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Archive for the ‘Quote’ Category

Dare

Through the Rough

 

 

“It is not because things are difficult that we do not dare; it is because we do not dare that they are difficult.”

           – Seneca

 

I’m at a point in my year when I have a little time to start working on new things, new directions for the work.  It’s always an interesting time at which I’m always a little anxious, not wanting to squander this time by not pushing myself enough.  To not dare myself to push through whatever barriers I have erected that I fear may be keeping my work static at the moment.

I view whatever small amount of talent or ability I have as being a ship and I am a sailor.  I may know how to sail the ship and may have ventured fair distances.  But there comes a point when I must dare to go further, past what I know.  See places unseen by few others.

And that’s how it feels at the moment.  The ship is at dock, waiting.  The sea is there and the horizon clear.  Now it’s up to me.

How far do I dare venture?

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Presence

Presence

 

 

The real voyage of discovery consists not in seeing new landscapes but in having new eyes.

— Marcel Proust

 

There’s truth in this.  Everything seems changed and fresh when looked at from a different perspective.  New eyes.

The difficulty comes in shedding the obscuring blindness caused by our own judgements, prejudices and self-righteousness.  

How can one obtain these new eyes?

How difficult is it to say that my point of view may not be always right, that there are other facets beyond mine in the prism that makes up this world?

Is that beyond me, beyond us?

 

 

 


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The Coming Together

 

Every man is a damn fool for at least five minutes every day; wisdom consists in not exceeding the limit.

                    – Elbert Hubbard

 

I came across this quote and wanted to use it not just because I find it humorous but because I wanted to just point out the life of Elbert Hubbard who started and headed the Roycrofters in East Aurora, NY in the early part of the 20th century.  I came across the Roycrofters many years ago when I acquired several of Hubbard’s books.  They were printed and bound by the Roycrofters and were beautifully done with wonderful papers and great bindings.  I discovered that the Roycrofters was a community that Hubbard had assembled that created many artisan products in the Arts and Crafts style- books,furniture, pottery, hammered copper and  more.  All beautiful stuff.

Hubbard was an interesting guy whose life ended in a fittingly interesting way as he was aboard the Lusitania, the ocean liner controversially sunk by German u-boats in the early days of World War I.

I don’t have a lot to say about Hubbard except that I’ve always admired his aesthetic works and the humor and wisdom he imparted in his books.  If you get a chance, look him up…

 

 

 

 


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The Silent Eye

The Silent Eye Soon silence will have passed into legend.  Man has turned his back on silence.  Day after day he invents machines and devices that increase noise and distract humanity from the essence of life, contemplation, meditation.

              – Jean Arp

 

Perhaps Arp was right.  This new piece, The Silent Eye, reminds me of this quote and how we have filled the world with noise and have lost the ability to bear the silence, to just be in the moment without the need to fill it with the din of our existence.  Will we even know what we have lost when there is no more silence?

 

 

 

 


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Off the Mainline

If you can see your path laid out in front of you step by step, you know it’s not your path.  Your own path you make with every step you take.  That’s why it’s your path.

           –Joseph Campbell

 

I’m very busy this morning as I’m getting ready for the show that opens June 12 at the Principle Gallery in Alexandria, VA, so I thought I’d make this a simple post.  I like the quote from Joseph Campbell and thought it went well with the accompanying painting,  a new piece titled Off the Mainline.  It’s a piece on paper and has a wonderful glow as I look at it here in the studio.  There’s real vibrancy in the color and texture which, if you’ve read this blog in the past, is something that I strive for in my work.  It has a real spark, a sense of its own life.  I think it’s very strong.

Like the quote above, the painting’s title  insinuates that not every path necessarily goes down the main road, that there is true meaning found in following your own path and daring to leave the main route.  A simple concept but one that’s often hard to realize…

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The Coming Together


 

Joy lies in the fight, in the attempt, in the suffering involved, not in the victory itself.

          — Mahatma Gandhi  

How do you define joy?  Is there such a thing as joy that is the same for every person or is finding joy strictly a personal preference?  Are there people who live without any joy at all in their lives or are there moments in everyone’s lives where they experience something close to joy?  Maybe it’s not a giddy kind of joy.  Maybe joy for some is a feeling of contentment, an absence of fear, an absence of pain.  

Maybe that’s it.  Maybe joy is finding that which takes away our fears and pains.

I don’t know.  I know that it doesn’t have to be sought.  It’s just there or it’s not.  For me, it might be as simple as laying in the grass and having my dog come over and lay against my chest.  It might be in sipping a cup of tea or watching the deer graze laconically in the yard.  It might be  in laughing out loud at something I’ve seen a hundred times yet still find funny or in making my wife laugh.  It can seem so simple yet I see people who seem joyless and I wonder where their joy might be.

Certainly, they must have something which brings them something akin to joy.  At least contentment.  But maybe it’s not for me to see or maybe they live a joyless existence.  Who knows?  Just something I wonder about on a sunny morning when the sun filtering through the trees, scattering patches of light on the thick grass beneath them, brings me joy.

By the way, the painting above is a new one, The Coming Together, that is part of the Principle Gallery show in June.  It features the entwined trees I sometimes use as well as the field rows.  I really like the feel of this piece and love the texture and color in the surface.  

Makes me happy.

Gives me joy…

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Brilliant Determination

If your determination is fixed, I do not counsel you to despair. Few things are impossible to diligence and skill. Great works are performed not by strength, but perseverance.
      

– Samuel Johnson


 

 

I’ve been thinking about determination a lot lately.  There are times when nothing seems to come easily and it seems like there are any number of things that would be more enjoyable than struggling forward with your chosen endeavor.  But in the end you force yourself ahead.  There’s a greater satisfaction in struggling with that which you have chosen and feel is meaningful than in doing something that means little to your inner self even though it is easier and, in many cases, more entertaining.

This is something I keep in mind when I’m in the studio.  There are many days when nothing comes easily, every stroke is like lifting a heavy weight and inspiration seems to have left the building long ago.  In these moments self doubts begin to stir and I seriously wonder if I have reached an end to my creative life.  It’s like a dull pain that seems like will be with me forever and there are points I want to stop.

But I remember that this is the path that I chose to follow.  With that recognition I am reminded of other times when I have been at this point before and I know, I just know, that if I steel my mind and force myself to move ahead, one small step in front of another, that I will come to a point  where all this forced energy builds and builds and suddenly breaks free.  In this moment of release, everything suddenly seems effortless and inspiration is everywhere.  It’s like going from the dark depths of a stifling mine to the top of a cool mountain.

And the memory of the toil that it has taken to reach this point fades into the distance.

Until the next time.  And that’s where determination is needed once more.

That’s what I see in this new piece above which is destined for my upcoming show.  I was given the title, Brilliant Determination,  by my friend Mary Squire who submitted it in the Name This Painting! contest.  I immediately saw the connection with this title and this painting and felt this piece deserved such a title.  This painting is definitely about the determination I’ve written about.  It has a feeling of that moment of release, that moment when full momentum is realized.  It really is brilliant determination.  Thanks for the title, Mary…

 

 

 

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Fear Overload

The Mind Ponders

 

What we fear comes to pass more speedily than what we hope.
—- Publilius Syrus – Moral Sayings (1st C B.C.)

 

I don’t think I have to tell anyone that we’re living in a world that right now is full of fear.  Everywhere you turn there is news of some sort bordering on the apocalyptic.  We have the swine flu scare which I still call the swine flu– no offense meant to my porcine friends.  There is financial ruin and a new Great Depression with every newscast.  There is the ongoing conflicts between religious factions in the Middle East and elsewhere leading straight to Armageddon.  Armed druglords with thousands of violent foot soldiers from Mexico.  Asteroids plummeting towards our planet.  Global warming raising ocean levels until our coastal cities are engulfed in water.  Hybrid werewolf/vampires roaming in packs through the streets of our cities, seeking brains for their zombie overlords.  Okay, maybe that one is a little beyond the pale– I think I saw it on Glenn Beck.

And yesterday we happened to sit down with a cup of tea to watch Oprah and we were faced with flesh-eating viruses.  MRSA and strep infections that eat away at the tissue of the body with such speed that in some that the doctors can barely stay ahead of the spread of the bacteria as they hack away body parts.  There was a lady on the show who was a chef and cut her finger while slicing celery.  No big deal, right?  Within  60 hours she had lost her right arm, shoulder and breast all the way to her sternum before they were able to stop the spread.  She now lives with her ribs and lungs covered by a thin layer of skin.  It was an amazing thing to see.  

It was just another ingredient in our recipe of fear.  There are points when I take the time and list all these things that I no longer wonder at the wingnuts who claim we are at the end of days.  But I can’t quite buy in all the way.  I like looking at history and throughout history people of every age believed they were at the  end of time, that civilization had decayed to a point where it could no longer stagger forward.  And yet, here we are.  

Maybe it’s some form of narcissism that makes us believe that ours is the generation that ends our continuum on this planet.  Maybe it’s just plain old fear and the ignorance that usually accompanies it, the ignorance that blinds us to the fact that we are adaptable beings and through the adversities of our times we will somehow stagger onward.  The future may not be as we hope for or envision but remember, we live in a world that is much different than earlier generations imagined for us when they were having these same thoughts.  But the fact remains, we are, for better or worse, still here.

The point of this is that we must not focus on our fears but must look at them as mere obstacles to overcome.  Fear makes us less rational and more reactionary and if we continue to believe the fear that this is some sort of end time, then we will create the conditions to make it so.  To paraphrase Publilius Syrus: If we let fears rule our lives, our greatest fears will come to bear…

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Wondering

“For my part I know nothing with any certainty, but the sight of the stars makes me dream.”    -Vincent Van Gogh

Starry Night Over the Rhone  Van Gogh

I came across this remark from Vincent Van Gogh and it immediately struck a chord.  I’ve written before of having little certainty about anything, particularly the big questions of life.  It’s always reassuring to see that others share the same viewpoint although I kind of wish I was sharing this point of view with someone whose life turned out slightly better than did Van Gogh’s.

Makes me wonder what he was dreaming about?  Was he dreaming of of color and shape or was he imagining himself flying through the night sky, his starry night?  Was he dreaming of a place without the need for belief or certainty?  

I don’t know.  Of that I’m certain but I do wonder…

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Solitary Crossing

“Patience and perseverance have a magical effect before which difficulties disappear and obstacles vanish.”

                                                          -John Quincy Adams

 

I don’t what made this pop into my head but I was thinking about a conversation from a few years back that I had with a friend who is also a painter.  He has been an artist for almost his entire adult life, pretty successful for much of that time.  We both agree that we are  extremely fortunate to have found the careers that we have, one that feels like a destination rather than a passageway to some other calling.

For me, I knew this was the career for me when I realized I no longer looked at the job listings in the classified section of the paper.  For most of my life, I felt there was something else out there that would satisfy me but I didn’t know what it was or how to find it.  Maybe it was as simple as finding the right job.  Or so I thought.  When you don’t know where you’re going, any direction might be the right direction.

But during this particular conversation this friend asked, “What would you do if you suddenly couldn’t paint?  What if you were suddenly blind?”

For him, it was unthinkable.  His life of creation was totally visual, based on expressing every emotion in paint.  

I thought about it for a second and said simply, “I’d do something else.  I’d find a way.”

In that split-second I realized that while I loved painting and relished the idea that I could communicate completely in paint, painting was a mere device for self-expression.  But it was not the only way to go.  I knew then as I know now that the deprivation of something that has come to mean so much to me would, in itself, create a new need for expression that would somehow be satisfied. I have always marveled at the people who, when paralyzed or have lost use of their arms,  paint with their toes or their mouth .  Their drive to communicate overcame their obstacles.  Mine would as well.

 If blinded, I could or do something with words, using them to create color and texture.  Perhaps not at the same level as my painting but it might grow into something different given the circumstance.  The need to communicate whatever I needed to communicate would create a pathway.

It was an epiphany in that moment.  Just knowing that I had found painting gave me the belief that I could and would find a new form of expression if needed.  And i found that greatly comforting.

Yes, I’d find a way…

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