Odyssey
May 19, 2000
Dear Artist,
It's called the New Tokaido Road and it runs
from Tokyo to Kyoto. In the cars of the bullet-train speedometers
indicate 200 kph. Hamlets, shrines, pagodas, cherry blossoms flash
by faster than the mind can reach and grasp. Like single frames
in a film, traditionally clad country-folk press for a moment against
the clanging barriers that hold them, suspended in time, from their
daily chores.
Ando Hiroshige took this route in 1832. He did it in the company
of shoguns, often on foot, staying at inns along the way. He sketched
everything he saw. The result was a series of color wood-block prints
"Fifty-three Stages of the Tokaido." Hiroshige had the
ability to reduce complex scenes to simple elements of a decorative
character and effective composition. He carefully noted everything
and turned his odyssey into a poetic travail, a romance of snow,
rain, mist and moonlight which gives condition and mood to the prints
which established his reputation. Later he traversed other routes
and destinations in the same manner, producing, "Fifty-nine
stages of the Kisokaido," "Views of Edo," etc.
There will forever be works to be had on the
modest and the grand roads. Seeing the work of
Hiroshige helps an artist to realize that great
works come from small journeys--some as ordinary
as the one from our studio doors to the corner
store. It's a go-slow opportunity--under
serendipitous and adverse conditions, asking
always what condition might be added or built,
what time of day, what meaning or metaphor might
be extracted. It may be simply a camera record,
the minutiae of nature's or man's patterns, the
freezing of the contemporary and mundane, the
honoring of beauty or the abstracting of forms,
but it may also be the filtering of found imagery
through the marvelous sieve of the human
imagination.
Best regards,
Robert
PS: "Thanks to art, instead of seeing a single world, our own,
we see it multiply until we have before us as many worlds as there
are original artists." (Marcel Proust)
The following are selected correspondence
relating to the above letter. You are welcome to
copy this material to friends. Needless to say I
found these ideas interesting and worthwhile. We
are thinking of publishing many of these letters
under the heading "Letters From a World of
Artists." Please let me know if you think
this is a good idea. Thank you for writing: rgenn@saraphina.com
Photographing from
trains
Trains themselves present interesting
challenges and opportunities. I have used trains for gathering material.
The unique condition in trains, with the exception of the observation
cars which you have in America, is that the opportunity is one sided
and pretty well limited to lateral vision. I use a very fast film,
sometimes pushing to 1000 or 1600 ASA, and taking a comfortable
position in a forward facing window seat, manual focus on subject
matter in the middle distance with a 100 or 150 mm telephoto lens.
Close-ups are easier when trains are slowing into platforms but
the subjects in these areas are mainly people which do not interest
me too much. When moving quickly the biggest hazards are the impingement
of foreground trees, trestles, and the sudden entry into tunnels.
On the other hand I find shooting landscape, farms, buildings, churches
and churchyards, or running horses or other animals useful and satisfying.
Making compositional decisions in a split second, particularly in
late or early light when conditions are best, is an aquirable skill.
Peter Page, Manchester,
UK
Dazzling microcosm
Mijas is a small
hill-town near Malaga. It has winding narrow
streets, whitewashed buildings and picturesque
views over our valley and toward the
Mediterranean. The walls of the town are covered
with potted geraniums and singing birds in wooden
cages. Originally from Britain my wife and I
retired here several years ago. I have painted
practically everything in Mijaseverywhere I
can carry my easel and paintbox. I work in oils
but I also do watercolors. I know the place
pretty well. Just when I think I have done my
last painting I find something else or another
angle on something Ive done before. The
light is very strong here and I guess you could
say that it has been the major subject matter of
my work. A few of my paintings Ive sold
right off my easel before they were dry.
Peter Mills, Mijas,
Spain
Small wonders
I have a 35mm camera with a 50 mm macro lens.
This permits close-up photos as little as 3 cm
from the subject. On five occasions now I have
given myself a project to cover a given distance
of groundgenerally a short walk in a
provincial park or on a public footpath. One was
less than 500 metres but I took a day to do it. I
take close-up pictures of everything of interest.
This means I spend most of my time on my hands
and knees. I shoot with 400 ASA film and use a
mirror to increase light when I need it. I take a
lot of pictures, weed and crop them carefully,
and mount them in a dated album. When Im
taking the pictures I often re-compose the
subject to make it better, at other times I
photograph things as I find them. I also try to
make them color co-ordinated. A typical series
includes leaves, flowers, feathers, nuts, pods,
insects, needles, sticks, moss, lichens, pebbles,
slugs, roots, centipedes, spiders, mysterious
holes, bones, coins, human detritus, etc., etc.
Apart from the shows I am preparing and mounting,
the act is terrific, a bonding with mother earth.
Wendy Rouse, Ontario
Community chest
I have traversed the
same street in Brooklyn for more than thirty
years. In January I started to photograph the
three blocks on both sides out from where I live.
This is very ordinary stuff. Most of the shop
owners know what Im doing and dont
seem to be bothered any more. The police just
laugh. One lady does pressing right in her
window. Ive got hundreds of photos of
different people eating hamburgers. One man can
always be depended on to be sorting his fruit.
People seem to be always shoppingas if they
were born into that state and it is now their
only vocation and interest. As in a play many
characters appear over and over, coming onto my
stage to do their thing for me. Where this
collection is going I dont know. I now have
a big box of photos.
R.S. Shapiro, NY, NY
Day to day imagery
The works of an artist over
the years are a recording of their path in life.
Perhaps on those days when one is clumsy with the
brush and all seems a waste of paint and canvas;
that one is simply off balance, not quite
connected on their path. We may be sorting our
way through some challenge via the right brain
rather than the rational, logical left brain. On
days when the brush flies along and perception of
time is non-existant there is a satisfactory
feeling of relief and joy. We are connected on
our path.
Ive witnessed this
incredible right brain synchronizing the
painter's individual and higher path. My students
came to me asking if I would teach them how to
paint their night dream images. One day my
student was painting and decided to change the
colour of one section and then added a door in
one wall. This was not literal to the dream and I
hesitated before my perfectionist self could
request that she stay true to her dream. It was a
divine moment as I observed a psychological shift
in this adventuresome student. Her emotions
surfaced from the darkness as the door opened
beyond the wall. She had altered her perception,
her psyche, her body and herself in that moment
of changing her painting.
It is through the
sincere artistic endeavours of professional as
well as novice creative artists that the right
brain can exhibit its connection to the
unconscious, the "bigger picture", or
whatever you want to call that which inspires us
to advance on our life's path. It is indeed in
ordinary moments and day to day imagery that
profound and great works are created.
Deborah Putman,
Vancouver
Okay
I have an extremely
original travelling idea but I dont want to
tell anybody, particularly I dont want to
send it out into the world by email because I am
going to exploit it for myself this summer.
TW
Journeys
There are many journeys that we each take in the
course of our lives. Besides actual trips and
travel, there are the journeys through the stages
of our lives, from child to teen, from teen to
adult, from young adult to mature, older adult,
etc. We also take journeys inside our own heads
if we are introspective, and for many adults, it
is a long journey to find ourselves creatively.
We all know of people who have been blessed to be
aware of the small steps along the way -
photographers who capture single moments, artists
and writers who show us those moments in their
own way. But many of us have been too busy
chasing after the "good life" and have
missed those small moments in our past. Some of
us many only now be treasuring those small
moments because our previous harried lives drove
us to a critical state of physical or mental ill
health.
How precious our lives can suddenly seem when we
stop outside our doorstep to smell the roses or
to look deep into the cup of a tulip.
Sue Legault, Vancouver
The deceptive road
Hiroshige sketched
everywhere he went. Its likely that he did
what we now call thumbnails. It was only after
the second and third generation of sketches that
he committed himself to the color print. It was
the transfer to the new medium that brought out
the intrinsic and universal qualities that have
made the work timeless.
I find the road
deceptive. Theres an overload of
impedimenta. Its later, when I have
assimilated the material, that I am able to
abstract the essentials. Very often there are
only a couple of images as the result of travel,
and they may be much different than what has been
seen, but they are the important ones.
Max Reimer, Berlin
Unlimited
My odyssey is
through the landscape of my mind. It is more
interesting and variable than anything that the
real world has to offer. As I am not able to
travel I must use the place I have been given.
Anything can happen here. That is why my
paintings are truly magical and have unreal
color, fantastic design, and are populated with
wonderful and improbable beings. Because I live
and move in this space I am not limited.
TK
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If you would like to see selected correspondence
relating to the previous letter "Taking the
Leap" please go to http://painterskeys.com/clickbacks/leap.htm
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