Can ye fathom the ocean, dark and deep, where the mighty waves and the grandeur sweep?
–Fanny Crosby, A Wreath of Columbia’s Flowers (1858)
When I finished this painting about 31 years back, I thought it was by far the best thing I had painted. Actually, I felt it might be the best thing I would ever paint, that it was as good as it might ever get for me. I was still new to this all. Pretty green.
I had just started showing at the West End Gallery just a few months before and I decided to show it there. As I said I was naive and, feeling that it was the best thing I had done or would ever do, put an absurdly high price on it. I can’t remember the specifics, but I believe I priced it at more than twice the price of other pieces of mine that were around the same price.
Of course, it didn’t find a home. I quickly brought it home and it has remained here since. I did learn a few things from that experience, one being that I can’t price my work based on my subjective judgement of any one piece. What I see as the merits of my work mean little to someone else.
But the more important lesson was that you can never say when your best work has appeared. Or, for that matter, if it will remain your best work forever. Looking back, it would be a sad commentary on my growth as an artist (and a human) if this early were to be my best work.
I would feel like a one hit wonder, a pop star who had some early success then never progressed beyond that.
That is not to denigrate this painting in any way. It is still a hit in my eyes. I still am moved as much by it now as I was then. It still speaks directly to some deep part within me. And at the time, it probably was the best thing I had painted.
But I moved on in many ways. But I took much of what I saw in this piece with me. I wrote a short paragraph about ten years ago about what I saw in this painting:
It reminds me of the feeling of looking out at the ocean. Maybe for us who live and were raised inland, far away from the seas, seeking the far horizon in our landscapes is the equivalent. Watching the roll of the land and how it comes up to meet the sky raises many of those same feelings, creating a sense of awe in us of the great power and vastness of the world and our own smallness in relation to it.
I think much of my work since this was painted has carried that same search for the distant horizon and that sense of being carried over the rolls of the landscape as on a boat. It creates a perspective that allows us to see the grandeur of the sky and the sea and our both own smallness in relation to it and our connection to it.
I have lived all my life in a region with hills and valleys, far from the oceans, yet I always find myself seeking that horizon still, knowing that this same sky hangs over the hills, plains, and oceans. It connects us and represents something greater.
I see that in this piece still and while my work may have progressed and have been and will be other paintings that I see as being the best things I have ever done at any given time, this is the equal of any of those in my eyes.
I am still debating whether I will show this piece again. While it has a place in my heart, it has already served its purpose for me. I know that my work is created to be shared, to find life and purpose beyond myself.
It may show up in June at my Principle Gallery show. Or not. Still not sure.
Here’s a song that goes with this post and painting in several. This is I Am the Sea followed by Can You See the Real Me and the instrumental overture, Quadrophenia, from The Who off their classic album, Quadrophenia, from 1973. All three compositions lineup beautifully with what I see in this painting and what I felt at the time it was done, when I was just finding a way to show the real me.










