
Walking
in Beauty
My paintings are an active response to a sense of wonder at being
in the world. They do not address any specific art discourse or theory.
Using a simple landscape format provides a surface on which I try
to express and/or reflect on my mind-state while contemplating experiences
I have had - mostly outdoors. Since the late 1970s my works have gone
through a range of stylistic treatments with a current focus on space,
distance, atmosphere, light, energy and textures - presented on a
two dimensional surface using paint. I compose and paint images that
resonate between principle subjects and surrounding spaces.
Sometimes the sensation of momentarily loosing "myself"
occurs in open places. Standing with great spaces before me may trigger
a perception where boundaries are only shimmering illusions and a
holistic presence is pervasive.
I
see trees, plants and bushes as tracing energetic linkages between
earth and sky.
The tree breathes what we exhale. When we exhale, the tree breathes.
So. We have a common destiny with the tree. We are all from the earth.
(Floyd Red Crow)
My
landscape paintings are composed from memories of an experience. I
use memory as a filtering agent to distil an image for a painting,
discarding useless details. I do occasional on-site drawings or photographs
which pile up in my studio; but I do not generally refer to them much
while making a painting.. When a painting is complete it must reflect
an emotional sensation that calls to mind some aspect of my remembered
perceptions.
The Navajo Prayer expresses my gratefulness at being alive in this
world and crystallizes my own emotional motivation as an artist.
In beauty I walk.
With beauty before me, I walk.
With beauty behind me, I walk.
With beauty below me, I walk.
With beauty all around me, I walk.
It is finished in beauty.
It is finished in beauty.
It is finished in beauty.
Robert
Marchessault
January 2008
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