in 1998. It felt like I had come across a hidden treasure, one that had been right in front of me the whole time but was inexplicably invisible.
I put it in one of my regular frames and it feels new in so many ways that please me greatly. I like the way the tree is styled, for example. It is representative of the manner in which I painted trees at the time, two years before the Red Tree began to appear and take hold of me. I like its color and solidity that makes it stands out against the background.
There are flaws in it as well that thrill me. In the hillside on which the tree stands, the large block of blue in the bottom right, there are ink marks that occurred while I was painting. They result from the ink drying too quickly as I am working on the whole block of color. You don’t see them in my work as often now since I can remove them on a surface treated with gesso. The untreated paper I was working with then had no such safety net.
As I said, seeing these sorts of flaws thrills me. I like seeing the hand of the artist, be it the exposed edge of drying paint or in bristles or hairs that become trapped in the paint. It gives me a sense of looking at the work through the eyes of the artist.
It is a very human thing, this willingness to show our all too human flaws.
The flaw of the human hand. Something you can’t produce with AI.
This painting now feels like a completely painting to me now. Without that crappy blue frame, it can speak its truth. And I see and hear it now. And I like it.
I don’t know that anyone will else see it in that way. And to be honest, I don’t give damn. I am going to show it again at my show at the Principle Gallery in June, to let it be visible after too long a period of being unseen and unheard.
Here’s song that I am required to play today. It immediately came to mind when I decided to write about this painting but was pretty sure I had played it not too long ago. Looking it up, I found that I had last shared it on this very same day one year ago in a post that was about, of all things, synchronicity. It featured this passage from Tom Robbins:
What we, thanks to Jung, call “synchronicity” (coincidence on steroids), Buddhists have long known as “the interpenetration of realities.” Whether it’s a natural law of sorts or simply evidence of mathematical inevitability (an infinite number of monkeys locked up with an infinite number of typewriters eventually producing Hamlet, not to mention Tarzan of the Apes), it seems to be as real as it is eerie.
The sheer and eerie synchronicity of it made me laugh this morning. Sharing the song was obviously an inevitability that I could not resist. To not share it would have went against the will of the universe and the way of the world.
And who am I to go against that?
This is That’s the Way the World Goes Round from the late John Prine.


















