“The object of art is not to make salable pictures. It is to save yourself.
The fools who write articles about me think that one morning I suddenly decided to write and began to produce masterpieces.
There is no special trick about writing or painting either. I wrote constantly for 15 years before I produced anything with any solidity to it….
The thing of course, is to make yourself alive. Most people remain all of their lives in a stupor.
The point of being an artist is that you may live….
You won’t arrive. It is an endless search.”
–Sherwood Anderson, April 1927 letter to his son
These fragments from a 1927 letter that Sherwood Anderson wrote to his son who was studying painting in Paris, really struck chords with me. Forst and foremost is that first line:
“The object of art is not to make salable pictures. It is to save yourself.”
My own experience has taught me that lesson. I don’t know that I would be alive if not for painting. And If I were, I can’t imagine any scenario where I would have found the same level of satisfaction with my life.
Followed by the next two lines:
“The fools who write articles about me think that one morning I suddenly decided to write and began to produce masterpieces.
There is no special trick about writing or painting either. I wrote constantly for 15 years before I produced anything with any solidity to it….”
This makes me think about when I first began painting after my fall. I had been in the midst of an energetic burst of activity when the fall took place and was restlessly anxious from the limitations set on me by my shattered wrist. I had to do something to burn off the mental fire and, as fortune would have it, picked up some old airbrush paints and began to mess around. No expectations, no idea that it would be anything more than a way to occupy my racing mind. Being as impatient and restless as I was, I think now about how improbable it was that I stayed with at the time. As with everything I did, I wanted immediate results. Instant gratification– the curse of our time. Maybe all time.
This brings back the memory of doing a painting in a junior high art class. I knew what I wanted from the paint but didn’t have the knowledge or ability to make it appear on the paper. I was like the fools that Anderson mention who thought that once the decision was made, masterpieces instantly appeared. I gave up trying to paint after that. Well, for a couple of decades. I thought that if it didn’t happen instantly it wasn’t going to happen at all.
But there was something in those early attempts after my fall that kept me engaged, enough of a glimpse of some reachable potential that prodded me to continue. Looking at some of those earliest attempts, I am amazed that I am writing this as an artist. I am grateful for whatever it was that urged me to continue to put in the work.
Then there is this section:
“The thing of course, is to make yourself alive. Most people remain all of their lives in a stupor.
The point of being an artist is that you may live….”
I realized early in my painting life that art indeed elevated a feeling of being alive within me. Dealing with people in the years before, I had seen so many people who lived without art or literature and without much music. It often did seem that they lived their lives in a stupor, as Anderson observed. Art gave me a sense of possibility, acting as an indicator that there was something beyond simply existing. It made me recognize the gift of this life we are given and that I had not yet began to unwrap it.
It made me want to be alive.
And, of course, it ends with:
“You won’t arrive. It is an endless search.”
I know now that there is no end once you have began such a journey. You realize that you are never as good as you could be or even as good as others say you are. There is always more to discover and reveal. It is an endless seeking of a horizon that is always in the far distance. Knowing that it is unreachable makes you appreciate the journey itself.
Each moment’s recognition becomes a destination. That is the reward of art.
Sherwood Anderson’s son was very fortunate to have such wisdom passed on to him. I am not sure I would have understood it fully when I was his age.
But I did come to understand it later, thankfully. And I sure as hell get it now.
Shall we have a little Sunday Morning Music? The first thing that came to mind for me was the first verse of the Neil Young classic, Heart of Gold:
I want to live
I want to give
I’ve been a miner
For a heart of gold
It’s these expressions
I never give
That keep me searching
For a heart of gold
And I’m getting old
Keep me searching
For a heart of gold
And I’m getting old
To my ear and eye, it fits today’s post perfectly. This performance is from a BBC broadcast in February of 1971.
I am heading out for that horizon soon so have to get off my boat now. You heard me– git.










