I’ve had the Vestibule Gallery lined up for a couple months now. The space is prime; located right on Congress Street in downtown Portland, ME. I haven’t even had a solo show in Portland since 2005 and that was in a coffee shop. Needless to say I’ve been trying to put something good together, to the point where I’d have to say I was overthinking it.
Category: maine painter
Absolom, Absolom
I started “Absolom, Absolom” last year, just after Austin was born. I remember reading it to him in studio. I love the way that Faulkner wrote. I unfortunately don’t have the endurance to finish his books. I have started three and gotten to about page 150 on each one and then I lose gas. Today, while I was watching Austin, I happened into Longfellow Books in Portland and found a copy of “Absolom, Absolom” for my own library. There is something about reading a book from your own library that can never be compared to borrowing the book. You own that book. It is yours to enjoy, feel, and love. There is something important in starting this Faulkner over again for me; a thread that I left unravelled but not unravelled all the way to the end and not wound up again either.
It seems that my artwork is in the same headspace right now. I am excited about the work but it seems foreign to me, like someone took all of my saved files on my computer and converted them to French. I can still catch the gist of the work, but it is difficult to decipher and some of the motives are lost in the translation. My time in studio has been reduced to such a great extent that I find myself feeling a bit lost, but I’ve begun piecing in hours. If I can piece in hours then I will be better off. I just need to retain my train of thought. I suspect that I will need to write more; dictate to myself what steps I wish to take while I am creating.
I worked on two pieces today, neither of which is finished, both of which seem like steps in the right direction. So as I sit here typing, listening to my last album of the day, Wilco “A Ghost is Born,” I wonder what the next step is with this work. I want to put up a show of new thoughts at every turn, but as I related in my last post, I think this does a disservice to the work. Is the work really about my subject matter or about me painting my subject matter? Would I be saying the same thing if I did 100 portraits of my son or if I were to 100 paintings of the Grapevine Epimenis? Grad school suggests to a certain extent, yes.
There is a holiness in the pattern making. It feels electrifying to fit myself into the spaces, but on the other hand I don’t really fit into the spaces. I haven’t concerned myself with coloring in the lines totally since I was in grade school. At the same time, I come fairly close on a regular basis.
UThis summer has been so very trying on my creativity. I took a job in an art gallery and seemingly lost my creative mojo. There were so many works around me, very few of which I wanted to feel any influence by, and on the whole my little brain has felt completely an utterly overwhelmed. Compounded with the amount of time that the job takes up I feel like I have been in for it.