Showing posts with label meditation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label meditation. Show all posts

Wednesday, 18 November 2020

Vija Celmins, Frances Richardson and Peter Dreher: Nature Morte

Vija Celmins: Desert

I have briefly mentioned the work of Vija Celmins before, and her work came to mind again when I was looking at some of Frances Richardson’s recent drawings on display at the Karsten Schubert online Gallery. Celmins’ drawings of ocean waves, desert floors, and night skies touch upon what is often called ‘the sublime’, she is known for images of things that are endless vistas or views of the world too difficult to be fixed in the mind’s eye. However back in the 1960s when she was first beginning as an artist she made images of lamps, heaters, and other overlooked fixtures of everyday life. It is as if she became more and more amazed by what it is to look at things, and then she discovered photographs. In many ways a photograph of a sea that ends up in someone’s living room, is like a doorway into a magical other world. A photograph may sit alongside other domestic things, perhaps on a mantelpiece alongside a brass candlestick, but unlike the candlestick, each time you look at the photograph it opens out into other vistas, ones that are far away from where the viewer is standing. Celmins’ images of seas and empty deserts were made out of graphite and charcoal and were meticulously copied from photographs, their materiality replacing the chemistry of photography with carbon. The only quote I know from her is, “I believe if there is any meaning in art, it resides in the physical presence of a work.” Therefore I would argue that she is not that interested in her drawings as windows that look out onto the world, but that she is presenting her images as objects for contemplation as things in themselves. This is at odds with my previous assertion that photographs are also windows, but perhaps the reality of the situation is something to do with the imagined reality of the image, something that sits between what is imaged and what receives the image, a situation that in communication terms creates a membrane that stretches between the perceiver and the perceived. This is the space in which as I have argued before, we find life in death. 

Vija Celmins: Sea

Frances Richardson has been responding to the work of Peter Dreher. Dreher made a series of paintings called 'Tag um Tag guter Tag' that engaged him for several years, and which involved him painting the same glass over 5,000 times. This series of paintings, in English ‘Day after Day, Good Day’, was a meditation on time, painting the glass 2,500 times at night and just over 2,500 times during the day. He always painted the glass in the same position on a 25 x 20cm neutral grey ground, and from the same viewer distance and life size. You could argue that these paintings measured out the length of his days, in effect becoming his own personal clock. 



Peter Dreher: 'Tag um Tag guter Tag'

So what you may ask would another artist find interesting in these images of a glass? I think artists are always fascinated by other artists, and are driven to try to understand their obsession. But artists are particularly obsessed with artists that take on the still-life as a subject. It is as if the human/material conversation brings out something fundamental, it focuses on a material metamorphosis, in such a way that it is almost like a religious revelation. Perhaps I need to provide a little history. 

 Quince, Cabbage, Melon and Cucumber (c. 1602), Juan Sánchez Cotán. 

Cotán’s painting of a stark, very deliberately arranged group of vegetables elevates this humble subject matter into a celestial dance. The vegetables are framed in a night sky darkness, their austere nature almost monk like; we are meant to worship in front of this image as at a vegetal altar. There is a spherical geometry that underlies this image, one that suggests celestial bodies moving across a night sky, a classical order that perhaps takes us way back to a time when vegetal Gods were worshipped and the night was a sky God's domain; a reminder that the first animal and human sacrifices were made to ensure the continuation of the yearly growth cycle. 
 
Chardin ‘The Ray’ 1728 

 In Chardin’s ‘The Ray’ the tense figure of a startled kitten stands alongside a dead ray, a fish that is painted in such a way that it’s vacant and ghostly gaze, becomes a metaphorical message as powerful as Rembrandt’s 'Carcass of Beef', this is indeed 'nature morte'. This is another still life that is deliberately constructed, the architectural arrangement of both alive and dead animals, being framed in a structural triangle of inanimate and animate objects. The frozen action is locked into a space initiated by a knife that almost pierces the picture plane with its handle, but which also establishes the compositional structure, a structure held down by a black jug that gives weight and gravitas to the image. 

 Morandi: Natura morta 1939 

 Morandi’s bedroom doubled as his studio, a situation now common as covid hits our ability to travel to studios and other places of work. He stated, ‘I’m a painter of the kind of... composition that communicates a sense of tranquillity and privacy, moods which I have always valued above all’. Morandi uses very subtle rhythms to give a pulse of life to inanimate objects. He suffuses them with his own quiet life rhythm, created in this instance by the undulating heights of objects played off against subtle colour variations played as if by a colour piano and transforming a simple group of everyday objects into a meditation on time. His methodical approach also extended to the objects he used as his subject material; often painting them and then allowing dust to settle on the now slightly rougher surface, each object slowly losing its original sharpness and clarity, gradually beginning to dissolve and soften its form as dust settled. This slowing down of perception until it becomes a meditative experience is what ties all these artists together, and is the key to what I have called an almost religious revelation. 

You should try this; stare at an object, especially something mundane, something you have previously found uninteresting. Keep staring, stare at it for longer that you want to stare. Now begin to draw it, find its edges, feel the movement of its various planes and angles with your drawing materials, mark your way over its surfaces as if it is a loved one, locate it in the space it belongs to, focus on the light that envelops it until it dissolves back into the light from which it emerged, and then keep drawing. Draw until you cant see anything any more. Now stare again at what you have drawn, stare at it for too long. Take your time, look again at that object you found boring and insignificant and hold in your mind what you have seen and then meditate again on the experience. Gradually at some point in the process, hopefully there will be a moment of revelation, a realisation that you and this object are in fact entwined together in existence and that just for a little while you were joined in a harmonic relationship, one that is recorded in the materials of your extended mind. I often draw the things I'm about to eat, I regard drawing as a type of digestion, we are what we eat and what we look at. 

A beetroot

Frances Richardson is a sculptor, someone I have written about before in a post on drawing as ‘thin sculpture’. She was obviously drawn to Peter Dreher’s work because of its focus on the enduring materiality of time. This is what is said about the exhibition on Karsten Schubert’s website. ‘Hunter/Gatherer brings together Frances Richardson's recent ink drawings with a selection of work by Peter Dreher. An exercise borne from the solitude of our current moment, Richardson's new works on paper gather together a group of objects each of which holds a sense of emptiness. Paired with the works are texts written by the artist’. 



Frances Richardson: Ungrounded objects, 1, 2 and 3

 Frances is she says ‘full of doubt’ about this, she feels ‘representation tends to hold authority and domination over things, subjugates the object in a reduced form for the purpose of narrative or symbol; reductive nouns and images attach themselves to objects, a shortcutting of our sensory experience of the world. For me, representation was a ‘not seeing’ of things in themselves as a matter of vibration; but perhaps I need to deal with things as they seem to be the measure of us’. I was personally fascinated by her doing things over and over. The last time I was engaged with Frances’s drawings there was a sense of labour, repetition and the pricking of countless holes, as paper became sculptural as well as becoming a drawing. As a maker she was re-making paper in her own image, partly yes trying to exert her ‘authority’ on things, but partly I suspect being controlled by paper’s very own material language. I use a lot of ink, I use it with pens and brushes and sometimes I pool it and think of it as a metaphor for my own ageing skin, its ability to crack and seep and stain, coupled with paper’s ability to soak it up, to resist it and to pool it as the paper crinkles and bends, being in my mind a metaphor for my own materiality. I’m therefore excited by the way Frances uses the ink to capture the surface of buckets and stone axes, or should I write 'the bucket' and 'the axe head', or is it 'a bucket' and 'an axe head', are these general or particular things? As they repeat how do they do so? I often draw the same thing, but each time it looks totally different, I can never get back into the same place, the object is always dissolving back into the world it emerges from. Frances Richardson plucks her objects out of their spaces, she holds them firmly in their Chinese ink coats, dark surfaces floating in white, each image struggling to become a mass in a space, but as she realises herself, each object is only a vibration, the thin skin of each drawing, a stretched membrane that just needs the faintest of breaths to make it vibrate again. The work is a fine and proper salute to Peter Dreher, the hours that he spent staring at his glass, compressed into nuggets of time, each one like a hand grenade waiting for someone to pull out the pin, and when they do, like all universes that exist in a point of fluctuation, they expand to become everything that has been and will be, even an old bucket or a hand axe chipped out of flint 10,000 years ago or a drawing and another drawing and another drawing. 

Still thinking 1 (Bucket 1)

Still thinking 3 (Bucket 3)

Frances Richardson: Still thinking 3 (Bucket 3)

Friday, 17 January 2020

Embrace insignificance

It turns out that roughly 68% of the universe is dark energy. Dark matter makes up about 27%. The rest - everything on Earth, everything ever observed with all of our instruments, all normal matter - adds up to less than 5% of the universe. Come to think of it, maybe it shouldn't be called "normal" matter at all, since it is such a small fraction of the universe. If you take these statistics as facts and add to them the issue that like most of my peers, I enjoy the illusion that everyone cares about what I am doing; you have a paradox. The conundrum being that self consciousness works in such a way that it causes me to believe that I am very important. This makes it hard to even think about how insignificant I actually am and makes me respond immediately to any situation that tends to suggest I am actually doing something of significance. Therefore I don't just 'like' likes on social media, or in everyday exchanges with others, I can begin to crave for them. 
I have in an earlier post pointed to the research done by professor Yi Zhou, who discovered that, "just one standard deviation increase in narcissism, (size of an artist's signature) increased the market price of a work by an average of 16%, and increased the auction house estimates by about 19%". A fact that further reinforces the feeling that if we are not seen to be significant players, if we don't believe in ourselves, we are literally 'worthless'. 
This situation can reinforce in the majority of us a feeling of low self-esteem, whereby our self conscious selves are torn between the reality of insignificance and the illusion of seeking some sort of fame or recognition for what we do. I would argue this is where drawing can be really useful. It allows us to embrace insignificance and use it to communicate to others how wonderful the world is. As we do this, it can also help us to get past those desires for affirmation from our peers. 

I have already looked at how drawing can be used to help develop a state of mindfulness. Five posts were put up that were designed to be worked through one after the other, as a way to achieve some sort of harmony with the world, but you do need to dedicate a fair amount of time to the suggested activities if you are to get any benefit from those posts. This post is an attempt to look at the issue of mindfulness in another way. 


Anonymous (late 15th century) St Jerome in Penitence, after Antonio Pollaiuolo  
Estimated sale price £80

I think the print above is really fascinating. You have an actual landscape, represented by ships and a harbour entrance brought together with an imaginary scene from the bible, of St. Jerome in a desert wilderness. The two spaces, real and imaginary, being pushed one against the other, with no attempt to suggest. gradual change. Various scales of representation are used within the same image, size constancy being more to do with importance than perspectival spatial location. The invention of graphic signs for things such as grass or water or hair, is a very important aspect of the image's texture and again there is little attempt to account for differences in foreground and background texture. Powerful gestures are used to highlight the emotional state of the main character; St Jerome's distress, is echoed in the figure of the crucified Christ and the lions fighting. Compositionally everything revolves around the figure on the cross, its strong vertical stabilising the visual rotation. You can spend quite some time with this image and the longer you do the more you can sink down into its self enclosed world, a world with its own laws, but ones that the more you engage with them, constantly reveal new possibilities. 
The fact that we don't know who the artist is does no harm to any appreciation of the image, in fact it helps us to see past the 'great artist' barrier. I used to teach engraving on copper plate and so I am also very aware of the craft behind the making of the plate from which this image was printed. The 14th century German theologian Meister Eckhart stated, “When the soul wants to experience something she throws out an image in front of her and then steps into it.” You can step into this image and become fused with Saint Jerome and his desert experience, you can get lost in the various ways that the artist has built this image, an image that slowly engraves itself into memory; its formal impossibilities making the mythic possible; kneeling in the company of lions, being no more difficult than sailing the seas or reading a book.
There is a rhythm to the work of engraving, as you rock and twist the graver, a rhythm is built into the spacing and arrangement of the lines that are cut; look carefully at the angled marks that are clustered together in order to make tonal patches and you will be able to imagine the plate engraver pushing the graver over and over again into the copper, until enough lines have been cut to hold the ink that creates its dark patches. Cutting an engraving is hard work and in order to have the necessary level of control, years of practice are needed. In looking closely at the print, gradually the ghost of the engraver emerges, we feel the presence of its making, each line a frozen action, each image a thought form. A human being is affecting us from a distance, this small piece of paper holding within it something of great spiritual worth, of far more value than the £80 it was put on sale for. 


A long time ago I was awarded an art prize at school and I asked for and received for the prize a book on Indian Painting. In that book I learned that the compositional structure of certain paintings was based on how ragas were composed in Indian classical music. This opened a doorway for me that I have ever been grateful for and since that time I have had a fascination with Indian Art and have realised over time that it has many other doorways into understanding the world, perhaps even more so, than Western art forms.

In the 17th Century in Rajasthan abstract Tantric paintings were made in response to certain religious texts. Painting was at this time and place regarded as a meditation exercise and once made these abstract images were often given as gifts. Their function was to help others also meditate. In this respect they could be seen as operating in a similar way to the icon, except they didn't need to be housed in or sanctified by the church, or they could be looked at in comparison the the work of the Swedish artist Hilma af Klint, who worked hard herself to develop a body of work that could be used as a doorway into spirituality.  


Hilma af Klint's notebook

These images below are all taken from the publication 'Tantra Song - Tantric Painting from Rajasthan' and they are both beautiful and yet rather insignificant in their modesty. We will never know the names of the people who made them, and the people who made them would not expect anyone to acknowledge them. They are gifts to the world, small fragments of meditation on paper, made by people who were mystics rather than artists, people who embraced their insignificance and offered their thoughts on paper as a courtesy to others.





17th Century Rajasthan Tantric paintings

Hopefully this introduction to the work of Tantric artists will inspire and help contextualise an alternative way of thinking about art, especially for those of you who have worried about the meaning of your work and whether or not it can effect change. Anonymity is not the same as uselessness, your quiet meditations and small drawings may for others be an entry into something wonderful. 

See also: 

Indian aesthetics
Uncertain certainty
Drawing and spirituality 
Artist's signatures
Abstraction, mathematics, metaphor and creation
The anonymous drawing project

Tuesday, 8 January 2019

To be absorbed in drawing

Fiona Hingston: Furrow

To be absorbed in what you are doing is a wonderful thing. To be absorbed into something else is another wonderful thing and they are related. When you are lost in the process of making a drawing, you are both absorbed in your own thoughts and absorbed in the drawing. It is as if your physical presence merges with that of the paper and pencils and charcoal and inks and moving hands and applicators. One thing can absorb another, and in doing so it takes in as part of itself some of the qualities and attributes of the other thing. It could be argued that absorption is key to life itself. Bacteria in particular are vital to the absorption of light energy and its conversion into chemical energy. They also help us absorb the food we eat, as well as converting the energy of the sun into a useable resource.  My absorption in drawing is when I am nearest to what Buddhist's would call a state of mindfulness. When we are absorbed we do not worry about what we look like, we have no other needs, our desires are forgotten in the activity of being in the now of doing. This is perhaps the real secret of drawing. It can allow you to become absorbed into the world. By looking intensely at the environment you exist in, you can gradually sink into your perception of it and as you do a new experience takes over, one that is being made as much as it is being perceived. Eventually you cannot separate yourself out from what is being drawn. Frederick Franck had this to say about this process: 'The meaning of life is to see, it is the flash of realisation, of not-twoness, that is both the centre and the endpoint of our human experience'. The not-twoness is important here and it goes to the root of the problem. When we think about ourselves and what is not ourselves we invent 'the other'. The 'other' is though when a product of inductive reason, a stranger to us and we fear strangers. Our fear of 'the other' has led us to forget that we are all connected in a vast web of being and that anything we do has an impact on others, not just on other people, but also on the complex world of both animate and inanimate things. 
However in academic terms to become absorbed in something is often described as being lost. You are recommended to be able to stand outside of your actions in order to become more objective and to watch what you do as if you are capable of turning on some sort of internal CTV camera, so that you can record footage of the process of being engaged. This type of observation is though not one of absorption, which means that you don't actually 'see' anything. It's similar to taking a photograph, you don't 'make' the photograph, so you can't in its development 'absorb' the world that it comes from. The less we see, especially that type of seeing that means that we become absorbed in what we see, the more numbed we become. But there are some very straightforward ways to engage, and one of the best is simply to draw in response to an experience. 


Durer: Large piece of turf

Fiona Hingston's 'Furrow', like Durer's 'large piece of turf' is a drawing of something we pass over every day. Both artists remind us of how exciting it is to just look at what is there. 
Renato Orara draws stuff we often overlook, an old sponge or bit of wire. I like the fact he does his drawings using a biro, a tool so common that we often overlook it. The drawings below are from a series of on-going drawings, '10,000 things that breath', a title that for myself suggests that Orara has an almost animist connection with the objects he draws. It could also be a title chosen to reflect upon that importance of breath control in the meditation process. Each drawing then being for Orara also a meditation on life.


Renato Orara: Untitled biro drawing


Renato Orara: Sponge biro drawing

These drawings respect the things that have been looked at, and if this is all they do, I think that is worthwhile. There are issues related to mimesis in these drawings and it could also be argued that in working so hard to make these drawings so 'realistic' the natural form of the materials used has been ignored, but there can also be what I would call 'an honest response' to a simple situation, and in this we have an alternative approach to some of the issues raised in the post on Object Orientated Ontology

Michael Landy: Buttercup

After the conceptually rigorous processes of 'Breakdown', Michael Landy produced a series of etchings of weeds, it was as if he needed to do something very straightforward in order to purge himself of the dense theoretical framework that had been built around his deep critique of consumerism. 

You can of course be absorbed in a drawing in a very different way. Robert Morris in his 'Blind Time Drawings' is totally absorbed in the physical making of the drawings. In some ways he is meditating on the act of drawing itself. How far can he stretch in order to make a mark? How many marks can he make within a certain time period? By drawing in the dark, he is able to focus on the importance of touch when making drawings and he reminds us that all drawings are in some ways a record of the movements made by a body in time.


Robert Morris: Blind time drawing



The important issue here is that when you immerse yourself in what you are doing, when in your thinking you accept that you are inseparable from everything else, you begin to build a very different relationship with the world. If it is part of you then you might consider ‘Life as a Work of Art’, the ‘giving attention’ to one’s experience being all you need to understand. Of course this simplicity is in many ways beyond simplicity, because it embraces everything. As a starting point try to focus on how it feels to hold your pencil or pen. Then focus on how it feels to move your hand, your arm and the rest of your body. As you become more aware of ankles, hips and shoulder movements and the way these translate into your pencil or pen's movement, try to fuse in your awareness both your body sensations and the quality of marks being made. Then begin to focus on your breathing, become one with your body and your breath, let controlled breaths come from the abdomen and then forget about the control and be in it as opposed to outside it and eventually you can reach a state of calmness, of acceptance and absorption in the doing.   


One of my own drawings that emerged out of being absorbed in just making it. 

See also:

To be absorbed by a bicycle is something all the daily bicycle riding policemen in Flann O'Brien's 'The Third Policeman' had to endure and of course their bicycles also endured the same fate, slowly absorbing the atoms and molecules of their riders. There is an extract from this book in my post on Pouring Water, which is always an excellent read, (the extract that is) and it will perhaps induce you to read the full novel, the philosophy of which is perhaps one of the biggest influences on my entire work. 


See also posts on absorption at a subatomic level 

Drawing and quantum theory part one

Drawing and quantum theory part two