To romanticize the world is to make us aware of the magic, mystery and wonder of the world; it is to educate the senses to see the ordinary as extraordinary, the familiar as strange, the mundane as sacred, the finite as infinite.
–Novalis. as quoted in Bildung in Early German Romanticism by Frederick C. Beiser
There are two ways of looking at my paintings for me. During the process, I often view it as an assemblage of parts, a series of decisions to be made and obstacles to overcome. It feels very much like it is part of me at that point, like I hold all the cards and determine where it will go and what it will inevitably be. I feel a bit like a mechanic or a surgeon in that time.
But there is a point just after it reaches completion where the piece stumbles to its feet and moves away from on its own volition. It has its own power, its own forward-moving force and I am left powerless to influence it at that point. I no longer see it as parts or pieces to be adjusted.
It is whole and seems to only be mine in only a familiar way. It might be like a parent looking at their child and seeing the resemblance but not understanding how and why the child does what it does as it grows away from them.
I don’t mean that in a negative way though I guess it could be taken that way. I was thinking of a sort of gratification in seeing their child do and say things they never imagined being possible for themselves. And doing it with a grace and beauty that they don’t recognize in themself.
It is a moment that is both prideful and somewhat sad when they realize that they have created something that they will never be themself, something that exceeds their whole.
I thought of this the other morning while doing my daily workout with a number of newly framed paintings within my sight. Only days before some of them had still been just parts and pieces, still problematic and with little life. They were still toddlers, dependent on me.
Yet now I was looking at them, and they felt whole and away from me. I recognized them as mine in that moment, could see the familial resemblance. But I could also see that they had their own things to say, their own feelings to express. Things out of my control. A transformation had taken place hey were grown now, no longer babes.
It was a moment that caught me off guard. I have spoken of the work taking on its own life many times before but, in that instant, this feeling seemed much more palpable and concrete.
It created a sense of wonder in me.
And when that happens, that is a good day…
A little short on time today. I have some things that need to be done health-wise early this morning so I am sharing the post above from back in 2016. It’s been edited a bit with a recent favorite painting and the passage from Novalis added. The song below, A Sense of Wonder from Van Morrison was part of the original post. I think it all comes together pretty well. One man’s opinion…









