The list of things that make me think I
should Stop Writing Now is long and mutable, and it's a fairly safe
bet that a new exhibition of oil paintings will shoot to the top. I
started daubing in oils when I was about 15 and maybe the fumes
infected my brain or the pigments poisoned my skin but I became
hooked and have never kicked the addiction, despite all-but-quitting
painting over a decade ago. A good exhibition is the glimpse of the
bottle, the glint of the needle, that shatters a precarious resolve:
I walk around in a paroxysm of envy and grass-is-greener confusion,
wondering how, why, I let writing come to dominate my life, when
paint was surely the partner for me.
I'm so
accustomed to feeling this that the past three months have been
perplexing: one exhibition after another has left me comparatively
unmoved. It's partly to do with the oils I've been seeing: lots of
the symbolist work at the Scottish
National Gallery
was minor league; I can't abide the prissy erotics and risible
melodrama of the pre-Raphaelites;
too much of the Munch
was dispensable. But a few days ago I saw a small room of new work by
a painter whose last show was an electric shock of unexpected
self-recognition, and felt surprised again by my equanimity. The
painter is Simon Ling, and I should declare an interest: I met Simon
years ago at a lindy-hop class and although I hardly ever see him he
lives in my heart because he's the only person with whom I dance and
can feel even fractionally competent. His last
show,
in the main space at Greengrassi, startled me because it did exactly
the things I dreamed of doing with paint: investigated the degrading
effect of humans on nature, and nature's insidious revenge, in images
of ragged wastelands and strangled forests and derelict buildings
smothered in weeds, representing this collision realistically while
calling sly, sensuous attention to the act of painting itself. The
new show, also at Greengrassi, is much smaller, and there are three
paintings in it that I love, of buildings around Old Street station,
each one fascinating in its slipperiness. One building seems to stand
askew,
another to careen
towards the edges of the canvas, while the third holds itself
together at the edge of collapse.
I think again about the abandoned painting of a crumbling building in
Athens that I was supposed to give my dad for his 50th birthday:
these, too, are things I dreamed of doing. But this time, it's OK
that I'm not.
Painting is the one thing I don't allow
myself to fudge: I'll make clothes and write and invent cake recipes
and just muddle along, but if I can't be brilliant at painting I
won't do it at all. Not even as a hobby: the phrase “Sunday
painter”, for that matter the word “hobby”, makes me balk.
Occasionally I've wondered if such fundamentalism isn't idiotic.
But last year, reading an interview with John
Berger in the Guardian, I received
confirmation. “Painting is something that you need to do if not
every day, then certainly most days,” Berger said. “It is almost
like being a pianist, if you stop you lose something. The phrase
'Sunday painter' is not often a compliment.”
I've been thinking about Berger a lot
this past fortnight, since X I had to confess,
sotto voce, that Berger is one of far too many writers whose books I
know I ought to have read by now but which I've been trying to absorb
by osmosis, as though simply having them on the shelves were enough.
Who knows, maybe it's worked: in an email conversation about Berger
X, Rajni
Shah wrote admiringly of the way that, in Berger's writing, “the
space of language is not separate to the space of thinking is not
separate to the space of eating and walking and falling and
hesitating and implying”. Which is pretty much exactly what I'd
like to be doing on Deliq.
At the same time, I've been thinking
about painting, or rather, about writing-as-painting, slowly becoming
conscious of a correspondence between how I used to paint and how I
now write, at least for Deliq, at least about theatre, and vaguely
wondering what that means. So I had something of a double-flip when I
came across this passage in Steps Towards a Small Theory of the
Visible, the second essay in Berger's book The Shape of a Pocket
(yes, I am actually reading him now):
The impulse to paint comes neither from observation nor from the soul (which is probably blind) but from an encounter... When a painting is lifeless it is the result of the painter not having the nerve to get close enough for a collaboration to start. He stays at a copying distance. …The modern illusion concerning painting … is that the artist is a creator. Rather he is a receiver. What seems like creation is the act of giving form to what he has received.
And then this, from the fourth essay,
Studio Talk:
...two words: FACE and PLACE.… Whatever the painter is looking for, he's looking for its face. All the search and the losing and the re-finding is about that, isn't it? And 'its face' means what? He's looking for its return gaze and he's looking for its expression – a slight sign of its inner life.… A place is more than an area. A place surrounds something. A place is the extension of a presence or the consequence of an action.… How does a painting become a place? … When a place is found it is found somewhere on the frontier between nature and art. It is like a hollow in the sand within which the frontier has been wiped out. The place of the painting begins in this hollow.
Forgive me if
this sounds completely ridiculous, but everything Berger says here
(and I realise there are lots of ellipses: they don't negate the
recognition but further confirm it) chimes with me instinctively not
as a painter but as a theatre-writer. What am I if not a receiver,
struggling to give new form to that which I've received? What am I
looking for if not the face, the inner life, of a piece? What is
Dialogue, the website/proposal for a new approach to theatre-writing
that I started this year with Jake Orr, if not an attempt to get
close enough to theatre-makers for a collaboration to start? And what
might become possible if I were entirely unafraid to leap into that
hollow in the sand, where the frontier between life and theatre, me
and the piece, has been wiped out?
I've been
writing this in my parents' house in Cyprus, a portal to a parallel
universe where all the paintings I did as a teenager hang on the
walls and I'm confronted daily by the person I never became. Earlier
today I went for a walk around their village and listened to
Deerhunter and beamed at the mountains turning lilac in the sunset,
dove-grey roads snaking across them, and photographed the small
gnarled trunk of a tree, its sinuous limbs curved like the body of a
woman, two snapped branches reaching out in supplication, and thought
of Daphne
escaping Apollo, and of coming back tomorrow to draw it. Last
night I threw together a yoghurt cake by whisking three medium eggs
with five tablespoons of honey, maybe 50ml of olive oil, 200g Greek yoghurt, three heaped
spoons of plain flour, 125g ground almonds and a sprinkle of
cinnamon, baked it for 40 minutes in a moderate oven, then glazed it
with more honey, a spoonful of lemon juice, and nibbed almonds; it
was good, something like a mild smooth cheesecake, but
I wish I'd made the effort to bake it in a bain marie. Every evening
I sit with my computer on my lap and half-despise, half-relish the
impossible frustration of words, while my family play cards and drink
and talk politics. And at the beach I read this, from another essay
in The Shape of a Pocket, about Vincent van Gogh: “for him the act
of drawing or painting was a way of discovering and demonstrating why
he loved so intensely what he was looking at”. And I
shivered as the heat of the sun turned my skin indignant red and
thought: yes, that is how I want to write about theatre, too.
No comments:
Post a Comment