"Our goals can only be reached through a vehicle
of a plan, in which we must fervently believe, and upon which we must
vigorously act. There is no other route to success." - Picasso
Cloudburst Over Marsh work in progress ©2016 Katherine Kean oil on linen 40 x 40 inches |
Do your paintings talk back to you as you paint them?
During Anselm Kiefer’s talk at the Getty last week, he
mentioned that he starts a piece with an idea in mind, but during the process the
artwork will often transform into something else.
Usually I begin a painting with what I think is a clear
intention of what the painting is about; the content, the subject, the mood and
also the scale, the palette, and to what extent it will be painterly and
textured.
Cloudburst Over Marsh sketch ©2016 Katherine Kean graphite 8 x 10 inches |
I almost always go to Nature as the source of inspiration. I
also make use of the many intellectual rules of composition. You know them: the Golden Ratio, the Fibonacci Spiral, the Rule of Thirds, etc. With these ideas in
the back of my mind I rearrange the elements of the landscape to align to the
framework of the canvas. Clouds up and to the left, tree down and to the right,
the curve of a road from here to there, and so on.
Cloudburst Over Marsh study ©2016 Katherine Kean oil on linen 6 x 6 inches |
Most of the time everything proceeds as imagined, and I’ll
think I know when and how the painting will arrive.
Cloudburst Over Marsh work in progress ©2016 Katherine Kean oil on linen 40 x 40 inches |
“An idea is a point of departure and no more. As soon as you
elaborate it, it becomes transformed by thought." - Picasso
Cloudburst Over Marsh work in progress ©2016 Katherine Kean oil on linen 40 x 40 inches |
Lately I find that as I approach this anticipated completion,
I’ll begin to see something else and if I slow down and let it happen the
painting seems to suggest a direction it would like to go – which may or may
not be what I’d originally intended.
Cloudburst Over Marsh detail ©2016 Katherine Kean oil on linen 40 x 40 inches |
And yet, I’m starting to like this way of working.
“Picasso was writing about this subject when he said: “I
consider a work of art as the product of calculations, but calculations which
are frequently unknown to the author himself. It is exactly like the carrier
pigeon calculating his return to the loft. But the calculation that turns out
to be correct is unknown to him; it is a calculation that precedes
intelligence.” - Keeper of the Flame, An essay on Max Shertz and his Art of the
Unconscious. By Daniel Kaufman, Artist and Writer