
When we see something in the distance, or out of the corner of the eye, or in fading light–the mind will offer an identity or name for what we think we see, but one that proves false on drawing nearer: it’s that intersection that I’m after–the instant between where you think you know what you are seeing, when the imagined image is replaced by an object with a name, with a received place in external reality. In a work of art, that would be the power to suggest, to raise the question–but to resist capture by withholding the answer–that the viewer remain at an intersection between what is out there , and the hidden desire that is source of the art’s affective power.
In refusing to ‘represent,’ (to point to something else, something ‘out there,’ the work becomes a mirror reflecting back on ourselves, on a struggle we have not been aware of, until, agitated by being unable to find what the art is pointing to–a disturbance that may help open us to what we have been struggling NOT to see.
I think that happens with any work of art; even most explicitly representational work is always a distortion–and it’s in the distortion that we can see ourselves. Those brought up with, and open to experiencing art, will find this in any style or genre.
Non-representational art merely places this at the center, by erasing the distractions.
Category: Goby’s Journal
#1000
I thought it would take me till April… will I live to do another thousand?
7″ x 11″ (18×28) Watercolor, ink

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#988 Two More A’s
28″ x 36″ (71×91) Acrylic on Canvas

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#987
24″ x 36″ (61x91cm) Acrylic on canvas

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#985
9″ x 12″ Mixed media: watercolor, ink, acrylic on paper
“The Real is that which is impossible (to represent) and [Lacan] …associates it with trauma or the missed encounter (that which we could not have encountered). We cannot speak the Real, but it nonetheless produces …effects that we can trace.”
Levi Paul Bryant
I can’t imagine a better account for my turn to abstraction in my art.

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#984 FLAG
12″ x 13″ Collage, acrylic on canvas

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#979
9″ x 12″ Watercolor, ink. Searching for something in these last two… still looking

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#977
32″ x 28″ Acrylic on canvas. Have to see if this belongs. I feel like I’m not so much painting one piece at a time, as adding to a series. This happened with the poems I was writing. Not sure about this one yet.

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#976 Glyph
“Glyph”
24″ x 30″ Acrylic on canvas.
I’m finding that my fascination with patterns in broken pavement, walls of razed buildings, stucco and peeling paint, radiographs, high altitude photos of the earth, cartography, tree bark– has been converging in my recent paintings into a new direction. As though I’d been led–from the time I began assembling discarded fragments and trash on a table in the Ox–to my most recent paintings (say, from #958 and 959)–to the making of images, not raw abstractions, but drawn from life, one step beyond the horizon of understanding, of where we able to name what it is we are seeing. This is why I’ve been labeling them, ‘conceptual,’ because they are about something… just that we can’t name what it is.
Many of my earlier pieces have a place in this line. Ones that don’t, and are less than satisfying to me, I’ve been painting over. The painting below is a paint-over of #612–a paining that was almost there… but not enough

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#973 Impact!
32″ x 42″ Acrylic on Canvas. On learning that the U.S. had withdrawn from the nuclear arms agreement with Russia.

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