Ten things about Art
FIRST
ten pictures of stuff that is art, or inspires art, or might
as well be called art because it takes you towards the boundaries of thought
and logic and human possibility ... number one might as well be bubbles !
because ...
matter, from what we know, likes to aggregate in
patterns, some more spectacular than others, some astonishingly ordered such as
DNA, some halfway between randomness and logic ...
SECOND

UNCERTAINTY. Doubts and uncertainty beget stress, which we
all know is injurious to health. Years ago, I thought that certainty and
agreement could be within the grasp of every rational mind. Hah ! If I’ve ever learned anything, then I’ve always been the last to know … even though Bertrand
Russell had spelled it out in one curt sentence … “Be certain of nothing, for
nothing is certain.” …
Everything we know is only what we like to think we know,
everything we see is only the mind’s best guess as we wade through oceans of
sensory chaos. Looking at art teaches you something about uncertainty, if only
by default. Artists get away with approximations that would annoy the hell out
of engineers. Very often, an artist has to leave stuff incomplete.
I’ve often sat in front of this drawing and searched it for
content.
You can guess what the women and their babies might be saying but you can’t know, or else
Leonardo would have had to invent the speech-bubble.
Two thoughts only dawned
on me very slowly, years after I’d first looked at the picture.
I’d been
looking at the faces and hands too much, but what are they sitting on ? I
wonder, but don’t know if they are sitting on a rock, for Leonardo’s church
supposed itself a rock ?
And it took me ages to realize he’d never got to grips
with the technicality of placing their bare feet in a living stream. Leonardo
kept this unfinished work with him.
Is it the stream of time ? I don’t know, and that really doesn’t
matter now.
THIRD

Physical grace. Occasionally the World Stands Still. For me, when someone is entering the scene who is perfectly poised, agile and purposeful in their movements, and whose every movement seem to flow.
Once, in a shabby club in Bristol, a big girl in an ugly
sweater walked to the centre of the floor and spun a triple pirouette, and then
walked off again.
On Brighton beach, I saw a tiny sinewy man stand on his hands
and “walk” on them down the steep shingle into the sea.
A new drinking partner
in a beer garden, when light-heartedly challenged by me, turned six or seven
cartwheels until she came to a halt standing in a bed of roses.
Sometimes such moments coincide with the camera shutter … I
think, for instance, this picture by Thollier might be one …
FOURTH

Memory of place … Canaletto,
the stonemason’s yard, painted late 1720s
it can be assumed that the
human mind is as great as the universe … if only because its boundaries are
undefined
can I make another assumption
... that everyone I know has their own private memory bank of places and spaces
?
and then add that I think
there might be another memory bank we keep which holds on to fleeting
impressions of atmosphere and space and light ?
maybe it isn’t a bank, more
of a cloud, or perhaps a labyrinth without walls ?
anyway, whenever I visit this
painting, I can hear and feel the empty undefined sunlit spaces of childhood, a
time before the fabric of memory was woven, dyed, stained, embroidered, frayed
at the edges …
FIFTH

GUILT ... I journeyed to a hospice
where a dearly loved one was fading away. We talked about the general topic of
guilt, honour, shame, etc, and I confessed that, when depression clouded my days, then I would sometimes become so burdened with shame at all the daft and
dishonest and selfish things I’d said and done ( or left undone ) that I would
mutter, “I hate myself, I hate myself, I hate myself …”
She, with a chesty laugh
through her tracheotomy plug, recognized that condition and said it had
afflicted her often … And of course, guilt is a very common affliction which no
one likes to talk about, and rightly …
In Brighton, I had a great
job delivering rental cars with a bunch of youngsters thirty years younger than
myself and we also had a brief discussion of guilt which led me to state that I
thought I might easily fill a thick book, maybe even a couple of volumes, if I
started to write down all the horrid things I was ashamed of. A girl in the
back seat said, “I wouldn’t go there, Tris … that way lies madness”
Sometimes when I’m looking at
Rubens’z fabulous frivverless fripperies in the National Gallery, the gleaming
frames remind me that “Guilt is a luxury you can’t afford”.
SIXTH

The Derveni Krater … The People of The Past were smarter
than you can possibly imagine … well, some of them …
At a glance, you might
take this for a bit of late eighteenth century neo-classicism … and you’d be
wrong by two thousand years, and some more … this is Greek bronze from 330BC,
maybe a bit earlier … a cunning assembly of wrought and beaten and cast metal,
in which the figures are modelled with a grace and subtlety rarely seen in any
great art …
The narrative complexity of the party-scene has taken up a few
chapters of scholarly dispute … and we have few clues as to who made it … this
was a party piece for posh drinkers, but it really is a kind of party in itself
…
One photo cannot do it justice, so clicketty-click on the links, the youtube
video shows it to better advantage than any of the best books …
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2LYNl3JezPA
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Derveni_Krater
SEVENTH

The Sky … is a painting with the clearest palette … is an
open book without a discouraging cover … is a poem without a beginning or an
end … light and life come through the sky … when our world ends, everything
that we once were will radiate away from or through the sky and will dissolve back into
the eternal cycle of order and chaos …
EIGHTH

DREAMS … I was talking to one of the modern world’s many
professional counsellors who are sometimes called psycho-therapists. She said she won’t discuss people’s dreams
during their paid sessions because they divert her clients’ focus from the
urgent central issue of their personal weaknesses and their failures of
understanding.
Well, yes, I can see her point … but only up to a point.
Dreams are still part of the lived
experience of many people, and for some of those people they offer a key
to what might be the only securely locked room in their personal and ricketty
palace of inverted priorities and unresolved issues, wherein may lay hidden all
of those cobwebbed and dusty questions that are too hard to ask, let alone
answer.
In Art, however, and particularly in painting, dreams seem
to take on another significance … the artist might offer us a view into a world
that has little rhyme or reason, but it still acts a kind of yardstick by which
we measure our own understandings, and our uncertainties.
I think that looking at other people’s imagined worlds can
be a kind of prism for thought, where many of the tangled knots of existence
can be teased out and split off into nearly
recognizable smudges and blotches of shades and colours, even if their
shapes and functions remain vague.
Time spent contemplating other worlds, whether real ones or
improbable fictions, time spent trying to accommodate one’s own narrow thinking
to another’s equally limited point of view, will often lead us towards fresh
intuitions about our own situations, tastes, beliefs, anxieties,
confusions.
That said, most paintings can’t and won’t offer copious
rewards ... but look twice anyway, just in case.
NINTH

LAUGHTER … I haven’t got a
“proper” sense of humour … you’d be lucky to hear me tell a joke because I can
only remember one joke, maybe two, after all these years of laughing at other
people’s … yet I’m addicted to laughter, and I’m addicted to the company of
those who live to laugh lightly … am I like a crack-head without a lab ? …
it doesn’t matter … and I
can’t figure out a point of view about Art and Humour … in Umberto Eco’s
splendid detective novel, The Name Of The Rose, ( much better than the fillum
), the fulcrum of the plot turns out to be the Church’s suppression of Aristotle’s
Treatise On Humour, ( which never existed outside the novel ) and the novelist
implies that tyrants hate humour because they fear ridicule … laughter bonds
people as powerfully as love
visual art can be
“good-humoured”, especially in books designed for children, or in those lovely
old compendium’s of Giles cartoons … yet I can’t think of any gallery or museum
I’ve been where people might have lingered to laugh … maybe the nearest I get
to laughter in the arts is when Steve Bell draws a cartoon and borrows from a
famous composition of some great painter … this mischievous travesty of Grant Wood's American Gothic is already old
but still seems topical …
TENTH

LOVE … the comforts and the excitements and discoveries of shared affection are
something we all crave … although artists tend to be more interested in the
erotic possibilities of true intimacy than in the mundanities of domestic
contentment … but either way the viewer wins … the best art comes from the
souls of those who have loved and from those who have endured all the illusions
and delusions that come with the full package … no point in making a list of
them for we’d have to write an encyclopaedia … the best are all sweetness and
light, the things we need most … and we need them to be unencumbered by futile notions of obligation and ownership because only unconditional love can endure