Baby I got your number
Oh and I know that you got mine
You know that I called you
I called too many times
You can call me baby
You can call me anytime, you got to call me
Give me one reason to stay here
And I’ll turn right back around
— Tracy Chapman, Give Me One Reason (1995)
I’ve recently been painting a series of small paintings like the one shown at the top, Give Me One Reason. All have the same elements with a few variations, and all are painted in shades of gray and back with the only color coming in the form of a red sun and a sometimes-red roofed house. All contain a small figure, most standing on the peak of the roof of the house, all addressing the red sun in some manner of conversation. There is generally a single bare limbed tree in the near foreground and sometimes one, as here, in the distance. Some have skies with clouds and some, like this one, do not.
The variations I mentioned come in the placement of the figure, the clouds, the tree, the house, and the red sun, as well as how they all sit in the landscape. There is also subtle but important variation in the posture and gesturing of the figure.
I like working with these limitations in mind. It becomes a mental challenge to arrange a small number of the same elements in a small space without the benefit of color and still maintain the individual nature of each painting. It is like assembling a puzzle but doing it different way each time.
It reminds me a bit of an early series that I did around 1995 and 1996. I called the series the Haiku series. The paintings were very simple– a block of color for the sky and one for the field that made up the foreground both separated by the thin white line of the underlying surface. The variations came in the color and ratio of the block of color to one another. There was also an important variation on each side of the white line where the multiple glazing layers of color each left a sharp edge. These edges stack up in an overlapping irregular way, creating an impression of low hills in the distance.
So, like the three lines of a haiku, there were three elements to create an atmosphere in which the reader, or the viewer in my case, could interpret the meaning in how those limited elements came together and played off one another.
These new paintings feel similar in that. The one major difference is the inclusion of the small figure. As I have noted a number of times before, once a figure enters the painting, it becomes the focus of that painting. We humans are always curious when another human becomes part of the picture, wondering what that human might be doing and why. There is ample evidence of that in these pieces.
I find myself asking myself why these figures are in these paintings now and why they often appear on the peaks of the roofs. Why are they speaking to that red sun? And why is that sun red in the first place?
I don’t really know. Maybe in the future when this series has run its full course in my mind, I will see an answer in the assembled imagery of the work. Maybe. Maybe not. Probably not. I suppose some things are meant to be a mystery.
The easy interpretation, and one that has certainly come to my mind, is that it relates to my health issues. Perhaps the figure is attempting to ask some higher power represented in the form of the red sun for a reason why things like this happen. Perhaps that figure is berating or begging that red sun for answers or mercy?
Could that be me up there? I don’t think so. I have not been angry or even questioning as to why I am going through this. As I have said, I know and accept that it’s just the price of admission we pay to experience the wonder that is this world. Everybody has to pay that price in some way.
This is mine.
And I think I might be getting a bargain. Seriously.
And that somehow doesn’t seem fair. So, if that is me up there on the roof, maybe I am asking why some people pay so much more for this privilege and others slide by on the cheap.
All I am asking is for one good reason. Then I’ll climb off that roof.
Let’s get to this week’s Sunday Morning Music. I am sure some of you could foresee this week’s pick. The painting was titled with this song in mind, after all. The song is Give Me One Reason from Tracy Chapman. I was surprised when I discovered I have never shared this song after all these years. Like so many of her songs, it has long been a favorite.
Enjoy it then show yourself out. Sorry to be abrupt but the roof is waiting for me. That red sun has some explaining to do…


















