I am a painter for two weeks each
summer, at Art Workshop International in Assisi. This year I came feeling
uncertain about what I wanted to do, couldn’t quite connect with anything until
I spent an hour or so watching Edith Isaac-Rose paint. I sat slightly
behind her, so I couldn’t see her watercolors and didn’t have any idea what
color she had on her brush until she put it on the paper in a big swath. I was
shocked several times, in the happiest way. Yellow! Red!
We were on the terrace of the Hotel
Giotto, the geometry of walls and roofs before us, broken by trees, flowers,
chimneys and, in the distance, the mountains, fields, sky. I could see a vague outline
of the scene on Edith’s watercolor paper in the beginning; but in time the
particulars disappeared, colors and shapes told each other what to do and
Edith, stopping, looking, let them do it.
She didn’t explain what she was doing,
just did it. In fact, if she had given me a lecture on abstraction, I doubt I
would have understood it nearly as well as I understood what abstraction was by
watching the scene before us morph into shapes and planes and colors beneath
her brush.
Later, I stood before my easel in the
studio, looking at the print of a photo I’d taken above the cloisters of the
Basilica, thinking, when my friend Charles Kreloff came by and started talking
about the planes in it. Suddenly, I saw it in the image in a completely
different way.
Over the next few days I did a flurry of
abstract paintings of that corner of the cloisters.
I loved playing with the
same elements over and over, observing how each painting was the same and
different from the others—and it occurred to me that a painter’s material is no
different from a writer’s material. The “stuff” from which we make paintings,
the bits and pieces of the real world to which we’re drawn because of who we
are, what shaped us, is exactly like the stuff from which we make stories.
Loaded into the kaleidoscope of the mind, it tumbles into a new painting with
each turn—then lifts, morphs to create its own unique piece of the universe.
2 comments:
Barb..... Love your words and your images!
Appreciatee your blog post
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