Everything is worthy of being drawn; anything can inspire a painting.
I spend as much time as I can walking and sitting and drawing in the woods near my home. Drawing is my way of getting to know the life of a place that is special to me.
Yet I always come back to drawing and painting people– faces and bodies. There is so much to say about why that is, more than I have words for. But the ancient Greeks knew something when they said, “The soul, to know itself, must gaze into a soul.” And Wendell Berry, “The task of healing is to respect oneself as a creature, no more and no less.”
I often ask myself if I can justify spending my time making pictures. There is so much work to be done in the world! But I tell myself that it is important, first, to try to see, clearly and honestly, with humility and patience. Drawing and painting, I hope, are a way for me to learn to see. It’s a beginning.
How difficult I find it to get out of my own way, simply to look and to listen, and then to respond. How difficult, sometimes, to trust my response and to follow it. But moments arise in which I do, and it is so simple, so natural. Everything is different then. Good things happen then.
I had a show and studio sale several years ago, took everything, almost, from my studio, installed it in the local library. Probably a thousand pieces of art– drawings, paintings, scraps, beginnings. The walls were covered. Three or four tables were covered with stacks of papers– drawings and paintings. A friend came, spent hours looking through just about everything. He’s an artist too.
My little house is filled to bursting with hundreds of watercolor paintings and small pastels, charcoal drawings (mostly from life-drawing groups– faces and bodies), and sketchbook drawings (landscapes, trees, dancers, musicians).
Either way, the upshot is: hundreds of beginnings, some carried farther than others, some really only scraps of ideas, some so close to what I envision.
I want to find homes for as many of these paintings and drawings as I can. For me, they are just beginnings, but maybe you’ll find something you like just as it is. You’ll be helping me a lot; I’ll be grateful. And they’ll be so much happier on your wall than in my closet!
“If you are under control
Seeing Things with Fresh Eyes
Imagine you are in the woods following an animal trail. You don’t know where it will lead; you just look for markers, and keep going. But you find yourself noticing more and more. You get to know those woods intimately.