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Expressive Realism A Description of Expressive Realism by John Passaro © 2008 John Passaro and Cabin Creek Studios Notes: (1) If you are a gallery, member of the media, or other person interested in a one-page text and graphical presentation of Expressive Realism, please call or email for a .pdf version. (2) All painting images included in this description of Expressive Realism include a citation in the text as to the museum where the painting is displayed, and all painting images link directly to the museum which displays the painting in its permanent collection, except where the text cites otherwise as in the case of Vermeer which link to the Essential Vermeer website; I have not included any images which to my knowledge are restricted by third-party rights, such as the heirs of an artist. The small pictures included in the text link to outside sources of information and/or images from the original source. I'm very sure linking to other pages on a website is permitted under Fair Use Guidelines, and I'm reasonably sure including the images themselves in this description is okay, but please if you are aware of any copyright problems with including the images let me know and I'll correct the problem immediately. (3) I've included quite a few references to various well-known paintings and artists in this description, but I'm not talking about paintings I haven't seen in person with my own two eyes (and, in some cases, touched with my own two hands . . . museum guards don't like me). Unfortunately for me, the only places I've been of any art consequence are my home town of Denver including the visitimg exhibits at the Denver Art Museum, the MFA, Fogg, Busch-Reisinger, and Gardner Museums in Boston, the National Gallery in Washington, the Guggenheim and Met in New York City, the Chicago Art Institute, the Rijksmuseum and Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam, the Mauritshuis in The Hague, and the LA County Museum on Wilshire in Los Angeles. I'm painfully aware that this leaves a wide world of art out there that I haven't seen; however, despite my limited travel, restricting the conversation to paintings which I've personally seen helps me keep this discussion on the ground and out of the realm of intellectual theory. In other words, I don't know how to write meaningfully about a painting or an artist's work that I haven't experienced in person. (4) If you would like to go directly to any part of this discussion, please select one of the following: How Expressive Can the Pure Elements of Art Be? How Far Can Expressive Realism Take Artists and Viewers? Summary on Expressive Realism
The foundation of Expressive Realism is the belief that the strongest painting embraces the best of both representational and non-representational art. The purpose of Expressive Realism is to fully explore the emotional and aesthetic potential of the abstract elements of art without excluding recognizable subject matter. The true subject matter of an Expressive Realist painting is the communication carried by the abstract visual elements; the literal subject matter provides an accessible context. Before we get into this discussion, let's take a minute to be clear about what we mean by various terms such as realistic art, abstract art, realism, representational work, pure abstract, expressionism, abstract expressionism, and a couple of others. Expressionism, and specifically Abstract Expressionism, is different from Expressive Realism, but there are similarities of purpose. Although Wassily Kandinsky in Europe was called an Abstract Expressionist, the term eventually came to mean art created by American artists working in New York City in the 1940s and 1950s. Some of these American artists like Mark Rothko, Barnett Newman, and Clyfford Still worked in unified color shapes and were called Color Field artists, and some of them like Jackson Pollock brought attention to the physical act of painting and were called among other things Action artists or Gestural artists. Neither the color field nor action artists were like Piet Mondrian, the great artist in a long line of great artists from Holland, whose highest achievements were in cold geometric shapes, and who, I believe, took the abstract process Kandinsky started to its logical conclusion; the Abtract Expressionists worked in non-geometric shapes, which means, in effect, that there was room for emotional expressiveness as compared to Mondrian's intellectual abstractions. Here's a seven foot by seventeen foot so-called drip painting by Pollock named
Number 30, (I rounded off the measurements; the point is that these are very large paintings meant, just as Bierdstadt's and Moran's gigantic studio productions were meant, to emotionally engulf the viewer. By almost any standards, seven by seventeen is a large painting and I remember it that way.) I've seen these works in person, have spent time with them, and have spent time with similar works by these artists. In fact, the Denver Art Museum has several paintings by Stills and the Clyfford Stills Museum will be here in Denver. The paintings by these artists I'm using as examples here are, I believe, good examples of Abstract Expressionists working in their artistic prime and are unquestionably emotionally expressive works, at least in my opinion. While I don't think the emotional content can be questioned, I do think the critical questions are: How expressive can a painting be without a recognizable subject? and, How many people will an expressive painting without a subject reach? I hope to give some answers to those questions in this description of Expressive Realism. Realistic art is often called realism or representational art, and for the purposes of this discussion all three terms are interchangable. Although there was a movement in literature called Expressive Realism,Ref.1 realism in that context meant common, non-elitist subject matter, and in our context of the visual arts, the terms realism, realistic, and representational mean works that have an identifiable, literal subject matter. You will recognize, for instance, people, animals, trees, mountains, pocket watches, lanterns, and other literal subject matter. On the other side of the coin, the term Abstract Art is often used interchangeably with non-representational art. I personally would rather talk about non-representational art because Abstract Art is associated with so many different kinds of art that it's difficult to find common ground. Also, the term non-representational avoid unnecessary and ridiculous arguments with artists who maintain that their abstract work is not really abstract. So, in this discussion, we'll agree that the term abstract refers to the pure elements of art separated from subject matter, and we'll call paintings that have no literal, recognizable subject matter non-representational artwork. The pure elements of art are the building blocks of the visual language: design, shape, value, line, edges, texture, and so on. Although some abstract artists may believe that the pure elements are art, not just the building blocks of art, in this discussion we will consider the artistic elements the tools of the trade for artists. Most people are familiar with some of the elements; in fact, almost everyone understands that color is part of the visual language and most non-artists are aware that composition is part of creating art. Awareness may not go much further, however an element like texture might be so pronounced on a painting surface that it pushes itself into the average viewer's awareness. (Artists are better off understanding that viewers respond to the language of art without the viewers necessarily being able to put a finger on what it is about the tools of the trade that is causing their response.) I've gone into this issue of the typical viewer's understanding of the abstract elements of the visual arts more than you might think necessary, or more than you might think is to the point, for a reason. I'm assuming throughout this description of Expressive Realism that, at the end of the day, an artist's public work is attempting to communicate something to an audience, and, presumably, the artist cares about how much of what he or she is saying gets through to the audience. We may think this is obvious, but others might think it presumptuous. From time to time artists have attempted what you could call non-art, the theoretical basis of which is deliberate confusion or outright non-communication. In other words, for whatever reason, the artist creates something for public consumption that seeks not to communicate to the rest of us. It's a free country, and there's nothing wrong with exploring all possibilities, but I'm not playing in that ballpark, and, frankly, I'm not very interested in looking too far into the personality of a person who feels compelled over a prolonged period of time to talk without wanting to be understood. I've used the words visual language partly because I've always been interested in comparisons among visual language, written language, and the language of music. I think the comparisons help me understand better what Expressive Realism and the visual arts are about. As an artist, I think the comparisons between the visual language on the one hand and written and musical languages on the other hand are particularly meaningful because I believe the visual arts, and painting in particular, are very different from writing and music in terms of expressive potential. In some ways, painting combines the best of both writing and music. In writing, a non-representational jumble of the most essential building blocks, namely letters and words, means nothing unless you are in the business of encryption and decoding. If I were to scramble this description into a visual arrangement of letters without regard to the literal meaning, nnayoed ouy ldwuo ryev eb (you would be very annoyed). Poetry comes the closest to abstraction by linking the sounds and connotations of the language to the meaning of the words, but, again, an abstract arrangement of sounds without words is more likely to be heard by the listener as, for instance, screaming, or an infant's cooing and giggling, rather than an artistic communication. The non-literal elements of powerful writing, such as rhythm, sound characteristics, allusion, connotations, metaphor, symbolism, and so on, give writing its expressive content, but writing comes down to the fact that unless you have literal meaning, you have no chance of meaning something more. One goal in creative writing is to describe things without saying them (show, don't tell); you conjure up the thing in the reader's imagination, which imagination is so much more expressive and powerful than a detailed description by an author. In his brilliant book,
The Art of Fiction: Notes on Craft for Young Writers,Ref.2
John Gardner challenges writing students to create four different paragraphs describing landscapes meant to really describe events and the emotions attached to them without mentioning the event, for instance, the death of an old lady's husband described without mentioning the husband or death.
Ref.3
In other words, he writers to rely more on the abstract qualities of the language and less on the literal, to be more creative and explore the expressive potential of writing.
On the more literal side of writing, the good news about written communication is that writers, even people like myself with average writing skills, have a fair degree of certainty that what they write will be understood clearly, at least in the literal sense of the writing . . . if a disconnection happens in the communication between what the writer is saying and what the reader is understanding, writers can believe their skill level can be improved to reconnect. Not so with music. I think music is nearly the opposite of writing. The highest skill levels don't translate literally. Music might make an attempt to have a literal, recognizable subject matter; for example, Beethoven's sixth symphony is called the Pastoral Symphony and is organized (according to Beethoven) around a trip to the countryside. He went so far as to write names for the five different movements such as "By the Brook," "Peasants Merrymaking," and "Thunderstorm."
Expressive Realism explores more of the abstract communication potential of music than it explores the recognizable subject matter of writing, however Expressive Realism, along with most painting, in my experience, combines many of the advantages of both writing and music. Painting relies first on the abstract, non-literal pure elements of the visual language. Without getting too technical, this usually comes down to the paintings immediately apparent shapes and value relationships: the visual elements we need to survive. In that sense, all painting has many of the powerful potentials of a symphony. Compared to writing, painting isn't limited to the required literal thinking and mechanics; in fact, literal thinking in painting dooms artwork to very limited effectiveness. Monet said, "When you go out to paint, try to forget what objects you have before you, a tree, a house, a field or whatever."Ref.5 Paul Valery (Ambroise-Paul-Toussaint-Jules Valéry, 1871-1945, a French government official and poet) said that, "To see is to forget the name of what one is seeing," which is another way of saying that to paint is forget the name of what you are painting. William Merritt Chase is supposed to have mentioned a friend of his who had been painting with him for years and continued to fail miserably because he couldn't stop seeing branches and leafs. (I would appreciate hearing from anyone who can tell me the exact words and give me a source for Chase's quote; regardless, I think the sentiment is accurate.) Some artists and collectors believe subject matter interferes with expression and communication. I understand this point of view on subject matter and am very sympathetic. I would like to mention an experience I've had frequently when listening to music. I give you the peculiar case of opera. Unlike a symphony, opera combines both music and words. In other words, it combines both the musical and written languages. (I suppose you could say opera combines visual experiences, but I won't comment on this because I personally find going to the opera and sitting through an entire performance intolerable.) While I can't listen to whole operas on the radio or stereo, nevertheless there are many individual opera songs that I find very moving. And there are opera singers whose voices I find very expressive. Here, for me, is the critical factor about opera: opera is in Italian. I don't understand enough Italian to know what the song is literally about. This might seem like a serious problem, but, quite to the contrary, it is a real advantage. When I am listening to music because the abstract qualities are what is so moving (unlike folk music in the English language, for instance, where the words and the music are moving), I don't want an answer to "What is it?" When I don't know the literal meaning of the words, I can experience unhindered the character of the music and the expressive character of the Italian language. My imagination takes over. I'm able to respond on a personal level. The actual subject matter interferes with my experience, which is why I say I'm sympathetic to abstract artists. My friends who are abstract artists don't want to put trees in their paintings any more than I want to find out my tenor is singing so beautifully about such issues as how to trick his opera girlfirend into missing her date with his rival. (I once watched part of a television show of an opera with English subtitles and the subject matter ruined one of my favorite songs. I'm sure the intention was to make opera more accessible and therefore likeable to the unsophisticated masses like me, but it had the opposite effect on me.) While I understand this relationship between abstract art and literal subject matter, painting isn't music. Wassily Kandinsky, the first full-time professional artist to create a serious career painting separated from subject matter, that is, separated from recognizable literal objects, compared his work, his artistic process, and his goals to music (music without words) as he described that he and other artists, "...are finding in Music the best teacher. With few exceptions music has been for some centuries the art which has devoted itself not to the reproduction of natural phenomena, but rather to the expression of the artist's soul, in musical sound."Ref.6 This is only one of many statements he makes on the comparisons between music and non-representational art. One of his themes is that music is able to reach the highest levels of expression because it isn't hindered by subject matter. In his book, Concerning the Spiritual in Art, he gives us many of his observations, thoughts, and beliefs on this subject. (You may select the title for the complete text of his book presented by the Gutenberg Project.) It's all interesting and good, except that, in my opinion, the comparisons between music and painting stop at the point where artists decide painting doesn't need a subject matter because music can't have a literal subject matter. When all is said and done, painting needs a subject matter and music doesn't because the abstract elements of the visual arts don't stand alone as effectively as a symphony stands alone. I'm not downplaying abstract expression. I very much appreciate the beauty and power of the tools of the visual trade. One of the most beautiful paintings I've ever seen was a red line travelling from one end to the other on a white canvas. In this discussion of Expressive Realism, however, I took some time in the introduction above to say that artists are in the business of communicating. That wonderful red line was artist-to-artist communication about the expressive potential of the tools of our trade. It was, really, shop talk. It wasn't artist-to-viewer communication. For the time while I was there looking at that painting, I noticed that the general public seemed unmoved (beyond the eye-catching phase, or curiosity) by that wonderful red line on that field of subtly-varied white. Most people aren't interested in the inner workings of a trade, including the inner workings of the art trade. HOW EXPRESSIVE CAN THE PURE ELEMENTS OF ART BE? How expressive can non-representational work be? How emotionally moving can abstract work be? Many people who have visited Rothko's chapel in Houston or experienced Pollock's large drip paintings have told me that these works are indeed emotionally meaningful beyond the abstract elements. Maybe. Rothko's works are dependent on the overall chapel and setting for their impact, but are they as effective in the same way hanging on the wall of an art museum? Many people feel they are. And at this point it is nearly impossible to see Pollock's best work without being affected by all the cultural publicity around him, his personal life, and the publicity surrounding Abstract Art. I have spent a lot of time with Pollack's work in Boston and New York and know that his work can be viewed independently of all the hype, but it isn't easy. The other problem is that there is so much abstract work around which is just as poorly executed as so much representational work that it can get difficult to separate out what's really worth talking about. I'm thinking here of artists who would follow the example of Mark Rothko, the American, New York, painter who maintained his color field paintings like No. 5 which is in the National Gallery in Washington were not abstract, without understanding what Rothko meant. Rothko was a serious artist with terrific skills and for good reason has been taken very seriously by historians, collectors, and other artists. He didn't believe his work was artist-to-artist discussion about the pure elements of art: "As he grew in popularity more people became interested in his multiform artwork which they described as abstract. Despite this, Rothko denounced that he was an abstract artist and wrote that his interest lied 'only in expressing basic human emotions — tragedy, ecstasy, doom, and so on. And the fact that a lot of people break down and cry when confronted with my pictures shows that I can communicate those basic human emotions . . . The people who weep before my pictures are having the same religious experience I had when I painted them. And if you, as you say, are moved only by their color relationship, then you miss the point.'” I quote this from Abstract Expressionism Wordpress, but it is well-known that Rothko objected to collectors, critics, and other artists calling his work abstract. The National Gallery puts it this way and quotes him: "Rothko's work is characterized by rigorous attention to formal elements such as color, shape, balance, depth, composition, and scale; yet, he refused to consider his paintings solely in these terms. He explained: 'It is a widely accepted notion among painters that it does not matter what one paints as long as it is well painted. This is the essence of academicism. There is no such thing as good painting about nothing.'" (The Introduction to the catalogue about the Rothko Exhibit in 1998.) That's quite an answer to the question How expressive can non-representational work be? And, for me as an artist, it's quite a challenge. As a viewer, I need to spend several hours looking at Rothko's work in person and seeing if my reactions and emotions match his intentions. As an artist, I need to watch and listen carefully to my viewers and collectors and see if their reactions and emotions match my intentions: I know my subject matter plays a smaller part in expressing my intentions than the abstract elements of the visual language. HOW FAR CAN EXPRESSIVE REALISM TAKE ARTISTS AND VIEWERS? While Expressive Realism embraces the best of both representational and non-representational work, there is, however, a reason why Expressive Realism is called expressive realism and not realistic expressionism: it's almost inevitable that an artist's work will evolve from the technically realistic to a reliance on less obvious technical skill and less realistic literalism. I think two or three reasons account for this. In the first place, unless you are amazingly gifted like Picasso or John Singer Sargent (I don't personally know anyone that gifted), it usually takes time for an artist to get to the point where he or she is so at ease with the technical skills involved with good painting, the abstract elements of painting, that they no longer interfere very much with the artist's expression of what it is that called the artist to a life of art in the first place. For most of us, you can figure on painting at least five hundred paintings before you begin feeling like you know what you're doing. For me, it was closer to a thousand paintings. Secondly, as people grow up, as they mature, their understanding of themselves and our world changes, and that usually has an affect on their work. Also, as people get older their work may change because they sometimes stop caring as much about what other people think about them and begin caring more about what they think of themselves. In artists' lives this may mean they start caring more about how they personally look at their paintings (and their personal artistic process) and less about how collectors look at them. For artists living and working in the time after that day in 1910 when Kandinsky painted the first non-representational work, subject matter might be the victim of this process, but certainly not always. You may see an image of Kandinsky's painting, a watercolor,
First Abstract Painting For examples of this technical and personal maturation process, you might typically compare many artists' early work with their later work. For instance, if you are an artist reading this, you have probably seen your own work mature over time. I've seen my work grow and change as I have grown and changed over time. I've seen my friends' work change over time. Unfortunately, you probably haven't seen my work or my friends' work over a lifetime, and none of us are, I hope, finished evolving, so let's use as references some famous artists we all know: if we want to have a discussion about artwork we need to be talking about the same work. The other issue concerning this point is that I don't think it's fair, with the exception of Monet, to use as examples artists who were aware that non-representational artwork was possible in the real world; in other words, I think better examples are artists who lived and worked before 1910. Unfortunately, that rules out Americans, who up until that time were painting under the dark and long shadow of European tastes. For this discussion now, though, let's keep it safe for now by talking about European artists who've been dead for at least a hundred years and sometimes a few hundred. And, while we're at it, why not talk about the best of the best in Europe? Reverence and obedience in an artist is admirable and essential, as CenniniRef.7 pointed out a few centuries ago, but, while his humility is admirable, daring to be like the best is very admirable. Closer to home, one of my artist friends once said, "Anybody nowadays can turn the lights on, it took a genius to invent the light bulb."
So then, speaking of artists who invented artistic light bulbs, Oscar Claude Monet is a great example of change. He spent a lot of time in his late teens and early twenties painting work acceptable to the art establishment, such as this
Still Life with a Pheasant An artist who may truly have been the father of the abstract century was Cezanne, who, having died in 1906, never lived to see a serious, public abstract painting. I have personally seen a wide range of Cezanne's paintings, and it seems to me at some point in his career his artistic life turned into one uninterrupted line of progress toward an intellectual organization of the world around him and of unity in the surface of his paintings. Despite being torturted by self-doubt and despair at times, his work and progress never stopped and his paintings became more intellectually purposeful . . . and less reliant on the visual appearance of subject matter. He never gave up subject matter, but he wasn't bound by it. (Erle Loran's book on Cezanne's composition,Ref.9 intelligently speculating on Cezanne's artistic process by comparing the paintings to pictures of the actual scene, is a valuable resource on this subject, not just for understanding Cezanne but for the artistic process in general.) What made his paintings earlier paintings expressive, and his late paintings less expressive, in my opinion, is that he continually worked to develop a surface unity on two-dimensional painting independent of subject to the exclusion of what makes paintings compelling to non-artists. In other words, he focused almost exclusively on the abstract elements of his work, to such an extent that people call him the father of abstract art, yet lost the emotional content of his work beyond the intellectual aesthetics. Expressive Realism does not in any way exclude intellect and aesthetics; however, intellect and aesthetics are exercises and artist-to-artist talk without an emotional context.
Rembrandt Van Rijn started out his career, and continued throughout most of his career, painting dozens of religious and allegorical works such as (the following two images come from a Rembrandt website, RembrandtPainting.net)
The Presentation of Jesus in the Temple
I offer one more example of expressive work: Vermeer. Another Dutch painter who worked about the same time as Rembrandt, Vermeer is a very interesting artist to look at when talking about Expressive Realism. I've spent many hours looking at his work in the National Gallery in Washington and on my one trip to the museums in Amsterdam and the Reijksmuseum in The Hague. I've read every critical work on Vermeer I've been able to find, including the works of Arthur Wheelock,Ref.10 the curator from the National Gallery in Washington, whose work is by far the most insightful, thoroughly researched, and well written. I suggest in particular his book,
It seems to me Vermeer went through three stages in his short life, which I give examples of from The Ultimate Vermeer website. He had a typical early phase when he explored and mastered the technicalities of his craft (see
Diana and Her Companions The work of these artists and others show that as artists leave behind an interest in literal subject matter and as they increase focus on the expressive power of painting, which lies in the purely abstract tools of the trade, the more powerful their work becomes on an emotional and aethetic level, as well as, I think, potentially on an intellectual level . . . up to a point, as the work of Vermeer shows; when he started focusing more on the abstract tools of the artistic trade, he sacrificed the expressive power of his middle works. As I said above, I'm assuming that ulitmately an artist's public work is attempting to communicate something to an audience, and the artist cares about how much of what he or she is saying gets through to the audience and how well the work is accomplished in technical terms. For artists, I think the distinction between public and private work is important. Many of the early American artists painted private field studies they never intended for public viewing, and often these are the works of theirs which nowadays we find the most attractive. (There's one of those wonderful exhibition catalogue books that are so thoroughly researched and which are of such value as resources, I believe, for artists, which deals at length and with insight on this very subject by Eleanor Jones Harvey called
The Painted Sketch Now then, having said that . . . what if the artist's audience is other artists? What if the artist's audience is other artists and a handful of collectors, critics who publish writings about art, and gallery owners dedicated to this market? That's a choice for each artist. You would hope that abstract, modern, contemporary artists would have a healthy respect for the honorable choices of more traditionally-minded artists. You would hope that traditional artists would have a healthy respect for the dedication and intentions of artists working in more modern veins. You might go so far as to hope that both traditional and modern artists would make an attempt to understand and appreciate the other's work. Expressive Realism is responsible for two corollary beliefs: first, merely expressing yourself without a verifiable context isn't enough to achieve the goal of effectively communicating or effectively expressing yourself to a viewer; and, second, that rendering a respresentational subject matter in super-realistic detail isn't enough either. This is not to say that technically superb realistic and super-realistic work can't be expressive. Let's recognize that very detailed work can run the continuum from the emotionally vapid to the ordinary to the powerful, just as expressive work can run the continuum from technically sloppy and unskilled work to the sentimental to the ordinary to powerfully emotional. Expressive Realism assumes that technically supreme representational work isn't any more effective than the best abstract work if the emotional content that is the foundation of expressive artistic communication is missing; however it assumes also that superbly executed non-representational work is very limited in its effectiveness because it is non-representational: Expressive Realism stops short of abandoning subject matter and stops short of passing over into the realm of non-representational art. Expressive Realism is not necessarily a style or a particular look. I say that painting relies on abstract elements first, because shortly after the abstract elements have reached into the viewer's subconscious, the next question is "What is it?" This usually happens within a fraction of a moment . . . almost, but not quite, simultaneously with first sight. From the artist's point of view, this is a quesitons which needs to be answered one way or another. Consciously or unconsciously, intellectually or by instinct, with much thoughtful effort or with little thought, artists explore the possibilities. How long do I want my viewer to look for a subject matter? Do I make the subject matter instantly available, or do I delay recognition? How long do I want to delay the answer to the question " What is it?" Do I want the viewer to have instant access to the " What is it?" so that I get that out of the way and can communicate on a deeper level? Do I want to delay the answer to the " What is it?" question and attempt to keep the viewer in the subconscious abstract workings of the painting longer? Moving further across the continuum of possibilities, do I want to put off the answer to " What is it?" to the point where the viewer needs to go ask the gallery director, or look for the written program, to find the answer? Do I move into the non-representational and intend for the answer to be, "There is no answer to 'What is it?'" Artists who create non-representational work, that is, artists who give no apparent or literal answer to the " What is it?" question, are not necessarily trying to be tricky or intellectual or cutting-edge or aggravating or any of the other motivations we sometimes assign to abstract artists. (And, no, your two-year-old couldn't, "...do better than that!") A couple of the reasons why there is no particular look which defines Expressive Realism is because every artist answers this and other questions differently. Expressive Realism can run the continuum from Vermeer's middle works to Monet's late works. Also, an artist might spend many fruitful years, or even a great career, exploring the possibilities involved in one or two of the abstract elements. An artist might explore big simple shape relationships, edges, a certain color combination and relationship, and so on. Expressive Realism is a big house with plenty of room for many artists. I recently re-discovered in my library a book named "The Monk" by Matthew G. "Monk" Lewis, an eighteenth century gothic novel out of the history of English literature. It's been in my library for years, but I don't recommend the actual story unless you enjoy complicated sensationalist books written in the awkward language and style of a bygone English. I never did get through the entire story, but what's stuck with me about the book is the introduction by John Berryman, a very troubled confessional poet and literature historian from the American 1950s and 1960s, and especially his conclusion to the introduction. He's comparing Monk Lewis to Hawthorne and Emily Bronte and says, "The difference is one of weight, size, drive of conception. We really cannot say much about what deeply matters in stories, novels. They [Hawthorne and Bronte] had stronger minds than Lewis, tougher hearts, a superior intuition of necessity -- the 'dark necessity' invoked by Chillingworth when he refuses to pardon. Lewis had this intuition too, but in a form less terrifying and affecting; but then he had it." Returning to the musical theme in this description, I'd like to quote one of my favorite singers, Andrea Bocelli, as he was quoted in the London Telegraph: "I think that some voices have the tears inside. Franco Corelli [the famous Italian tenor, now deceased] said these things about my voice in a newspaper article. He gave a masterclass in Turin, and that's when he heard me for the first time. The voice is something very mysterious. It's difficult to say what is inside a voice that moves people."
I think the same can be said of painting, including Expressive Realism. There's not much you can say about what makes a painting effective. As artists we need to get into the workings of what makes paintings professional and technically effective, but at some point something else takes over and we create a work that has it or doesn't have it, whatever that is. As collectors we know it when we see it; we know what we like. As gallery owners we learn that you can't talk a person into liking a painting enough to buy it . . . either the painting takes care of itself or doesn't (unless the sale has something to do with an investment). As artists we usually feel it as it's happening, and that's when it's time to get out of the way and let the brush take over. Other times we recognize what we've done after the fact, the next day for instance, and have the sense not to overpaint it.
For collectors and artists alike, in the end I think painting comes down to whether or not the work strikes you at first, and then moves you in some way after that initial impression, and then, hopefully, continues to engage you over and over again for years to come. That three-part process is the expressive part of Expressive Realism, and I think it come down to an intangible combination which relies purely on the elements of the visual language. The realism part of Expressive Realism is imposed by subject matter and allows me to communicate with more people than I might reach without a subject matter. But even this comes down to intangibles: my experience is that the more observant, engaged, involved, and caring I am about the subject matter at hand, the more other people are engaged. Once engaged, the magic of painting takes over and the work is out of the artist's hands. The best abstract painting is not really abstract, and the best representational work isn't really all about rivers and trees and watches and lanterns.
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