Saturday, July 26, 2025

For the record


Every year, ahead of the hurricane season, I make a photographic record of paintings that hang on the walls of my studio. If they then have to take them down for safe keeping during the passing of a storm, I afterwards know which goes where when putting them back again. The opening picture is just one of many photographs that record the 140 paintings and 56 sculptures that are on display. There are hundreds more in portfolios and in storage.

It's a collection that triggers the wow factor from visitors. Let's hope we make it safely though the forthcoming vulnerable months.

Sunday, July 20, 2025

In the time I have left

My life has been the poem I would have writ, but I could not both live and utter it. 

Henry David Thoreau

Now that I'm well into my eighties, I ask myself, what remains for me to do in the time I have left. My life has not been limited to painting and sculpture. In earlier times survival at sea took precedence, now it's survival on land. Since first light this morning Denise and I have been struggling to solve problems with pumping water from the river to our roof header tank. That has taken the first half of our day. Then you can add that for the last two months we have been working flat out to ensure that our buildings a ready to face this year's hurricane season. Bear in mind, we're still repairing the devastation caused by Hurricane Maria eight years ago.

While working on these survival tasks my mind continues to fire creatively on all cylinders. In the time I have left I want to create sculptures that have the same freedom as my paintings. The torso below is by the German sculptor Mátyás G. Terebesi. It has the freedom that I'm after.


Sunday, July 13, 2025

At the risk of being risqué

 

An innocent detail that hopefully will not trespass 
on forbidden social media territory.

Since my recent inadvertent trespass into Google's forbidden territory I have become cautious of images that can be taken out of context and the risk of being risqué. 

I trust that the above image will not offend the censors, but I can no longer be sure. What was permissible in the days when Blogger was Blogger, is not permissible now that Blogger is Google. 

On the other hand, Google post images that can be ogled over, but which offend my sense of decency. It's an anomaly that leaves me in a quandary.

What google permits!

The above image is one of many taken at a recent British Virgin Island music festival. They are all posted on Facebook.

Saturday, July 5, 2025

Differentiating between model, lover and muse

Study, Torso, Effect of Sun by Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1875-76)

I was once asked to differentiate between model, lover and muse. When does one become the other? Without love - albeit platonic - between artist and model very little of real worth can be accomplished. But the transition from model, to lover, to muse is a relationship that seldom materialises. On the other hand, the muse is not necessarily model or lover; at least not in the accepted meaning of lover. 

Once in a while the role muse can be mutual, as was the case between Virgin Island poet Sheila Hyndman and myself. Forty years ago Sheila expressed our creative relationship in her poem "Revelations".
 
I am a seeker of wisdom
You are the active force
That manifests my truths
For the good of humanity.
I am a contemplator of what was and shall be,
You are the revealer of the link that is.
I am of the sky and would flee the cares of men.
You are the Earth, the balance that keeps my sanity.
I am night, the creator of fear and uncertainty
You are the sun, that brings me ecstasy
At the dawn of our union.
I am black with the seed of knowledge
You are fair
And the fire of your purity
Bounds me to the seat of wisdom.

It is possible that Renoir's model for his painting Study, Torso, Effect of Sun fulfilled all three roles. Marguerite Legrand (1856 –1879), known as "Anna", was a nineteen year old seamstress and single parent when she first modelled for Renoir. Sadly she died of smallpox at the age of twenty-three. The painting now hangs in the Musée d'Orsay and her beauty forever lives on.

In my book Notes on the Nude I delve deeper into the relationship between artist and model.