You can’t judge a book by its cover.
— George Eliot, The Mill on the Floss (1860)
I’m about a month out from the opening of my 27th annual solo show at the Principle Gallery, which opens on Friday, June 12th. I deliver the show to the gallery in two weeks so I am deep in prepping and framing the paintings for this show. It has been a sometimes grueling process this year as the effects of the fatigue from my treatment and back pain brought on by standing on a concrete floor to build and stain my frames have slowed my pace considerably. Everything is done in short spurts of activity followed by a period of resting. Hard to get a great rhythm going.
The only benefit of this that I can see is that trying to get through this has kept me from worrying about the details of the opening at the Principle Gallery. I used to have pretty high anxiety about the openings, about how I would come off to others in appearance and manner. That train has pretty much left the station in recent times. There are much bigger things to occupy my mind these days than whether I am wearing the “right” clothes or if I might come off as a little crazy to people there.
I have learned that it doesn’t really matter. Some will judge you and many will not, no matter how much effort you put into blending in. So, I don’t give much thought or effort to appearance these days. Right now, I am wearing a dirty, paint splattered flannel shirt along with what I call old man work pants, the kind of khaki chinos that I remember my great-uncle Otto wearing. The ones I wear are well worn with a large horizontal rip across the right knee that includes a long vertical tear that goes halfway down the front of my calf. I might just wear these to the opening.
Thinking about this brought back a story I told here back in 2009, not long after I began writing this blog. I was prepping for what was then my tenth show at the Principle Gallery. I have told this story a couple of times at Gallery Talks but can’t find any mention of it here after that 2009 post.
In it I recounted an episode from an opening I attended there in 1998. In my early days at the Principle Gallery, I was included in a group of five artists called the Finger Lakes School. It included Tom Buechner, Marty Poole, Tom Gardner, Rudy Gyr, and me. With Marty Poole’s recent death, only Tom and I remain from that group that was named for the lovely region in which we live.
I was kind of the oddball in the group as the others were all more traditional representational painters with much longer careers than mine. I was just glad to be included on equal footing with this group of esteemed artists.
We did two shows as the Finger Lakes School at the gallery before I broke off and began my solo shows there in 2000. There is one moment from our first show that stands out for me. There was a great turnout for the show and the gallery was crowded as several of us from the group mingled, answering questions and such.
I had a small break in conversation and stepped back to take it all in. I then heard a female voice from behind me ask her companion where we were from, where the Finger Lakes were. Her friend answered that the Finger Lakes region was in western New York. He explained that it was a mainly rural area with a lot of wineries and farms.
“Well, you know, they do look like farmers,” she replied.
I think I might have done a spit take on hearing that. Maybe not but I chuckled pretty hard at that moment. Over the years I often think back to that lady’s comment and still sometimes laugh. Maybe we shouldn’t have all worn our overalls and John Deere caps that night. Or maybe it was the piece of straw I kept in my mouth.
It just reminds me how we often judge others by that initial glimpse and how we often end up being wrong. If people judge me to be a farmer, I’m okay with that. Though I am more comfortable in calling myself an artist than I once did, I still generally think of myself as workingman. To be honest, I am always a little suspect when someone has the deliberate look of being an artist, like they are trying too hard to play the role.
So, if you can make it to the opening, don’t look for someone who looks like an artist. I’ll be the uncomfortable guy there who looks like a farmer.
That brings me to this week’s Sunday Morning Music. It is You Can’t Judge a Book, that was originally written by blues great Willie Dixon and made popular by Bo Diddley. My favorite version is from Long John Baldry, one of the pioneers of the British blues/rock movement in the early 60’s and a guy who had real panache. Both Rod Stewart and Elton John, both mentioned in this song, started their careers with Baldry’s band. My brother introduced to me to his music in the early 70’s and I have enjoyed it ever since.
Plain good stuff. Now git– I need to get out in the fields. Got to get those crops in.











