Showing posts with label anchoring. Show all posts
Showing posts with label anchoring. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 28, 2022

Exploring, 3

I've read Cynthia Voigt's A Solitary Blue more than once—in fact, four times since 1989. I was reading it yet again, this time as an audiobook, when the following passage—a passage I've quoted more than once in this blog—filled my ears last week while I vacationed in downeast Maine. 

This had been the pattern

of his days 

on the back creek:

he would move the boat out

until he felt more frightened

than he had the courage to match;

then he would anchor

and wait.

—Cynthia Voigt, A Solitary Blue

The words offer such a fitting metaphor for my typical way of painting. The moving-anchoring-waiting-gathering-courage-moving-again pattern is exactly what was playing out when Voigt's words came my way as I was painting last week. 

The piece I was working on already had a considerable history of moving-anchoring-waiting when I'd set it aside as a finished (or so I thought) painting in 2016. 

After a six-year(!) wait period, I'd pulled anchor and included this piece in what I packed for vacation, thinking I might use it as the backdrop for a new neurographic exploration. 

Use it I did. I added neurographic linework and, for good measure, also threw in a semi-blind contour drawing of trees seen out my cottage window.

totally lost myself in the joy of process—created messes, anchored, waited, let my courage and investigative energy recover, ventured forth again, resolved one mess and inevitably created a new one, anchored again, waited again, gathered courage again, moved forward to resolution again, created yet another puzzle, and so on. 

Loved every moment.



A Greatness of Air
8 x 8"; collage, acrylic, gouache, watercolor, ink, and
oil pastel on watercolor paper
abstract landscape
2022



History:



'completed' piece from 2016
that became a start 
last week
for the new work above